Jones County Land Co. v. Fox

83 So. 241, 120 Miss. 798
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1919
DocketNo. 20873
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 83 So. 241 (Jones County Land Co. v. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones County Land Co. v. Fox, 83 So. 241, 120 Miss. 798 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

SteveNs, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this ease the Jones County Land Company, a corporation, was complainant and appellee the defendant and cross-complainant in the trial court. The bill is one for the confirmation of a tax title. Appellant on April 6, 1914, purchased from the tax collector of Jones county the south half of southeast quarter, and the northwest quarter of southeast quarter, section 14, township 6, range 11 west, and received therefor a tax deed, signed “Luther Mill, Tax Collector, by Amos Jordan, D. S.” This deed was duly filed with the chancery clerk, and remained on file for two years, after which it was delivered to the purchaser.

The land involved in this litigation formerly belonged to W. T. McGrilvary, who received a patent from the United States government, and he owned the land at the time of his death. At the time of the assessment a.nd sale the land belonged to the widow and the three children of W. T. McGilvary, deceased, as tenants in [809]*809common. The widow subsequently married one B. W. 'Davis and the three forty-acre tracts of land here involved were assessed to S. A. McGfilvary. W. T. Mc-Gilvary also owned the northeast quarter of northeast .quarter, section 23, township 6, range 11 west, which immediately adjoined the lands which comprise the. subject-matter of this suit. The forty in section 23 was separately assessed on the assessment roll to Mrs. N. A. Davis. On June 16, 1914, after the tax sale, J. L. Mc-Gfilvary, one of the contenants, conveyed his undivided one-fourth interest to D. B. Fox, appellee, and Fox was made a party defendant to the original hill for confirmation. The appellant obtained a decree pro confesso and a' final decree against all of the defendants except Fox. Appellee, Fox, filed his answer, denying all of the material allegations of the hill, and made his answer a cross-hill, in which he attacks the validity of the tax deed on three grounds: First, that the tax deed is void on its face because it is not properly signed and executed; second, that the attempted sale was void because the sheriff who attempted to make the sale did not offer the lands in separate forty-acre tracts as provided by the statute; third, because the tax collector did not consider and treat the four forty-acre tracts as constituting a single tract and as the property of the same owner, but attempted to make two sales in violation, as contended, of our statute.

It is also alleged in the cross-bill that the widow and the two other children on November 30, 1916, executed and delivered to appellee their warranty deed for the remaining three-fourths interest, and thereby appellee became the owner in fee simple of all the lands sued for; that at the time this deed was executed Wirt' Mc-Grilvary was a minor; that the statutory period for redemption for the minor’s interest had not expired, and that Mr.' Fox, as assignee of the minor, had the right to redeem the minor’s interest; and accordingly [810]*810appellee contends and prays tlie court that, if the tax deed he upheld, he he accorded the right to redeem an undivided one-fourth interest, and offers to do equity, and tenders unto the court the amount which the court finds to be necessary to redeem. The' case was set down for hearing on bill, answer, cross-hill, answer to the cross-bill and proof.

On the trial of the case cross-complainant introduced Amos Jordan, the deputy sheriff and tax collector who made the sale, in an effort to show that this officer did not obey the statute in the method of sale. It appears that the cause was submitted on oral téstimony taken before the chancellor, and that a stenographer was employed to take down the evidence. According to the stenographer’s notes, Mr. Jordan on direct examination was asked the following questions, and made response thereto as follows:

“Q. When you sold the three forty’s, how did you sell them A. I would offer the west one-half of the southeast quarter for the taxes and costs of the three forty’s, and I wouldn’t get any bid, then I would offer the southeast of the southeast for the taxes and costs of the whole thing, and didn’t get a bid, and then I would .offer it all together and got a bid on it. Q. And that is the way you sold it? A. Yes, sir.”

There was some controversy .between counsel as to what the witness testified to on direct examination, and the court permitted the witness to be recalled for ftather examination, and on a subsequent examination the following appears:

<£Q. When you sold the three forty’s, in question, how did you sell them? just' state what your testimony was relative to this. A. I would offer one forty for taxes and costs on the 3 — that is my recollection — and I would offer one forty for taxes and costs on three forty’s. If I wouldn’t, get a bid, then I would add another forty; and, if I.didn’t get a bid on- these two, I would add the [811]*811third forty. That1 is the way it was done. That is what I intended to say down .yonder. . ,. . The way I sold it, I would offer one forty and if'I couldn’t get a hid, I would add another, and then, if I didn’t get a bid. I would offer them «all together. ... I would offer the first one separately,” etc.

There was a general decree for the defendant and cross-complainant, Fox, canceling the tax deed and dismissing the original hill, and from this decree the tax purchaser appeals.

In the argument at the bar, as also in.the briefs, the same grounds upon which the tax deed was assailed in the court below are relied upon here. We - shall take them up for consideration in the order in which counsel present them.

There is no merit, we think, in the first contention that the tax deed is void on its face. The deed is executed in the name of Luther Hill, Tax Collector, by Amos Jordan, D. S. In McReae v. Swalm, 81 Miss. 679, 33 So. 503, this court, speaking through Chief Judge Whitfield, said: “After a careful consideration, we are of the opinion, clearly, that a deputy sheriff is virtute officii, also deputy tax collector.”

By statute (section 4694, Code of 1906; section 3111, Hemingway’s Code) the sheriff of each county is, by virtue of his office as sheriff, made tax collector, and if the sheriff fails to qualify by giving the bond required as tax collector, he vacates his office as sheriff. The sheriff is by a separate statute given power to appoint one or more deputy sheriffs and to remove them at pleasure, and such deputies ‘ ‘ shall have authority to do all the acts and duties enjoined upon their principals.” Section 4664, Code 1906 (section 3981, Hemingway’s Code).

The record in this case shows, not only how the deed was signed, hut that Luther Hill was the tax collector of the county, and that Amos Jordan was acting as [812]*812a regular deputy sheriff and tax - collector in making the tax sale here questioned. The abbreviation or letters “D. S.” can mean nothing else except deputy sheriff. Mr. Jordan was put upon the stand as appellee’s witness to show the method and manner of sale in this case and thereby removed any possible doubt as to the indentity of the party purporting to act as deputy. It is conceded that the recitals of the deed are in usual form, and the only alleged infirmity is in the signature.

It is next contended that the sale was void because the land was not offered for sale in the manner provided by section 4328, Code of 1906.

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Bluebook (online)
83 So. 241, 120 Miss. 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-county-land-co-v-fox-miss-1919.