Lord v. City of Kosciusko

154 So. 346, 170 Miss. 169, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 119
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 23, 1934
DocketNo. 30771.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 154 So. 346 (Lord v. City of Kosciusko) 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
Lord v. City of Kosciusko, 154 So. 346, 170 Miss. 169, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 119 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

*177 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1929, under chapter 194, Laws of 1924, the city of Kosciusko, by proper resolutions and ordinances, made certain special improvements on Wells and North-streets in said city, consisting of street paving and storm sewer improvements, and assessed one-third of the cost thereof to the abutting property on each side of these streets, and the remaining one-fhird to the city.

The appellant is the owner of an unexpired lease of sixteenth-section school lands fronting on Wells street for a distance of one thousand two hundred fifty feet, and on North street for a distance of two hundred seventy feet. For making these special improvements, appellant’s leasehold interest in said land was assessed by the city the total sum of five thousand six hundred thirty-six dollars and nine cents, this being one-third of the cost of making said special improvements along and immediately in front thereof. This assessment was made payable in ten annual installments; and there was no appeal therefrom by the appellant or any abutting property owner. Thereafter, the taxes due on this assessment against appellant’s leasehold interest being in default for an annual installment, after due advertisement, the appellant’s above-described leasehold interest was sold to the city for said delinquent taxes.

Afterwards the appellant filed the bill of complaint in this cause against the city of Kosciusko, and the board of supervisors of Attala county, alleging that he was the owner of an nnexpired leasehold interest in said sixteenth-section land, both by mesne conveyances and by adverse possession, and deraigned his title in so far as the records were available. The bill charged that the original lease of these lands was executed many years ¿go, for a period of ninety-nine years, but that the exact date thereof was unknown on account of the destruction by fire of the deed records of Attala county in the year 1858, *178 and, therefore, the date of the expiration of the said lease was unknown. Upon this phase of the case the bill prayed for a decree fixing the expiration of his lease, and quieting and confirming his title thereto.

The bill of complaint further challenged the right of the city to assess appellant’s leasehold interest in said land with any part of the cost of said special improvements, on the ground that he was not the owner of the said land abutting on the streets in question, but was merely the lessee thereof for an unexpired term of years, the remainder or fee of said land being in state of Mississippi as trustee for the benefit of education, and, therefore, not liable for the cost of making special and permanent public improvements- along the same. The bill further charged that the assessment and sale of this leasehold was void for the reasons above stated, and prayed that the sale be decreed to be void for other stated reasons. The bill further charged that if the complainant was mistaken in the contention that his leasehold was not assessable for any part of this special improvement tax, then it could only be assessed with a proportionate part of said cost, and he was entitled to an apportionment of the cost between him as lessee and the owner or beneficiary of the remainder interest in said premises, as represented by the board of supervisors. The bill prayed that the said assessment and sale thereunder for delinquent taxes be decreed to be void, and be set aside and canceled in so far as it affected his leasehold interest, and that in the event the court should determine that appellant’s interest in said land was liable for only a portion of the cost of improvement, that it apportion such cost between the respective parties.

The court below fixed the date of expiration of the lease as being October 12, 1948, and held that the leasehold interest of appellant is liable for the full amount assessed against it for said improvements, and that the board of supervisors is not liable for any part of such costs, and *179 cannot he required to pay the same out of any sixteenth-section funds under its control. The court further held that the sale of the leasehold was void for reasons not necessary to here state, since there was no appeal by the city from the decree so declaring.

As bearing upon the date of the original ninety-nine year lease of this sixteenth-section land, and for the purpose of fixing the date of the expiration thereof, there was offered in evidence two affidavits executed on the 16th day of November, 1861, and recorded in the deed records of the county in the year 1863. One of these affidavits recited that, on or about the 12th day of October, 1849, the land in question was leased to one Ozias Lewis for the term of ninety-nine years, and that at the time of the execution of the lease, the affiant was president of the board of trustees of said section 16, which executed 'the lease, and that such affidavit was executed for the purpose of being admitted to record as evidence of said lease, and the making, signing, sealing, and delivery thereof to the said Ozias Lewis. The other affidavit was executed by Ozias Lewis, and was to the effect that on or about the 12th day of October, 1849, the board of trustees of said sixteenth section leased to him a portion ‘thereof, which includes the land here involved, and that such affidavit was executed in pursuance of the statute, as evidence of the execution of said lease. These two affidavits were originally executed and recorded in pursuance of, and substantially in the form prescribed by, chapter 371, Laws of 1858, which is an act entitled, “An Act further to remedy the evils occasioned by the burning of the courthouse of Attala County.” Section 7 of this act reads, in part, as follows:

“Be it. further enacted, That in all instances where original deeds may have been destroyed by fire, or are supposed to have been so destroyed, in the burning of the court-house of said county, which deeds conveyed lands lying in said county, it shall be lawful for the grantee, or *180 other person interested in the preservation of the evidence of said deed, to make affidavit of the execution of such deed, distinctly stating the date or about the date of its execution, and by whom executed, and upon what consideration and what land was conveyed by it, which 'affidavit may be subscribed and sworn to before any person now authorized by law to administer oaths in this State, and shall be substantially in the following -form, to-wit: (Form set out.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 So. 346, 170 Miss. 169, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lord-v-city-of-kosciusko-miss-1934.