Mathers v. Bull

6 Ohio N.P. 45
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedJuly 1, 1898
DocketNo. 113,766; No. 113,770; No. 113,771
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Ohio N.P. 45 (Mathers v. Bull) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathers v. Bull, 6 Ohio N.P. 45 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

SPIEGEL, J.

These three suits were brought by plaintiffs May 14, 1898, for the purpose of quieting their title to lands sold at delinquent tax sale on February 1, 1897, by the County Treasurer, to J. E. Bull, plaintiffs alleging that said tax sale was illegal for numerous reasons stated in said petitions. Numerous preliminary skirmishes were had, the defendant denying his ownership of said tax certificates, until the case was finally tried November 17, 1898.

The chief question involved in this case has narrowed down to the single proposition : Was the sale of delinquent lands, made by the treasurer of Hamilton county on the first Monday of February, 1897, a legal sale, or not? The answer to this query depends upon the construction to be given to sections 2864 and 2870-of the Revised Statutes of our State.

The first section named originally provided that each county auditor should cause the list of delinquent land in his-county to be published weekly for two weeks between the 20th day of December and the third Tuesday in January next ensuing; and attached to this section was the form of the notice to be published, stating, among other things, that the county treasurer would sell said delinquent land at the court-house on the third Tuesday of January.

Section 2870 originally provided that the county treasurer or his deputy should attend at the court-house on the third Tuesday in January, and then and there proceed to sell.

On April 18, 1892, (vol. 89, O. L., p. 395) the general assembly amended section 2864 by inserting: “Except in counties containing a city of the second grade of the first class, (Cleveland) in which such list shall be published between the 20th day of December and the first Tuesday in February;” did not amend “the notice attached to said section, which still read that said lands would be sold by the county treasurer on the third Tuesday of January next; but proceeded further to amend section 2870 by inserting a provision that in counties containing a city of the second grade of the first class, (Cleveland) the sale of lands should begin on the first Tuesday of February.

Section 2870 has remained thus to this day.

On February 9, 1893, section 2864 was again amended (90 O. L., p. 26), changing “Except in counties containing a city of the second grade of the first class in which such list shall be published between the twentieth day of December and the first Tuesday in February” to “except in counties containing a city of the first grade of the first class tCincinnati), in which such Iistshall be published between the 20th day of December and the first Monday in February,” again leaving the notice unchanged.

On January 10, 1894, section 2864 was again amended (91 O. L., p. 1) by changing a city of the first grade of the first class to “except in counties containing a city of the first or second grade of the first class”, thus including Cincinnati and Cleveland in the excepted classes, and again leaving the notice unchanged, and leaving unchanged in both the latter amendments substituting and. including Cincinnati in section 2864, the section 2870, which always provided, since the-amendment of 1892, (vol. 89), “that in counties containing a city of the second [46]*46grade of the first class, (Cleveland) the sale of lands shall begin on the first Tuesday of February,” entirely omitting Cincinnati, and making the beginning of the sale in the excepted class not the first Monday, but the first Tuesday of February.

:“.That we have to do here with a piece of slovenly law-making, such as the amendment of the attachment law last winter, goes without doubt, and the court, by reason thereof is confronted with the problem of construing a law in which every tax payer is vitally interested.

Two forms of construction are known to the law, — a liberal construction, and a strict construction. Two classes of statutes are liberally construed, — remedial statutes, and statutes which conserve the public good or the general welfare. But penal statutes have always been strictly construed. And by strict construction is meant a close and conservative adheranee to the literal or textual interpretation. A remedial statute, not clear as to any proposed application, admits of resort to many rules of construction to determine what the courts are authorized to assume is ¡The meaning and intention of the law maker; but a statute which must, on account of its suoject or nature, be construed strictly, must be read without expansion beyond its letter, without recourse to any such rules; it is to be confined to such subjects or applications as are obviously within its terms and purpose. This is the rule laid down by all modern text writers, and approved by our best courts.

Keeping this in view,a number of citations urged upon the court by counsel, will be found to be applicable to cases within the rule of liberal construction, and not of strict construction, and will be found not to be applicable to this case, if the subject matter of the laws to be construed, to-wit: Delinquent tax sales, place them within the category of penal statutes.

Counsel for defendant has cited Judge Cooley upon this question, and I can do no better than repeat what this eminent jurist has said upon this question:

“The general rules of interpretation require this in the case of statutes which may divest one of his freehold by proceedings not in the ordinary sense judicial, and to which he is only an enforced party. It is thought to be only reasonable to intend that the legislature, in making provision for such proceedings, would take unusual care to make use of terms which would plainly express its meaning, in order that ministerial officers might not be left in doubt in the exercise of unusual powers, and that the citizen might know exactly what were his duties and liabilities. A strict construction in such cases is reasonable, because presumptively the legislature has given in plain terms all the power it has intended should be exercised. It has been very generally supposed that the like strict construction was reasonable in the case of tax laws. Mr. Dwarris in his treatise on Statutes has the following remarks:
“Statutes made for the advancement of trade and commerce, and to regulate the conduct of merchants, ought to be perfectly clear and intelligible to persons of their description. By the use of ambiguous clauses in laws of that sort, the legislature would be laying a snare for the subject, and a construction which conveys such an imputation ought never to be adopted. Judges, therefore, where clauses are obscure, will lean against forfeitures, leaving it to the legislature to correct the evil, if there be any.’ ”

This rule thus laid down by the most eminent authority, has been followed by all writers, and adopted by the courts of nearly every state. As the court says in Dean v. Charlton, (27 Wis., 522):

“A due regard for individual rights and the plainest principles of justice requires that taxing statutes shall have only the effect which the legislature clearly intended; in .construing them all reasonable doubts as to such intent should be resolved in favor of the citizen.”

The same rule has ben laid down by our Supreme Court. In Woodward v. Sloan, 27 Ohio St., 592, the court says:

“Lands cannot be claimed as forfeited to the state for non-payment of taxes without a strict compliance with the statutes authorizing the forfeiture.”

See further Magruder v. Esmay, 35 Ohio St., 221.

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Related

Dean v. Charlton
27 Wis. 522 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1871)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Ohio N.P. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathers-v-bull-ohctcomplhamilt-1898.