Millett v. Mullen

49 A. 871, 95 Me. 400, 1901 Me. LEXIS 49
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 A. 871 (Millett v. Mullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millett v. Mullen, 49 A. 871, 95 Me. 400, 1901 Me. LEXIS 49 (Me. 1901).

Opinion

Emery, J.

The demanded land is two specific parcels of two hundred acres, each outside of any organized municipality of any kind, but within a definite, surveyed and recognized sub-division of the territory of the state officially designated as “Township No. Three, Indian ■ Purchase, Penobscot county.” The action was begun December 21, 1897. The defendant deraigns title solely from a deed from the State land agent to William H. McCrillis, dated April 80, 1849, and' purporting to effectuate a sale made according to the statute 1848, ch. 65, of land in that township forfeited to the State for the non-payment of certain State taxes theretofore assessed and remaining unpaid. In the recitals of the proceedings under that statute, and in the deed itself, the only description of the subject matter thus sold and to be conveyed is, “ all the right, title and interest which the State of Maine has by virtue of such forfeiture in and to six thousand five hundred acres of land in Township Three, Indian Purchase in the County of Penobscot.” There were at that time, and now are, over twenty-three thousand acres in the township.

It has been repeatedly and uniformly held that such a sale or deed with such a description is utterly ineffectual to designate, or to pass any title to, any specific tract or acre in the township. Larrabee v. Hodgkins, 58 Maine, 412; Griffin v. Creppin, 60 Maine, 270; Moulton v. Egery, 75 Maine, 485; Skowhegan Savings Bank v. Parsons, 86 Maine, 514. The act of 1852, ch. 272, providing that the deed should “vest in the grantee all the interest of the state in the lands therein described and no more,” does not help the matter, for no lands are described in the deed or the notice of sale. It is still impossible to determine that the demanded lot is part of the 6500 acres said to have been sold, rather than of the 16,500 acres which were not sold. The defend[413]*413ant, therefore, has no title with which to resist even the least title which the plaintiff may prove. .

The defendant contends, however, that the plaintiff has not even the least title, since all the title under which he claims passed from his predecessors in title to the state more than twenty years before the date of his writ for non-payment of state taxes. This contention should be next considered, since, if it be sustained, the plaintiff fails even though the defendant has no title. Hewes v. Coombs, 84 Maine, 434.

It is claimed that the title was wholly forfeited to the State for the non-payment of the State tax of 1844 assessed March 21, 1844. The statute then in force is contained in R. S., 1841, ch. 14, §§ 1-9. It provided, — (1) that when a state tax was assessed by the legislature upon any township or tract of land not taxable by the assessors of any municipality,- the state treasurer should cause the assessment to be published in the State paper three weeks successively, the last publication to be within three months from the day the assessment was laid,— (2} that the land so taxed should be held liable to the State for the payment of the tax,— (3) that the owner might at any time within four years from the time of publishing the assessment redeem the land by paying into the treasury of the State the amount of the tax, etc. —and (4) that if the State tax so assessed and advertised was not so paid within the time named, then in such case, “the said township or tract shall be wholly forfeited and the title thereof shall vest in the State free and quit from, all claims by any former owner, and the same shall be held and owned by the State by a title which is hereby declared to be perfect and indefeasible.”

A state tax was assessed upon this township by the legislature by Act dated March 21,1844. Notice of this assessment was published by the state treasurer in accordance with the statute. The plaintiff and his predecessors in title have never paid any of that tax, nor have any persons for them. A large amount of the entire tax remained unpaid at the end of the four years from the time of the publishing. The land was then “ wholly forfeited” to the State.

[414]*414But on August 10, 1848, the legislature passed an act (ch. 65) providing: — (1) that the State Treasurer should within thirty days from that date publish a list of all tracts of land then forfeited to the State, and should thereafter annually on the first Monday of September publish a similar list of all tracts of land which may at that date have become forfeited,— (2) that any person having a legal interest in such tract so forfeited might discharge his interest from the tax and forfeiture by paying his proportion of the tax, interest and costs at any time before such list is published, or on or before the first day of March next after such publication,— (8) that immediately after said first day of March (viz, the March next after the publication) the Land Agent should advertise and sell the lands upon which taxes had not by that time been paid,— (4) that the Land Agent at any time before the land was thus sold should accept all taxes, interest and costs due on the land so advertised,— (5) in terms that “ tbe owner or owners of any township or tract of land sold under the provisions of this act shall have a right to redeem the same by paying the purchaser or his assigns the amount for which said township or tract was sold, with interest thei’eon at the rate of twenty per cent per annum, and the cost of reconveying the same at any time within one year from the time of sale,”' — -and (6) that the owner could collect of the State his share of the surplus proceeds of the sale, within three years after the sale. In 1852 was passed the Act already noted (ch. 272) providing that the State’s title in land described in the deed should pass to the grantee “ notwithstanding any irregularities in the notices, or failure to comply with the provision of the Act under which the sales were made.”

The contention of the defendant is, that the title at the end of the four years from the notice of the assessment of 1844, viz., in May, 1848, some months before the passage of the Act of 1848, was by operation of the statute completely transferred from the plaintiff’s predecessors to the State and became vested in the State by a “perfect and indefeasible title,” “free and quit from all claims of the former owners;” or if their entire title was not extinguished by the lapse of time under the statute of 1841, it was, [415]*415nevertheless, extinguished even under the Act of 1848, by the action of the State in undertaking to sell and convey its title, whether effectually or not. The plaintiff contends that the Act of 1848, ch. 65, amended the Act of 1841, and expressly covered lands already forfeited under that Act, and conferred upon the original owners a further right to redeem until the lapse of one year after a sale of the land had been effectually made under the amending statute, — that is, within one year after the State parted with its title. His argument is, that this right of redemption with which the former owner was thus endowed is a title to the land good against all the world except the State and its grantees, and that such title continues heritable and conveyable until the State cuts it off by such a sale and conveyance as will vest the State’s title in a purchaser.

It is a familiar principle that when a statute imposing or enforcing a tax or other burden on the citizen even in behalf of the State is fairly susceptible of more than one interpretation, the court will incline to the interpretation most favorable to the citizen. Partington v. Att’y Genl.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A. 871, 95 Me. 400, 1901 Me. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millett-v-mullen-me-1901.