Mundee v. Freeman

23 Fla. 529
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 Fla. 529 (Mundee v. Freeman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mundee v. Freeman, 23 Fla. 529 (Fla. 1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Raney

delivered the opinion of the court:

I. If Freeman’s mediate grantor, Harris, had a- valid tax title, there is no necessity to discuss the question of the title of the former by adverse possession for seven years under a claim of right and color of title ; still, we may remark, that we have been forced to a consideration of the ■ validity of the tax title by the serious doubts left in our minds, after careful study, as to Freeman having shown a title by such adverse possession.

The tax sale was made July 1st, 1872, for unpaid taxes assessed in the tax year of 1871. This sale was regulated by the act of February 29, 1872, (Chapter 1887,) entitled “ an act for the assessment and collection of revenue in [532]*532this State.” The assessment, however, was made under the Revenue Act of 1869, (Chapter 1713,) to which the act just mentioned was in effect an amendment, doing . away with certain of its provisions and substituting others in their place. .

■ The validity of the tax title is assailed upon the ground that the Collector of Revenue never received any warrant authorizing him to make sales for the collection of taxes', and also upon the ground that the land in question was never assessed or placed on the roll.

The 17th section of the Act of 1872, above referred to, provides a substantial form of a deed of land sold for taxes, and that this deed shall be prima fade evidence of the regularity of the proceedings from the valuation of the land by the assessor to the date of the deed inclusive and of the title of the purchaser; and the 20th section provides that no suit or proceeding shall be commenced by a former owner or claimant * * * to set aside any.deed made in pursuance of any sale of land for taxes, or against the grantee in such deed, his heirs or assigns or legal representatives to recover possession of said lands, unless such suit or proceedings be commenced within one year after the recording of the deed in the county where the lands lie, except upon the ground that the said lands were not subject to taxation, or that the taxes were paid or tendered together with the expenses chargable thereon before sale. There is-a saving clause as to persons under certain disabilities, but . the plaintiff, has not set up any disability.

The evidence as to the absence of an assessment and want of a warrant is the testimony of two witnesses—Bullock, introduced by the plaintiff, and Atkinson, by the defendant, and what is left of the tax roll of that year. Bullock was a deputy of the Olerk of the Circuit Court of Marion county at the time his deposition was taken in 1885. He [533]*533says of this tax roll, which was before him, that it is in the Clerk’s custody; that it has no warrant attached to it authorizing the Collector to collect the taxes, and that, (as we understand the witness to mean at this particular stage of his testimony) under the letter M neither the name of, nor any assessment to, the plaintiff appears in it. He further says all of the book does not appear to be present, but that a part of the assessments under letter A •seem to be gone; that it has no binding or covering on it; that the pages are not numbered ; that he cannot say positively that a part of the book is gone, but it seems to be; that its condition is very bad, the binding cords are out; that he thinks a number of pages might be out of the book, and he be unable to detect it; that four pages are disconnected, the binding is entirely loose, and in four disconnected parts; that all the assessments do not come in alphabetical order ; that the warrant to the Collector is usually placed on the last leaf of the book, but that it is hard to tell, which is the last leaf of this book ; that this warrant is usually placed on the leaf where there is no other •entry made ; that there is one leaf here on which no entry is made, and “ it appears that that was the last leaf in the book.” . “I have made a careful examination, and listing •of assessments appear,” he says, “ to be alphabetically ar ranged from A to Z, and in regular order.” This last •statement was made on his being hapded the book, and asked to examine the same and to testify on the point covered by his answer. Upon his attention being called to assessasments under the letter M, and being asked whetheror not it appears, from said book that all the assessments under said letter are there, he replies: “ I cannot say they are. They .are, with the exceptions of sonae names in the back of the book which appear to be irregular assessments.” When asked if any of the pages under the letter M were missing [534]*534he could tell it, he replies that he could not. The book, he says, is separated in two or more distinct pieces under the head of the letter M.

Manthalon Atkinson testifies that he was Tax Collector for Marion county, Florida, in 1871. The book here shown him purporting to be the Assessor’s book of 1871 is the book, or a part of it, from which he collected taxes for said county; it is not a complete book. The book had an outer binding or lid on it; knows this, because he never had one “.but that did ;” never recéived one that did not have a warrant; it contained a warrant either on the first or last part of it; knows he never collected taxes without a warrant; never sold land as Collector without a warrant; it was usually placed on the inuer first lid or the inner last lid of the book; the book now produced has not the lid on which the warrant was usually fastened ; never sold any land that was not enrolled on the tax»book ; if he did it was error ; did not do it; the book shows that part of it is gone. On cross-examination, he says he finds no land assessed to Alice Mundee; has examined the book at such places as her name would probably appear. From an examination of the book the assessments under the letter M seem to be formal, but “ I do not know that all the leaves are there;” is acquainted with the handwriting of James A. Harris in 1870 and 1871 ; the assessments in the back part of said book are in his handwriting; states “that there was a warrant to said book on the principle that he never received one without; but do not recollect as to this one in particular.” Redirect: “ Cannot tell whether or not one of the letter M pages is gone ; knows some of it is gone, two-thirds of it here.”

' The tax roll has been brought here with the transcript, and the condition is such as to entitle it to no weight as evidence of exactly what property was qnd what was not [535]*535upon it, in its original condition. It has no binding, its pages are nearly all separated from each other, and are not numbered. Even if it can be said that its condition is worse than when the witnesses were testifying, it is plain it was not then reliable evidence of what .assessments the roll originally contained, or that there were no assessments on the missing pages. The testimony is that one-third of the book is missing. Even though some system appears from the pages before us to have been observed in arranging the assessments alphabetically, it cannot be assumed from this either that the name of the plaintiff was not on any of the missing pages with this land assessed against it, or that it was not assessed as unknown lands, which would seem to have been a proper assessment, as much in the record bearing on the point indicates that the land was “ unoccupied ” up to a period after Harris purchased it at the tax sale. It is no better evidence, even if as good, that there was no warrant annexed to it.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Fla. 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mundee-v-freeman-fla-1887.