Nebraska-Tensas Co. v. Moritz

102 So. 195, 157 La. 174, 1924 La. LEXIS 2192
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 17, 1924
DocketNo. 24265.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 102 So. 195 (Nebraska-Tensas Co. v. Moritz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska-Tensas Co. v. Moritz, 102 So. 195, 157 La. 174, 1924 La. LEXIS 2192 (La. 1924).

Opinions

THOMPSON, J.

This is a suit to annul a tax sale of a 600-acre tract of land situated in Concordia parish, and known as the Ross and Marks plantation.

The land was sold by the tax collector in 1917 for the taxes of 1916 assessed against the Nebraska-Tensas Company as owner. The defendant, Charles Moritz, was the purchaser at said sale. The sale is attacked for a number of reasons set forth in the original and four amended or supplemental petitions, all of which in an elaborate and well-considered opinion of the trial judge were disposed of adversely to the plaintiff, and the plaintiff’s suit was dismissed.

In this court all of the alleged grounds of nullity are abandoned, except two, viz.:

(1) That the property was assessed and sold in globo and in confusion with the property of other persons; and (2) that, the property being easily susceptible of division, the tax collector offered and sold the whole to the highest bidder for what it would bring without having previously offered a less quantity than the whole. The suit was filed less than three years from the registry of the tax deed, hence there is no question of prescription.

It appears that in 1860 Henry Marks and Janies Ross purchased a tract of land containing 1081 acres, and thereafter this tract by mesne conveyances, designating the land as Ross and Marks tract or plantation, passed to J. B. Sullivan. In 1904 Sullivan sold a part of the Marks and Ross plantation containing 600 acres under a specific description to the plaintiff, the Nebraska-Tensas Company. The balance of the original Ross and Marks tract passed by sequent conveyances to the Dunbarton planting Company, and became a part of the Dunbarton plantation, and was thereafter generally accepted and recognized as forming a part of that plantation.

The 600 acres sold to the plaintiff retained the name of “Ross & Marks place,” and was so designated in the assessment for the years succeeding plaintiff’s purchase until sold at tax sale to the defendant in 1917.

The description on the assessment roll for 1916 being the same as that for previous years is as follows:

“Nebraska-Tensas Co., Ward 8, No. of acres 600. Description of lands: Ross & Marks — E. % of W. % of S. 'E. }4, section 30; S. W. %, section 29; N. E. % and fract. N. y2 of N. W. %, E. y2 of S. W. %, E. ■y2 of N. W. %, section 31, T. 9, R. 8, E. % and N. W. %, section 6, T. 8, R. 8.”

It is admitted that the foregoing description by subdivisions includes land which forms no part of the Ross & Marks place, and which was not owned by the plaintiff company, and it is also admitted that lands were omitted from the specific description which were owned by the plaintiff, and constituted a part of the Ross & Marks place. The assessment on its’ face also shows a double description in several instances. Like errors in the specific description by subdivisions were made in the advertisement and in the tax deed, but the name by which the place was known, the number of acres, and tlie number of the ward in which the land is situated, were given in the advertisement and tax deed the same as in the assessment.

It also appears that the tax debtor owned no land in Concordia parish except the 600 acres known as the Ross & Marks place.

*177 If the attempted description of the plantation by subdivisions had been omitted from the assessment, there could be no doubt that the assessment otherwise would have been a perfectly legal and valid assessment, and would have furnished a sufficient basis for a legal tax sale. For, as already stated, the assessment gave the name of the true owner; the name by which the plantation was generally known, and the name by which plaintiff purchased, the number of acres comprising said place as designated in plaintiff’s deed and all previous assessments since plaintiff’s acquisition, and the number of the ward of the parish in which the land is located. All of which indicia, aided and supported by proof of the. fact that the tax debtor owned no other lands in Concordia parish, was a sufficient description to identify the land and to answer every requirement of the law.

Act 140 of 1890 provides that, for the purpose of taxation and tax sales, it shall be sufficient to assess and describe all property according to such description as will reasonably identify the property assessed, such as designating the tract or lot by the name by which it is commonly known, or by the dimensions, or description, or name given in the act translating the ownership thereof, or by such other further description as may furnish the means of reasonable identification.

The act further provides:

“Section 8. * * * That no assessment or tax sale shall be set aside or annulled for any error in description or measurement of the property assessed, in the name of the owner, provided the property assessed or sold can be reasonably identified.
“Section 4. * * * 'That the tax,sale shall convey and the purchaser shall take the entirety of the property, neither more or less, intended to be assessed and sold and such as it was owned by the delinquent taxpayer, regardless of any error in the dimensions or description of the property assessed and sold.”

A quite similar assessment was considered in the case of the Board of Commissioners v. Concordia Land & Timber Co., 141 La. 265, 74 So. 928, and the court on rehearing had this to say:

“Our opinion is that, for the purpose of a valid assessment and sale for taxes, the description of the land, stating the name of its owner, the name by which the tract was generally known, the names of its former owners, the ward in which it was situated, and its area, within a fraction of an acre, was a sufficient description to. identify the land belonging to-the party in whose name it was assessed.”

In view of the statute of 1890 and the foregoing decision, and others along the same line, which it is unnecessary to referió, we think it is clear that the description in the assessment and in the deed was sufficient to furnish all means of a ready and easy identification of the property intended' to be assessed and sold. The evidence in-the record shows that the defendant, shortly after his purchase at tax sale, took actual possession of the plantation and was in such possession when this suit was filed, and this fact is admitted in paragraph 8 of plaintiff’s third amended petition. This-taking of possession clearly indicates that the description in the assessment and deed furnished the means of identification. Weber v. Martinez, 125 La. 668, 51 So. 679.

The question then arises: Did the erroneous inclusion in that part of the assessment describing the land by subdivisions of lands belonging to other persons and not forming a part of the plantation intended to be assessed, strike with nullity the entire assessment and render void the tax sale-based on that assessment?

There, can hardly be any doubt of the-invalidity of an assessment as a basis for a valid tax sale, when two or more separate- and distinct tracts of land belonging to different owners are brought together and merged into one -assessment and sold in *179 globo.

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Bluebook (online)
102 So. 195, 157 La. 174, 1924 La. LEXIS 2192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-tensas-co-v-moritz-la-1924.