Rawlings v. Ladner

165 So. 427, 174 Miss. 611, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 203
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1936
DocketNo. 32058.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 165 So. 427 (Rawlings v. Ladner) 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
Rawlings v. Ladner, 165 So. 427, 174 Miss. 611, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 203 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

MeGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Immediately following the July, 1930, equalization meeting of the hoard of supervisors of Forrest county, the hoard caused the following newspaper notice to he given as to the tax assessment rolls, to-wit:

*618 ‘ ‘ To the Taxpayers of Forrest County, Mississippi.
“You will please take notice that the assessments of real and personal property on the rolls for 1930 have been changed ánd corrected by this Board so as to comply with the laws of this State and that said revised rolls are now open for examination and that any objection to any assessments contained in said revised rolls must be made in writing and filed with the clerk of this Board on or before the first Monday of August, 1930, at his office in the courthouse of said county, and that any and all assessments to which no objection is then and there made will be made final. This the 23rd day of July, 1930”— which notice was signed “The Board of'Supervisors of Forrest County, by M. T. Draughon, Clerk of said Board.”

Thereafter, at the August, 1930, meeting of the board of supervisors, the assessment rolls were duly approved, and on April 6, 1931, the county and state ad valorem taxes on the one thousand two hundred eighty acres of land assessed to the Hinton Bros. Lumber Company and included in said assessment rolls not having paid, the tax collector sold the land, and the First National Bank of Lumberton, of which the appellant is the receiver, became the purchaser, and, after the lapse of two ye'ars following the date of sale, this suit was begun to confirm the tax title acquired under said tax sale. Hinton Bros. Lumber Company filed no answer, and a decree pro confesso was taken, entered against it, and final decree entered confirming appellant’s title as to all lands except the eighty acres involved in this appeal. J. W. Ladner appeared and claimed title to eighty acres of the, land involved by virtue of a deed executed after the purchase thereof, at the tax sale, by the bank, and resisted the confirmation of the title on the ground that the foregoing notice to the taxpayers did not comply with the applicable statutes, and that all subsequent proceedings of the board qf supervisors thereon were void; and like *619 wise the deed to the lands executed by the chancery clerk was null and void.

The court below sustained the contention of Ladner as to the eighty acres of land, and declined to confirm the complainant’s title thereto. The appeal is prosecuted from the decree in favor of Ladner as to the eighty acres of land claimed by him.

It is conceded that all the proceedings of the board of supervisors are regulan, and no point is made as against the deed and the several orders of the board of supervisors, except as to the notice which we have hereinabove set forth.

The appellee, Ladner, contends that the tax deed relied upon by the appellant is void because of two alleged fatal defects in the above notice to the taxpayers as follows: (a) Because the notice is addressed to the taxpayers of Forrest county, and that it should have been, under the controlling statute, addressed to the public, and not to the'taxpayers; and (b) that the stipulation in the notice that any objection to any assessment must be made in writing and filed with the clerk of the board on or before the first Monday in August, 1930, at his office in the courthouse of said county, and all assessments not objected to will be made final, rendered the notice void because an objecting taxpayer is required so to do on or before the first Monday of August, 1930, and that under the statute, an objection might be made on any day of the August term antecedent to the entry, by the board of supervisors, of its final order approving the assessment rolls.

The statute under which the above notice was 'given is section 3162, Code 1930, which reads as follows: “Supervisors to equalise rolls—notice to taxpayers.—The board of supervisors shall immediately at the July meeting proceed to equalize such rolls and shall complete such equalization at least ten days before the August meeting, and .shall immediately by newspaper publication notify the *620 public that such rolls so equalized are ready for inspection and examination. In counties having two judicial districts the board shall by order designate on what days during August it will begin in each of the two districts upon its hearing of objections, and these days shall be named in the said notice, and the board shall be authorized to hold its sessions in the two districts respectively as designated in the order aforesaid. The foregoing provision with reference to counties with two judicial districts shall apply to any subsequent meetings whereof notice to taxpayers is necessary to be given.” (Italics ours.)

Section 3164 empowers the board to make corrections and to enter an order approving the assessments with or without corrections. Section 3165 provides that the board of supervisors shall hold a meeting on the first Monday of August to hear objections to assessment, and shall sit from day to day until the assessments have been disposed of. Section 3166 provides that a person dissatisfied with the assessment may, at such August meeting, present objections in writing, and that persons failing to file such written objections shall be precluded from questioning its validity, except minors and persons non compos mentis.

The notice required to be given by section 3162 is essential and jurisdictional. Henderson Molpus Co. v. Gammill, 149 Miss. 576, 115 So. 716.

The statute, as to the notice given, must be strictly complied with. Cameron et al. v. Whittington et al., 120 Miss. 595, 82 So. 311, and Smythe v. Whitehead, 133 Miss. 184, 97 So. 529, in which this court held that, under the statute (section 4303, Code 1906) requiring the tax assessor to publish notice in a newspaper, a notice to the taxpayers signed and approved by the clerk of the board of supervisors was insufficient, and the proceedings thereunder were void.

1. It is the precise contention of the appellee in the *621 case at bar that the notice set forth above should have been addressed to the public, and that the statute so requires.

It is quite evident, when we consider the purpose of the Legislature in the enactment of section 3162, that appellee’s contention is without merit. It may be conceded, for the purpose of the argument, that the notice to taxpayers would not necessarily include the public. Black’s Law Dictionary, p. 1459, defines the word “public” as the “Whole body politic,'or the aggregate of the citizens of a state, district or municipality.” It would seem, therefore, that the intention of the Legislature by requiring this notice was to provide steps in a proceeding toward the rendition of a judgment against the taxpayers whose lands were subject to taxation under existing revenue laws. The headnote to this statute evinces its intention that it is a notice to the taxpayers.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baker v. State
327 So. 2d 288 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1976)
Gambrill v. Gulf States Creosoting Co.
62 So. 2d 772 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1953)
Berryhill v. Johnston
39 So. 2d 530 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Beard v. Stanley
39 So. 2d 317 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Simpson v. Ricketts
186 So. 318 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 So. 427, 174 Miss. 611, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rawlings-v-ladner-miss-1936.