Recker v. Dupuy

108 So. 782, 161 La. 392, 1926 La. LEXIS 2070
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 3, 1926
DocketNo. 27327.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 108 So. 782 (Recker v. Dupuy) 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
Recker v. Dupuy, 108 So. 782, 161 La. 392, 1926 La. LEXIS 2070 (La. 1926).

Opinion

OVERTON, J.

J. W. Murrell, on January 28, 1920, sold certain land in the town of Mánden, consisting of approximately 65 acres, to A. W. Recker for $9,500 cash. This deed was filed for record on February 17,1920. On June 19, 1920, Recker sold an undivided one-half interest in approximately 39% acres of said land to H. O. Byrd.

As Murrell was the owner of record of all of said land on January 1,1920, it was assessed-to him, under the law, for the taxes of 1920. *385 Murrell refused to pay the taxes for the reason that he was no longer the owner of the land. The sheriff and tax collector advertised the entire 65 acres for sale in the name of.J. W. Murrell as owner, in whose name it was assessed, for the taxes due the state and parish thereon, which, together with costs, amounted to $259.16, and on September 17, 1921, the day of sale, adjudicated said property to Alberta Glass, less a part thereof previously sold by Byrd and Recker. The quantity adjudicated to Glass consisted of about 40 acres, more or less.

The town of Minden,' through its marshal and tax collector, also advertised the 65 acres for sale in the name of Murrell, as owner, for taxes due it, and on October 8, 1921, adjudicated the entire tract to Glass for the taxes, interest, and costs due thereon, which amounted to $139.65.

As H. O. Byrd, by virtue of the deed to him by Recker, was, on January 1, 1921, the owner of record of an undivided one-half interest of a part of said 65 acres, or, as fixed by the assessor, of 19Y2 acres, said interest was assessed to him for the taxes of 1921, and the remaining undivided one-half interest, in the same part of the tract, was for the year 1921 assessed to A. W. Recker, he being the owner of record thereof on January 1st of that year. The taxes for the year 1921, on said interests, were not paid the state and parish by either Byrd or Recker, and the sheriff and tax collector therefore advertised said interests for sale for those taxes, and on September 2, 1922, adjudicated the interest assessed to Byrd and also that assessed to Recker to J. L. Dupuy for the state and parish taxes due thereon. It does not appear, as relates to the taxes for the year 1921, what was done with the remaining 26 acres of the original tract of 65 acres acquired by Recker from Murrell.

By an act of sale passed in March, 1922, which was prior to the making of the last two tax sales mentioned, and before the year for redemption had elapsed on the first two sales, Glass sold to Dupuy all of the interest he had acquired by the first two sales, which necessarily included such interest as he may have acquired in the entire 65-acre tract by the sale made by the town of Minden to him, in the name of Murrell, as owner, for the taxes of 1920. Something over a year later Dupuy sold an undivided half interest in the land, described in the last two tax sales made, and included in the first two, to H. C. and A. S. Drew.

Byrd and Recker, the plaintiffs herein, did not exercise the right to redeem the property, but, after permitting the time for redemption to lapse, instituted the present suit against Dupuy and H. O. and A. S. Drew for the purpose of annulling the four tax sales mentioned, and of being decreed the owners of that part of the 65-acre tract conveyed by the second two tax sales mentioned, and included in the first two, on the theory that they are owners in indivisión of said part consisting of approximately 39% acres, and that said tax sales are null and void.

One of the grounds alleged for annulling the tax sales is that in not one of them was any notice of delinquency and of intention to sell given to plaintiffs, who were the owners of the property at the time of the sales.

As relates to the tax sale for the state and parish taxes for 1920, made by the sheriff and tax collector, and as relates to the sale for municipal taxes for the same year, made by the town of Minden, the only notice of delinquency and of intention to sell given by the state and parish and by the municipality was given to Murrell, in whose name the property was assessed. The Constitution requires that notice be given to the delinquent in the manner prescribed by law, by which is meant the delinquent owner, who is owner, as appears from the conveyance records, at the time the notice is required to be given without reference to who may have been owner when the assessment was made. *397 Const. § 11, art. 10. Such was the interpretation given a similar provision contained in article 210 of the Constitution of 1879, and article 233 of the Constitutions of 1898 and 3913. Geddes v. Cunningham, 104 La. 313, 29 So. 138; Tensas Delta Land Co. v. Sholars, 105 La. 357, 29 So. 908; Pitre v. Schleslinger, 110 La. 234, 34 So. 425; Wilkerson v. Wyche, 158 La. 596, 104 So. 381. Since, therefore, although the property was correctly assessed in the name of Murrell, as owner, for the taxes of 1920, for he was owner on the 1st day of January of that year, and the law gives its sanction to the assessment of property in the name of the one who is owner on the 1st of January' of the year in which the assessment is made, yet, as Murrell ceased to be owner shortly thereafter, and was not owner when the taxes became delinquent and the time arrived to give notice of delinquency and of intention to sell, which time for notice did not arrive until January 2, 1921 (Act 170 of 1898, § 50), it follows that the notice to Murrell was not a compliance with the Constitution, and was therefore ineffectual. At that time, and when the notice was given, Byrd and Becker were the owners of record-of the property, and had been for some months. They were entitled to notice. The evidence discloses, however, that they were given none. •

The town of Minden did not sell the property for the taxes of 1921, but, as we have seen, the sheriff and tax collector sold approximately 39 acres of it to Dupuy for the state and parish taxes of that year, 19% of said acres as the property of Byi-d, and the remaining 19% acres as the property of Becker, under assessments made in the name of each. As relates to these sales, the only evidence of the giving of notice of delinquency and of intention to sell is the following: In the procés verbal of the sale made of the property assessed to Byrd, the sheriff and tax collector recites that notice was mailed to Byrd, and, in the procés verbal of the sale made of the property assessed to Becker, a similar recital is made as to Becker, but the sheriff does not say in either instance to what address the notice was mailed. But the evidence aliunde the procés verbal shows that no notice whatever was mailed either to Byrd or Becker notifying them of the intention to sell for the taxes of 1921, and that the only notice attempted to be given either of them, or any one else, for that year, was a notice by publication in the official journal as for nonresident owners whose addresses are unknown. Byrd and Becker were both nonresidents, but the address of each could have been easily ascertained. The deed by which Becker sold an undivided interest in the land to Byrd, and under which the property was assessed as belonging to Becker and to Byrd, was of record in the conveyance books of the parish when the time arrived to send the notices of delinquency. This deed shows that the address of Becker and of Byrd was St. Louis, Mo.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 782, 161 La. 392, 1926 La. LEXIS 2070, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/recker-v-dupuy-la-1926.