Shackelford v. McGlashan

202 P. 690, 27 N.M. 454
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1921
DocketNo. 2561
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 202 P. 690 (Shackelford v. McGlashan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shackelford v. McGlashan, 202 P. 690, 27 N.M. 454 (N.M. 1921).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

DAVIS, J.

This is a proceeding to cancel a tax deed and subsequent conveyances based upon it. It was decided by the trial court upon a demurrer alleging that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, this demurrer being sustained. The facts are therefore admitted, and we state them from the complaint. On January 1, 1908, John Schroeder was the owner of 160 acres of land described as the S. W. 1/4, S. 17, Tp. 9 N., R. 3 E., N. M. P. M., the land being located in Ber-nalillo county. This was the only 160-acre tract which he owned at that time. For the year 1908 Schroeder made a return for taxation purposes in Bernalillo county in which he included this 160 acres of land, but through inadvertence, error, and mistake he incorrectly described the land, the description set out in his tax schedule, literally read, being as follows:

tp. 7
Sec. Tp. Range No. Acres
Precinct N. 1 SW1^ 17 5E 160

This description was intended by Schroeder to identify and describe the 160 acres which he owned and was a bona fide attempt on his part to comply with the law.

The assessor in making up the rolls for the year 1908 did not copy exactly the return by Schroeder, but entered an assessment against him for the “SW1/4, Sec.-, Tp. 17, R. 5 E.” Under this assessment Schroeder paid the taxes levied, intending thereby to pay the taxes upon the 160 acres of land which he owned, and this payment was accepted by the treasurer of Bernalillo county.

The land described in this assessment would be located in Sandoval county, and not in Bernalillo county, in which the assessment was made.

For the year 1908 the assessor made an additional assessment against “unknown owners,” and there correctly described and assessed the lands owned by Schroeder as the “S. W. 1/4, Sec. 17, Tp. 9, R. 3 E.” Schroeder had no actual notice or knowledge of this assessment.

After Schroeder had paid the taxes under the assessment above set out, containing the incorrect description of his lands, the land was sold under the assessment to “unknown owners,” and such proceedings were had that the tax title thus instituted became vested in the defendant A. E. McGlashan under a tax deed from the county. Later McGlashan and his wife conveyed the land by warranty deed to D. V. Wardall, who, with his wife, and likewise by warranty deed, conveyed the premises to J. J. Weisendanger, one of the appellees here. The assessment to “unknown owners,” the sale made under it to McGlashan, and the subsequent conveyances to Weisendanger all appear to be regular.

The tax sale was made during the year 1909, and is therefore governed by the provisions of section 25, c. 22, Laws 1899, which has frequently been before this court, the latest case being Chisholm v. Bujac, 27 N. M. 375 202 Pac. 126, decided at this term. This section expressly permits a tax sale made under that law to be attacked on the ground that the tax had been paid before the sale. In this respect it is merely declaratory of the rule which would exist without it. Non-payment of the tax is an essential foundation for every tax sale.

The question in this case is whether payment of the tax has in fact been shown, or, in other words, whether payment under this assessment which improperly described the land was good payment on the land he owned. It is conceded that appellant intended by this payment to pay the tax on his land and believed that he was doing so. Since the treasurer of the county accepted the money, it must.be assumed that he understood it was payment on the same land, for he certainly would not knowingly accept the payment of taxes upon land-not within his county. We have, therefore, a case where the owner has paid money to the county as taxes on a certain piece of land, and the county has accepted it as payment on that land, although in fact the land was not properly described on the tax roll and can only be identified by proof of circumstances wholly apart from the roll itself.

The assessment under which this tax was paid was not a valid one. It would not have supported the tax sale based upon it. On the record presented to us the assessment to “unknown owners” was a valid assessment, and the tax sale based upon it was regular on its face. The conclusion that this assessment was valid necessarily follows from the decision of this court in Knight v. Fairless, 23 N. M. 479, 169 Pac. 312, in which this court held that an assessment of a specific piece of property to "unknown owners” could not be attacked by proof that the owner had attempted to include it in another assessment which did not describe it. We see nothing in the present record to differentiate that case from this one in that regard. But Knight v. Fair-less did not involve the question of the payment of the tax. Here we are determining whether the tax was in fact paid, not primarily whether the assessment to “unknown owners” was good, and upon that point the former case is not authority.

We are not presented with the issue as to whether payment may be shown to avoid a tax sale based upon a record which incorrectly shows the tax unpaid, nor as to whether payment under one assessment, valid on its face, will avoid a sale under another equally regular, a question which arises in the ordinary case of double assessment. The authorities on such questions are uniform to the effect that payment in fact may be shown, and there would seem to be little chance for argument to the contrary. Here the question is somewhat - different. We are determining whether payment under an assessment, invalid because it fails to describe the land sufficiently for identification, is good payment on the land intended to be assessed, so as to avoid a sale under another assessment with a proper description.

The primary purpose of every law for the enforcement of tax liens is to obtain payment of the tax. The end desired is the obtaining of the funds necessary for governmental purposes. If that payment has been obtained, the primary purpose of the law has been accomplished, and this is true whether or not payment is made with technical accuracy. While the law provides for a tax sale and allows a purchaser at such sale to acquire title, divesting the former owner, that is but a method by which the county obtains its funds. The owner of the land having failed to pay, the county obtains its money from another. Under our statutes the purchaser at such a sale is amply protected. If the sale is invalid for the reason that no tax is in fact due, he recovers back from the county the amount which he paid to it. If his sale is valid, he obtains under it property usually worth many times the amount which he pays. He has all to gain and nothing to lose. The remedy as against the owner of the land is a harsh one in any event, and to hold that, where he has in good faith attempted and intended to return his land and to pay the taxes upon it, he must nevertheless lose it because of a failure to obey the provision of law which says that his assessment must properly describe the land, is to lay down too severe a rule. While it is true that the result would come from his own fault, the forfeiture of his property, would be punishment far greater than the offense.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P. 690, 27 N.M. 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shackelford-v-mcglashan-nm-1921.