Sharpleigh v. Surdam

21 F. Cas. 1173, 1 Flip. 472, 11 West. Jur. 203, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1804
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 15, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 F. Cas. 1173 (Sharpleigh v. Surdam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharpleigh v. Surdam, 21 F. Cas. 1173, 1 Flip. 472, 11 West. Jur. 203, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1804 (circtwdtn 1876).

Opinion

EMMONS, Circuit Judge.

In all the cases where the complainants are in possession, judgments already rendered in the federal courts fully sustain the jurisdiction. In Gilman v. Sheboygan, 2 Black [67 U. S.] 510; Slater v. Maxwell, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 268; Dows v. City of Chicago, 11 Wall. [78 U. S.] 108. and the New York, Virginia, and Illinois cases, cited and approved in them, the irregularity complained' of did not appear on the face of the proceedings, but extrinsic evidence was necessary to show it. When the deed threatened or executed is made evidence by the statute, and the subject of the tax and suit is real estate, equity will interfere. The rule is more extensive, but the part applicable here alone is noticed. The New York, Virginia and Illinois cases approved by the supreme court, as explained and since applied in the courts which pronounced them, go quite beyond the necessities of those now before us where the defendants are out of possession. See Hanlon v. Supervisors of Westchester, 57 Barb. 383; Crooke v. Andrews, 40 N. Y. 547. Those where they have entered and retain possession under their titles demand a different remedy. The Orton v. Smith. 18 How. [50 U. S.] 263, announces the familiar rule that in order to authorize a court of equity i« inieifere in reference to an asserted right to real estate, the complainant must be in possession, unless there is ground of fraud, accident, mistake, discovery, multiplicity of suits, irreparable mischief, or other ground of equitable jurisdiction. In the numerous cases cited for the complainants, generalities may be found seemingly covering the cases where complainant is not in possession. But all must be referred to the circumstances in reference to which they are announced. Thus read, they require possession in all instances where there is not some other element of equitable cognizance. Still, in actual practice, the courts, desiring to afford relief, have seized on so many and so slight circumstances to take cases out of the old rule., that they will not enjoin a mere trespass where there is ample remedy at law. As the precedents now stand, there are few exceptions [1174]*1174in practice to the rule that a court Trill inquire into the validity of a tax sale which the defendant refuses to prosecute, and which he holds over the head of a complainant as a cloud upon his title. There is no necessity for this remedy where the owner is out of possession and may bring ejectment where there are no special circumstances of equitable relief. We approve of the rule in Blackwood v. Van Vleet. 11 Mich. 252, and similar cases.

The language in Slater v. Maxwell, 6 Wall. [73 U. S.] 208. is quite capable of an interpretation, that, in all cases where extrinsic evidence is necessary to show the invalidity of proceedings, the owner may go into equity, and that it is only where proceedings are void on their face that the remedy is wholly at law. This is so at war with what we deem well settled principles in this department of the law, that we think no such meaning should be imputed to the court.

Substantially, it is indifferent upon which side of a court having jurisdiction of the subject and the parties, its decree is valid when collaterally questioned, and both being willing to accept its judgment, a party shall proceed. But the supreme court have not so treated it. As if it were a question of power and jurisdiction in a plenary sense, it will sua sponte dismiss proceedings in a court of last resort, if a majority of that tribunal deem tlie case one more fit for the law side than the equity side of the court. See Noonan v. Bee, 2 Black [67 U. S.] 509, and Hipp v. Babin. 19 How. [60 U. S.] 271, and other cases in that court. Booking to the vast number of irreconcilable and conflicting judgments in reference to jurisdiction at law and in equity in all its departments, such a rule ought to bo corrected by legislation. We have no doubt of the jurisdiction in this case.

The sixth section of the act of 1862 (12 Stat. 423) directs the commissioners to enter upon their duties whenever the commanding general of the forces of the United States entering into any insurrectionary state or district shall have established the military authority “throughout any parish or district or county of the same.”

It is insisted that the authority was not so established throughout the county in which the city of Memphis is situated, and that the occupation of the city alone is not sufficient lo authorize the assessment and sale of this land for taxes. We do not go over the conflicting testimony in reference to the military situation, or deem it necessary to decide that the general orders of the commanding general will in all cases conclusively determine the establishment of military authority within the lines described in them. We can conceive of cases where such a rule would work unjust results. The word “district” is used in this section not necessarily to designate any civil division in the state occupied, but as synonymous with "region,” “section of country,” or “locality occupied.” The same word is used in describing the whole territory into which the commanding general enters, and the subjugation of parts of which will authorize the tax. Within the nomenclature of the law there is necessarily an insurrectionary district, the whole of which need not be occupied in order to justify the tax. The statute so provides in express terms. We know of no civil divisions in the insurrec-tionary states where there were districts within districts. But this law declares that where the commanding general enters into any state or district, and within it establishes the authority throughout any parish or county, the tax may be collected. Within this law the occupation of the entire city of Memphis, having a distinct municipal organization, is a taxing district. It is not a parish or a county; but both the title and the reason of the law show that distinct political divisions and tax districts are contemplated by it. This is the most familiar phrase in the nomenclature of the tax laws of the whole nation. Its common use and application has no reference to the statutory or constitutional names of civil divisions for other political purposes. “Taxing district” is a phrase long known in our elementary treatises, judicial discussions, and statutory enactments, to describe the territory or region into which, for the purpose of assessment merely, a state, county, town, or other political district, is divided; and without going further and saying what we think true, viz.: that a region of territory permanently subdued, although parts of several political divisions in a state might constitute a district under this law, we are quite clear that a whole city, municipality, town, or other civil division, for the purposes of government and taxation, may do so, although not in the statutes of the state before known by the name of “parish, district or county.” The exigency in which the assessment became lawful, we have no doubt existed in this ease. Wayne Co. v. City of Detroit, 17 Mich. 390; Attorney General v. Supervisors of St. Clair, 11 Mich. 63, and kindred cases, although not very applicable so far as the facts are concerned, are instances where the words of laws have been extended to include civil divisions known in the constitution and laws by other names.

The 1st section of the act (12 Stat. 422) provides that, when in any state rebellion shall prevent the collection of the tax, the land shall be charged with a penalty of fifty per cent, in addition to the assessment. The 3d section authorizes owners within sixty days after the assessment, to redeem on paying the tax.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Cas. 1173, 1 Flip. 472, 11 West. Jur. 203, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpleigh-v-surdam-circtwdtn-1876.