Sibley v. Smith

2 Mich. 486
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 2 Mich. 486 (Sibley v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sibley v. Smith, 2 Mich. 486 (Mich. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court, Wing, P. J.

An action of ejectment was commenced in the Circuit Court for the county of Calhoun, to recover the possession of the east half of the. south west quarter of section twenty-four, township three south, of range seven west. •

At the term at which the canse was to have been tried, the parties agreed upon a case, which was to be reserved for the opinion of this Court, and which was done by the Circuit Judge.

The case supposes the plaintiff to have.offered in evidence, the record of a deed, in the register’s office in the county of Calhoun, of the lands described in the declaration, executed by the Auditor General to the grantor of the plaintiff.

[488]*488To this the defendants made three objections, as follows:

1. A proper foundation for this evidence has not been laid — the plaintiff should prove all the prior proceedings-up to, and including the sale; without which, the deed|s not evidence;

2. The deed does not recite any such proceedings;

3. The deed on its face, shows that the sale was void, as no mom than forty acres could be sold, to satisfy the tax.

It appears from the proceedings and deed, that the taxes, for the nonpayment of which, the land described in the deed was sold, were assessed -in the year 1841, under the provisions of title five of the R. S. of 1838, and the amendments thereto, enacted in 1839, 1840, and 1841. The tax was returned to the Auditor General’s office, as delinquent, between the months of February and April, of 1842.

On the 16th of April, 1842, an act was passed, which changed the previously existing system for the assessment and collection of taxes. The 66 th section of that act repeals chapters two, three, four, and five of part first, title five of the R. S. of 1838, leaving chapter six of that title to remain in force; but tbenew law, (Seel 67, page 101,) expressly provides that the same proceedings shall be had on taxes then returned to the Auditor General, and which should remain unpaid, as though the chapters above named had not been repealed. The repealing clause provides that it shall not affect any act done, or right accrued, &c., before the act takes effect.

On the 18th of March, 1843, a new system, similar in some respects to that contained in the revised statutes of 1838, was enacted by the Legislature, and took effect, providing for the assessment, collection, return, advertisement, and sale of delinquent taxes.

By the 74th section of that act, provision is made for returns to the Auditor General by the county treasurers, of taxes for the year 1841 remaining unpaid, and which had not been returned in 1842, but that provision is not applicable to taxes of 1841 which were returned in 1842. The 70fch section provides that '“lands which have been or shall be returned as above provided, for taxes of 1841 and 1842, and those now.in tbe office of the Auditor General for taxes of 1841, on which the taxes, interest, and charges shall remain unpaid, or not to he charged back to the proper county, by the first day of June [489]*489eighteen hundred and forty-four, shall he advertised, and if not paid by the first Monday in October, succeeding, shall be sold at the same time and in the same manner as herein provided for the taxes of eighteen hundred and forty-three, and in all respects with the lihe effect, and shall be subject to redemption and payment of surplus, in hice manner as other lands liable to be sold on the first Monday in October, 1844,. -by the provisions of this act, and the same interest after sale shall be ■charged."

This law of 1848, with the exception of the four last sections, including those noticed above, is prospective in its terms; it was manifestly designed to creato a new system of taxation, and to cover the whole ground occupied by former statutes. The sections cited take up the tees returned for 1841, (among which are those for Calhoun County,) as they were found in the office of the Auditor General; no further act was required to be done, to enable the Auditor General to proceed to sell under the provisions of section 76, and the sections to which reference is therein made. He was not directed to any former act as his rule of action, but was required to conform to the provisions of that act.

But it is insistod that section seventy-six, though it prescribes the proceedings to he had up to and including the sale, does not grant to any officer the power to deed, and unless the provisions of chapter six, section nineteen, of the revised statutes of 1838 are held to he operativo for such purpose, in eouuectiou with the law of 1843, no deed can be given by the Auditor General for lands sold for taxes of 1841.

By the eighty-third section of the act of 1848, it is enacted that “all acts and parts of acts inconsistent or concurrent with the provisions of this act are hereby repealed, hut this repeal shall not affect any suit or proceeding,” &c., “nor shall it affect any act done or right accrued before this act shall take effect.” By comparing chapter six, of title five,, of the revised statutes of 1838, with the provisions of this act, it will he seen that this act incorporates (with some few alterations,) all its provisions-; that it was intended to embrace all the law upon the subject, and that chapter six is either inconsistent or concurrent with it,, operating upon the same objects, and contributing to the same event ox effect. But for the provisions of section seventy-four or section seventy-nine, the taxes of 1841 would have remained subject to be disposed of [490]*490under the provisions of chapter six, which was retained for that purpose' by the law of 1842. Those 'sections expressly provide for the taxes of 1841, and withdraw them from the operation of chapter six, and prescribe the course of procedure to effect a sale, and, consequently, the' repealing clause embraces that chapter.

If this construction of the law of 1843 is not obviously correct, it will, J think, appear to be so, if it can be shown (as I think it can be,) that power is given to the Auditor General, by section seventy-six, to • execute deeds to purchaser’s at tax sales of land for delinquent taxes of 1841. That section, as we have seen, provides that the land shall be '■ sold at the same time and in the same manner as is herein provided • for the taxes of 1843, and it was urged by the counsel of the plaintiff that the word sold, as used in that section, imported a power in the offi•cer selling, to give a deed, but in this we think he was incorrect.

It is claimed that this power is derived from the well established principle of law, that every grant of power, necessarily carries with it all the usual and necessary means for the exercise of that power, and that, consequently, the power to convey is implied in the authority to sell. (10 Pet. R., 161; 18 John. R., 418; 2 Cow. 199, 233—5.)

But this principle is not admitted in the construction of statutes similar to this; such statutes, being in derogation of the common law, and authorizing proceedings, the effect of which is to divest a citizen of 'his title to real estate, though it may be for the good of the public, ■ must be construed strictly, ( Van Horn's Lessees vs. Darrow, 2 Dal. 216; 4 Hill R., 99;) and their piro visions can be enforced no farther than they are clearly expressed.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Mich. 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sibley-v-smith-mich-1853.