Sigman v. Lundy

66 Miss. 522
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 66 Miss. 522 (Sigman v. Lundy) 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
Sigman v. Lundy, 66 Miss. 522 (Mich. 1889).

Opinion

Cooped, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The chancellor did not err in retaining the cross-bill and permitting complainants therein to proceed with it as an original bill. In [527]*527Belcher v. Wilkerson, 54 Miss. 677, there was no order of court retaining the cross-bill, while in the case now before us the order >of the chancellor expressly retained the cross-bill “ as an original bill,” and directed process to be issued on it as such. The ■appellant entered her appearance and answered, thus waiving the process directed to be issued.

Proceeding to the main questions involved, it is sufficient to say ■in reference to complainants’ title that as heirs at law of Tamlin Avent they are the owners of the lands in controversy (Sec. 18, T. 17), unless the tax-title under which appellant claims is valid, or unless a valid outstanding tax-title is shown. The history of the tax-titles adverse to the ownership of complainants is this :

The lands were sold to the state in 1867 for the taxes of 1866 ; in 1869 they were sold for levee taxes and bought in by the board of levee commissioners; in 1875 they were sold by the state under the act of March 1,1875 (commonly known as the Abatement Act), and again bought by the state; in 1878 they were sold by Gwin .and Hemingway, commissioners of the chancery court of Hinds •county in the case of Green v. Gibbs, and the title thus conveyed is now vested in appellant.

Appellant first acquired, a claim to the lands in November, 1878, .and in 1883 she procured from the auditor of public accounts a release from the state’s title to all the lands except the N. E. J of S. W. i and the N. W. -]■ of S. E. J, by compliance with § 574 of the code of 1880, which is as follows : When the owner or any person interested in any lands held by the state by a purchase at a sale for taxes shall produce a tax receipt for the payment, to the collector, of the taxes for which said land was sold, before such sale, and shall pay to the collector of taxes of the county in which said land is, all taxes which have subsequently accrued on said •land and not been paid, taking his receipt therefor in duplicate, which such collector is hereby required to furnish him, and shall file with the clerk of the board of supervisors of such county one -of said receipts, and with the auditor of public accounts the other •of such receipts, and also the receipt first mentioned, the said auditor shall release to such person the title of the state to such land, [528]*528which release may be recorded without acknowledgment, as in other cases of conveyances by the auditor.”

. Complainants attack the sale of 1867 on the ground that it was not made at the door of the court house, and because the land was not offered in the smallest legal subdivisions, but was sold asoné entire tract. This, it is said, rendered the title thus acquired void as to the owner, but that it was effectual to prevent a subsequent sale for levee taxes, since thereafter the lands were held by the state,” and exempt from such taxes. ■

The conclusion sought to be reached by complainants by this process of reasoning, is arrived at by us on different reasons; its effect is, of course, the same. . The conclusion is reached by us, not upon the ground that both tax-titles were void, but because one (that held by the state) was valid, wherefore the other (that •acquired by the levee board) was invalid. We shall see by what .course of'action the valid tax-title derived under the sale of 1867 was afterward surrendered and became inoperative.

By an act entitled An act to provide for the better security of titles to lands held and claimed under tax sale and tax-titles,” approved February 10, 1860, it was among other things declared, That all sales of lands hereafter made for non-payment of taxes,, due under any law of this state, shall be valid to all intents and purposes — said lands subject to redemption, as provided by law— and that no such sale shall be impeached or questioned in any manner, or for any cause, saving fraud or mistake in the assessment or sale of the same, or upon the proof that the tax for which the same were sold had been paid prior to such sale, and no suit to set aside any title acquired under such sale, hereafter to be made, shall be brought, unless within five years from the date of the sale.” Acts 1859-60, p. 213, § 8.

The first question for consideration is whether under the operation of this statute, the title derived by the state under the sale of 1867 became secure from attack by the lapse of time, or whether the italicized part of the act was a mere statute of limitation which was repealed by the adoption of the code of 1871 before the period .had expired.

[529]*529In Nevin v. Bailey, 62 Miss. 433, we construed a provision of the code of 1871, similar in purport to the above, and declared its effect. That provision was, as is this, in form a statute of limitations, but in substance it was held to be in many respects much more than such a statute. The title, scope and purpose of the act of 1860 (the italicized portion of which was carried forward and became a part of § 1709 of the code of 1871) adds strength to the conclusion reached in the ease above cited. The act was to provide for the better security of tax-titles it afforded a remedy by which the holder under tax-title might call, into court all persons “ claiming or having any interest in such lands, which existed at the time the same were sold for taxes and settle once for always the validity of his title. As to the sales thereafter to be made, it added the assurance that after the lapse of five years no hostile claim should be asserted. Whether the purchaser at tax sale or the former owner was in possession of the land sold; whether the land was occupied or vacant, the security afforded by the act existed. The provision as to future sales was intended to be, and was, an irrevocable and irrepealable stipulation that after the lapse of time named no assailment of the title should be made. It was, and was intended to be, a part of the contract into which the purchaser would enter, an inherent, continuing element of right secured, running with the land and a perpetual security of the title. But it was aimed at those who were delinquents, and ivas, as we have recently held, ineffectual as against him whose taxes had been paid. Metcalfe v. Perry, ante, p. 68. It probably would be equally inapplicable to a case in which compliance with constitutional requirements as to assessment was not shown. As to lands bought by the state, the power of course existed to repeal the law, since such repeal would not be the impairment of the contract of sale.

If this statute had been a pure statute of limitations, the next inquiry presented might be differently answered. That inquiry is, whether it was repealed by the code of 1871 in which the subject of limitations of actions was revised and codified ?

The substance of the first six sections of the act of 1860 is embodied in § 1753 of the code, and that portion of § 8 of said act now [530]*530under consideration became a part oí § 1709. The argument has been made that § 1709 of the code refers to sales thereafter to be made under the provisions of the chapter of which it is a part, and that as to sales made under the act of 1860 neither the code nor the act applies ;

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Bluebook (online)
66 Miss. 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sigman-v-lundy-miss-1889.