Smith v. Cleveland

17 Wis. 556
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 17 Wis. 556 (Smith v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Cleveland, 17 Wis. 556 (Wis. 1863).

Opinion

By the Court,

DixoN, C. J.

The sale for the unpaid taxes, the issuing and transfer of the certificate, and the execution [564]*564and recording of the deed under which, the defendants claim title, all took place while the act of April 8, 1854 was in force. Laws of 1854, chap. 66. That act restored the act of April 19, 1852, which had been in part repealed by the act of March 31, 1853. Laws of 1852, chap. 503; Laws of 1853, chap. 57. The first and second sections of the act of April 19th declares that a tax deed executed by the proper officers, and in the prescribed form, should be conclusive in all courts that the proceedings had been regular, from the valuation of the land up to the execution of the deed, and of the existence of all conditions precedent in any way affecting the validity of said deed, except that it should be prima facie evidence only, first, of the liability of the land to taxation ; second, of the non-payment of the tax for which the same was sold ; and third, of the non-redemption of the land after sale and before the recording of the deed. The act of 1854 furthermore declared that the title conveyed by any deed of lands sold for the non-payment of taxes to the grantee therein, his heirs and assigns, should not be invalidated, or in any way affected or avoided by any error previously made in assessing, listing, taxing, selling or conveying said lands, or in any other proceeding previous to the execution and delivery of such deed.

The objections taken, and for which the plaintiff seeks to ¡impeach the title of the defendants, go merely to the regularity .of the proceedings. The groundwork and essence of the transactions which resulted in the execution and delivery of the deed remain untouched. The liability of the lands to taxation is not denied, nor that the taxes were unpaid. Neither is it claimed that there was any redemption. It is only shown that in some of the steps prescribed by the general law, the taxing ■officers failed to conform strictly to its requirements. The town assessor neglected to add the word “ assessor ” to his signature to the certificate .appended to the assessment roll. The .town treasurer, in his return of delinquent lands to the treas[565]*565urer of the county, omitted to insert the year for which the taxes were unpaid, in a blank left for that purpose, though the year appeared in other parts of the return. The return was not made until the 10th day of February, instead of on or before the last Mónday of January. The county treasurer’s affidavit of the posting of the statement and notice of sale, deposited in the office of the clerk of the board of supervisors, does not state the time and places of posting, but that they were posted up in accordance with the statute in such case made and provided.” The deed recites that the sale took place on the twelfth day of April. It appears from the certificate that it was made on the eleventh. ' The notice to redeem followed the certificate, and declared that the premises wouldbe subject to conveyance unless redeemed on or before the 11th day of April, three years from the time of the sale. These are the defects urged, and it is obvious that after the execution of the deed they were all cured by the statutes referred to, provided it was competent for the legislature so to enact, and of that we entertain no doubt. The existence of such power is fully established by the authorities cited by defendants’ counsel, to which may be added the very able and satisfactory opinion of the district court for this state upon these same statutes, delivered some years since in the case of Lord v. The Milwaukee & Mississippi Rail Road Company, and published in pamphlet.

But aside from the'sanctions of authority, the question seems very plain to us on principle. The only constitutional restraint is that requiring the rule of taxation to be uniform. In all other respects the power of the legislature is supreme. The machinery of taxation — the mode of levying, assessing and collecting — is subject entirely to its discretion. The liability to taxation and non-payment of the taxes being admitted, the legislature may, as to all other things, declare what shall or shall not be essential to the validity of the proceedings. The same power which imposes a duty may dispense with its performance. It may say that the proceeding shall be void for non[566]*566performance, or that it shall nevertheless be valid. The difference is between mandatory and directory statutes. We take it to be clear that the legislature may, by express words, declare any statute regulating the form of a proceeding to be directory, that is, that the proceeding shall be valid although the prescribed form be not pursued. Such is, to some extent, the effect of the statutes before us. After the execution and recording of the tax deed, all defects and imperfections of this nature became immaterial. Let us take for instance the first irregularity specified, the omission of the assessor to add his name of office. The same legislative power which declared that he should sign as “ assessor ” might have dispensed with such addition, or with the entire signature. Having declared that he-should sign officially, it might still say that his omission to do so should not vitiate the assessment. It could prescribe the precise effect which should be given to its own enactment. This is just what was done by the statutes in question. They were equivalent to an enactment in distinct phrase: but after the execution and recording of the tax deed, the omission of the assessor to add his name of office shall not invalidate the assessmentor, “ this requirement shall be deemed directory.” The same observations might be made of the neglect of the town treasurer to insert the year; of the affidavit of the posting of notices; and so on to the end of the list. The legislature might have fixed the time and provided for a sale without notice or advertisement. They may, surely, by proper legislation in advance, guard against errors and cure mistakes when notice is required.

But there is another ground upon which these enactments may, if possible, with more safety be rested, and that is the power of the legislature to pass statutes of limitation, which no one denies. The legislature did not attempt to declare absolutely that such errors and imperfections should not at any ,time be inquired into, but only after the execution of the deed. The deed could not be executed until after the expiration of [567]*567three years from tbe day of sale. In. the meantime every question was open to investigation. The acts were, therefore, valid as statutes of limitation.

Another question grows out of the repeal of these acts and a subsequent enactment by which the legislature endeavored to open the door of investigation to every question pertaining to the proceeding. The repeal took place on the first day of January, 1859. R. S., ch. 191, sec. 1. Section two, however, declares that the repeal of the acts mentioned in the preceding section shall not affect any act done or right accrued or established; but every-such act or right shall remain as valid and effectual as if the provision so repealed had remained in full force. So far, therefore, the rights of the defendants were not affected, provided it was in the power of the legislature to affect them. But on the 19th day of March following, an act was passed, the first section of which declares that any deed executed prior to its passage, rrpon the sale of any land for the non-payment of taxes, shall he prima fade

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Bluebook (online)
17 Wis. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-cleveland-wis-1863.