State Ex Rel. Comfort v. Leatherman

128 So. 21, 99 Fla. 899
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedApril 23, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 128 So. 21 (State Ex Rel. Comfort v. Leatherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Comfort v. Leatherman, 128 So. 21, 99 Fla. 899 (Fla. 1930).

Opinion

Brown, J.

This is a' mandamus proceeding instituted on the relation of Walter R. Comfort, Jr., and others, mortgagees and creditors of certain delinquent owners, against E. B. Leatherman as clerk of the circuit court of Dade County, to compel such clerk to permit the relators to redeem from sales for taxes certain described real estate, for the sum of $22,643.45, which sum had been paid by the relators to such clerk, on September 25, 1929, for the redemption of said property - from sales for taxes for the years 1926, 1927 and 1928. The tax certificates had been sold to The Mortgage Discount Company, which company, on August 8, 1929, surrendered them to said clerk and paid to him all of the fees due him on account of the issuance of said certificates and applied for a tax deed to the described property. The clerk published a notice of the application for the tax deed, as required by law, which notice stated among other things that unless the certificates should be redeemed according to law a tax deed would issue for said property on September 26, 1929. The sum of $22,643.45 paid to the clerk by the relators on September 25, 1929, represented the total amount of taxes for which the property was sold, and which The Mortgage Discount *901 Company, the purchaser and owner of the certificates, had paid, together with interest thereon at t'he rate of 25 per cent, per annum on the face amount of each certificate for the first year after the issuance thereof, and eight per cent per annum for the time after the first year to the date of payment, to-wit, September 25, 1929, together with a fee of 50 cents for each certificate so outstanding and the cost of publishing the notice of application for tax deed, and eight per cent per annum on the cost of advertising and the clerk’s statutory fees from the time notice of application for tax deed was given until the date of the tender. The petition further alleged the refusal of the clerk to permit relators to redeem, and the reason stated by him for such refusal.

An alternative writ of mandamus was issued and the respondent clerk filed an answer, in which he set up as his reason for refusing to permit redemption on the above basis, that, under Section 1002, Comp. Gen Laws of 1927, which was Section 778, Rev. Gen Stats., the relators were required to pay, not only the full amount of said tax certificates, together with fees and cost of publication, but also eight per cent thereon, which meant an additional flat eig'ht per cent on the total amount due the applicant for tax deed on said certificates, together with the cost incurred in advertising the notice of application for tax deed and the statutory fees to which the clerk was entitled, as provided by law.

In his answer, the respondent stated that he had been advised by the Comptroller of the State of Florida, under whose jurisdiction the respondent acted in handling the redemption of tax certificates, that the purpose of said Section 1002, Comp. Gen. Laws, was to permit the delinquent tax payer to redeem his lands from tax certificates after the first publication of notice of application for tax *902 deed, but before tbe tax deed is issued, provided such person, in addition to payment to the clerk of the full amount that may then be due the applicant for all certificates, fees and cost of publication, paid the further sum of eight per cent flat on the total amount of money that the law actually required the applicant for a tax deed to pay in order to become qualified to make the application for tax deed. That such had been the interpretation of the statute ever since its original enactment as part of Chapter 4888 of the Acts of 1901, and that the purpose of said Act was to put an increased penalty of eight per cent on the delinquent tax payer for waiting until after publication for notice of tax deed before seeking to redeem property from tax sale, and to give an added incentive to holders of tax certificates to apply for tax deeds at the earliest practicable date, thereby strengthening the state’s power of enforcing the collection of revenue.

Upon the filing of the above answer, the relators moved this Court to issue the peremptory writ of mandamus as prayed in the petition, notwithstanding the respondent’s answer to the alternative writ, upon the ground that said answer admitted all the allegations of fact set up in the alternative writ and the respondent relied only upon a misconstruction of said Section 1002, Comp. Gen. Laws, as his reason for refusing to obey the command of said alternative writ.

It thus appears that the sole question presented for decision turns on the construction of the last six words of said Section 1002, Comp. Gen. Laws. Said section reads as follows:

“Proof of the publication or posting of such notice as is required by the preceding section and the cost thereof shall be filed by the clerk before any tax deed shall be issued, and at any time before the execution *903 of such tax deed any person owning or claiming the land therein or any part or parcel thereof or any interest therein, or any creditor of such owner or claimant, may redeem the same by paying to the clerk the full amount that may then be due the applicant for all certificates, fees and cost of publication, or such portion thereof as the part or interest redeemed shall bear to the whole, together with eight per cent, thereon.” (Italics supplied).

The relators contend that the words “together with eight per cent, thereon,” means a sum of money equal to eight per cent, per avmum on the “cost of publication” of the notice of application for a tax deed provided for in section 1000, C. G. L., originally section 8 of Chap. 4888, Laws of 1901.

The respondent contends that the proper construction of the act obligates the redeemer to pay: (1) The full amount of all outstanding tax sale certificates. (2) Interest on the full amount at the rate of twenty-five per cent for the first year and eight per cent for subsequent years. (3) All costs incurred in advertising notice of application for tax deed. (4) The statutory fees to which the clerk is entitled for advertising for tax deed and redeeming the. property. (5) On the total of these amounts an additional flat penalty of eight per cent.

In support of their contention, relators argue that under Sections 981, 982 and 983, Comp. Gen. Laws of 1927, there is no difference in certificates, in form or effect, whether held by the State or owned by an individual, and that therefore the property may be redeemed on the same terms, and that under Sections 993 and 994, Comp. Gen. Laws, providing for the redemption of property from tax sales, the rate of interest to be paid on redemption is fixed by *904 the following language, namely: “and interest on all unpaid * * * taxes for the year 1917 and subsequent years, at the rate of twenty five per cent, per annum for the first year and eight per cent, per annum thereafter, beginning with the first day of April next after the year for which taxes are due. ’ ’ And that these rates of interest are the precise rates paid by the holder of the certificates involved in this suit when it purchased them from the Clerk of the Circuit Court.

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Bluebook (online)
128 So. 21, 99 Fla. 899, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-comfort-v-leatherman-fla-1930.