State v. Butler

21 So. 2d 650, 197 Miss. 218, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 287
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1945
DocketNo. 35812.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 21 So. 2d 650 (State v. Butler) 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
State v. Butler, 21 So. 2d 650, 197 Miss. 218, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 287 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellees, Charlie and Milton Butler, who are the grantees of their father Owen Butler, deceased, brought this suit to have cancelled as a cloud upon their title to 80 acres of land in the First Judicial District of Jasper County a certain tax sale ^thereof made to the State of Mississippi on September 18, 1933, or in the alternative to have their title to the said land confirmed and quieted under and by virtue of a forfeited tax land patent obtained from the state by the said Owen Butler as former owner of the land.

The tax sale in question was alleged to be invalid upon several grounds, and the case was tried upon an agreed statement of facts. The trial court held the tax sale to be void, cancelled the same as a cloud upon the title of the complainants and confirmed and quieted their title.

The state in its answer denied the invalidity of such tax sale and sought in a cross-bill to have the patent can-celled which it had issued on September 21, 1939, to the said Owen Butler on the ground that the same was obtained by him without the payment of an adequate consideration therefor.

The tax sale was made for the unpaid taxes for the year 1932. The land assessment rolls for the years 1932 and 1933 were equalized in July and approved in Au *226 gust, 1932, when the courthouse of the First Judicial District of the county at Paulding was destroyed by fire on September 10, 1932., prior to . the filing of a copy of the assessment rolls with the State Tax Commission, there was not left in existence a copy of the assessment roll for the land in said district for the reason that the Tax Assessor had not filed an entire assessment roll of the whole county in each of thé districts, but had filed at Paulding an assessment of only that part of the county situated in the First Judicial District, and at Bay Springs only that part of the assessment rolls that embraced only the lands situated in the Second Judicial District of the county.

Section 2338, Code 1930, Section 768, Code 1942, if controlling in the emergency above mentioned, provided for the use of the rolls for the years of 1930 and 1931 in collecting taxes for the current year of 1932. However, that Section of the Code, whether applicable or not, was not followed by the board of supervisors or the Sheriff and Tax Collector in the collection of taxes for said year, •but when the board of supervisors met at an adjourned meeting on September 19', 1932, shortly after the fire “for the purpose of taking up the matter of the budget, passing on same, etc., for 1932,” a notice was issued by the President of the board for a special meeting to be held at Paulding on September 28, 1932, to consider among other things “the matter of assessment rolls, real and personal, for said District for the year 1932.” Then at such special meeting the board of supervisors ordered a reassessment of the property in the First Judicial District to be made for that year only, presumably under the supposed authority of Section 3190, Code 1930', Section 9814, Code 1942, which provides, among other things, that when •the- board of supervisors shall order a new assessment the roll shall be “prepared in the manner required by law when made at the regular time, and the board of supervisors and all other officers, either county or state, shall *227 perform all duties in reference to said roll, or rolls, as if made at the regular time. ’ ’

We pretermit the decision of the question as to whether the board of supervisors should have used the 1930 and 1931 assessment rolls for 1932 or should hav.e ordered a reassessment under the circumstances, since the previous assessment was neither used nor the law as to a reassessment complied with in the instant case. But see in connection with the statutes already referred to in that behalf Section 3187, Code 1930, Section 9811, Code 1942. The notice of the said special meeting for September 28, 1932, in stating what the board would then consider, did not specify that a reassessment was to be ordered at such meeting, or what rolls were to be then considered.

Since the regular rolls had been equalized and approved at the July and August meetings of 1932 respectively, pursuant to notice in that behalf, and the property owners were not necessarily advised in any manner that all copies of such rolls* had been destroyed by fire, or that none were on file anywhere, it is reasonable that they would have assumed that the consideration of the assessment rolls to be had at the special meeting on September 28, 1932, was due to some order of the State Tax Commission with reference to the rolls which had theretofore been equalized and approved by the board, instead of a reassessment of their property due to the destruction of such rolls by fire on September 10,1932. And the statute, Section 3190, Code 1932, Section 9814, Code 1942, under which the board was undertaking to act in the premises, having also provided that “in case of the destruction ... of an assessment roll the board of supervisors may have duplicate copies made from copies on file in the office of the state tax commission, or in the office of the chancery clerk, and when certified to be correct by the clerk, the copy shall be treated and recognized as the legal roll,” it will be readily seen that the taxpayers were not sufficiently advised by the notice of this special meeting for September 28,1932,' as to. what rolls were' to be, considered. ■ Then *228 too,'-the reassessment ordered at such special meeting was equalized at the November, 1932, meeting and approved at a special meeting-in December, without the board having designated the November meeting’ as the time for such equalization aid without proper notice to the taxpayers as to what was to be done at either the meeting at which the same were equalized or the meeting at which objections could be heard and the rolls approved.

We, are, therefore, of the opinion that for the reasons hereinbefore stated the reassessment upon which the tax sale in question was made was void, and we do not deem it necessary to discuss the remaining several grounds which are assigned by the appellees in support of their contention that the tax sale made thereon was likewise Void.

Moreover, the state does not undertake to sustain the' validity' of such tax sale, but takes the position in its assignment of error and brief that the complainants were not entitled to relief, and that the .state was entitled to have the patent cancelled which had been issued to the former owner, as. prayed for in its cross-bill, for the following reasons: (1) That regardless of the invalidity of the tax sale the appellees are estopped from contesting the same because Owen Butler, their vendor, applied for and obtained the forfeited tax land patent from /the State of Mississippi; (2) that they are precluded from contesting the validity of the tax sale on account of the .two year limitation on their right to do so under Chapter 196, Laws 1934; and (3) that the forfeited tax land patent was void for inadequacy of consideration.

If the state acquired no title under the tax sale because of its invalidity, the same nevertheless constituted a cloud upon the title of the former owner, and he had the right to either have the tax sale cancelled and removed as a cloud from his title, or to purchase the claim of title which was being asserted by the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 So. 2d 650, 197 Miss. 218, 1945 Miss. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-butler-miss-1945.