State v. Cannon

44 La. Ann. 734
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1892
DocketNo. 10,037
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 La. Ann. 734 (State v. Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cannon, 44 La. Ann. 734 (La. 1892).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by.

Watkins, J.

The object of this action is to h,ave declared null and void a tax adjudication of real property situated in the parish of Avoyelles on the ground that it was a non-consummated sale for want of due compliance by the tax collector with a condition precedent, claim being made that it had been adjudicated to J. H. Bemiss, of the State of Texas, one of the defendants, under and by authority of Act 80 of 1888.

The property in controversy was sold to the State in 1886 for the delinquent taxes of antecedent years, and certain, of the heirs of J. A. D. Tureaud and Madam George Sauvé made application for their redemption, and the negotiations therefor had been well nigh completed when the complained of adjudication took place..

On account of the alleged irregularities in the tax collector’s proceedings the attorney general, in the name of the State, demands their revocation and annulment, and the restitution of thestatus quo.

[736]*736To be more specific, the contention of the State is, that prior to said adjudication the tax collector failed to submit to the auditor of public accounts a list of said lands for comparison with records of property adjudicated to the State and secure his approval before offering same for sale; and that such comparison and approval was a condition precedent to such sale, and without it the tax collector had no warrant of authority for making sale and that the adjudication was void without-it. .

Preliminarily, the defendants tendered a series of exceptions to plaintiff’s suit, one of which was want of tender, coupled with the averment “that plaintiff, as vendor, has accepted and still holds the purchase price of said property.”

This, with other exceptions, was by the court referred to the merits, and the defendants filed answers and the case went to trial on the merits and exceptions. But the, court, finding that the plea of want of tender was well taken, grounded its judgment upon it and non-suited the case, and the State has appealed. Hence, the only question we have to deal with is this ruling of the judge of the court below.

Considering the' question Of tender, we - find in the petition the allegation that “the State has never received any part of the sum of $1057 recited as the consideration for said pretended act of adjudication, and that the sum, if paid by said Bemiss, has Over since remained in the hands of said Gannon” — the tax collector who is defendant.

This allegation is plainly an offset to the exception.' In the face of this specific averment in the petition, that the State had never received any part of the alleged price of sale, we are at a loss to understand why the plea was tendered, very much less, entertained. The fact of receipt vel non by the State of the proceeds is disputed on the one hand and affirmed on the other, and constitutes the question one for the merits, and, what is termed and treated as an exception, must be considered as a part of the answer. For it is a very plain question, that we must go into the merits, in order to determine the fact of payment to and receipt by the State of the proceeds of sale.

But in the case of Stafford vs. Twitchell, 33 An. 520, this court had occasion to examine the question of want of tender, as applicable to tax sales — if, indeed-, it be a question here, for determina[737]*737tion as a matter of law — and, in that connection, we had occasion to hold that our predecessors had acted without sufficient consideration in deciding in Barrow vs. Lapine, 32 An. 310, that this plea had applicability thereto, and said:

“We do not find this doctrine, as applicable to tax sales, sustained by authority.”

This principle of construction has never been departed from since, but, on the contrary, has been constantly maintained. Guidry vs. Broussard, 32 An. 924; Davenport vs. Knox, 34 An. 407. Those decisions are strictly conformable to prior jurisprudence. Brooks vs. Hardwick, 5 An. 675, and Coleman vs. Baker, 24 An. 524.

But the question of tender is not an open one, because it is defined expressly in the Constitution, and the constitutional definition has been recently interpreted by us.

In Breaux vs. Negrotto, 43 An. 426, we said:

“It is sufficient for us to say that the provisions of Art. 210 of the Constitution do not seem to contemplate a ‘ previous legal tender ’ of the price of adjudication being made — such as is contemplated in O. P. 407, et seq., andR. C. O. 1933, et seq., and 1911, et seq. —as a condition precedent to the institution of the suit for rescission of the sale. It declares: ‘No sale of property for taxes shall be annulled for any informality in the proceedings until the price paid, with 10 per cent, interest, be tendered to the-purchaser.’ Constitution, Art. 210.

“We think the tender may be made at any time prior to the rendition of final judgment decreeing the nullity of the sale; or the price may be adjusted and liquidated in the judgment.

“Certain it is that the constitutional mandate must be carried into effect, and the tax purchaser must be compensated, and the judgment annulling the sale can not be completed until that is done.”

To that view and opinion we adhere, and it is conclusive of the question under consideration.

The judgment appealed from is erroneous and must be reversed.

It is therefore ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from be and the same is annulled and reversed; and it is further ordered and decreed that the cause be remanded to the lower court, and therein reinstated for trial on the merits; and that the defendants’ plea of want of tender stand as a part of their answer.

It is finally ordered that 'the defendants and appellees be taxed [738]*738with-the costs of appeal, and that all other costs to await final determination of the cause.

On Application por Rehearing.

We are requested to grant a rehearing, recast our opinion and decide the case on its merits because the interest of the State might be jeopardized by the protracted delay occasioned by remanding the cause; and counsel for plaintiff, in support of their application, refer to the fact, which is evidenced by the record, that the case was tried on the merits, contradictorily and upon issue joined on answer.

Whilst this statement is correct, yet because the judge a quo confined his decree to the plea of want of tender, and, finding it good, dismissed the case, we limited our judgment to that finding, reversed the judge’s ruling and remanded the cause for trial and decision on the merits, following the precedent of Connery vs. Waterworks, 39 An. 770.

The plea of the plaintiff is persuasive as well as urgent, and much inclines us to its favorable consideration; and in its support the counsel cite the opinion of Judge Martin, speaking for the court, in Kenner vs. Their Creditors, 3 N. S. 51, who puts the proposition in this wise, viz.:

“ It is obvious that this is not a sufficient cause to authorize us to refuse.to act on the whole case.

“The court below decides a cause on whatever point it deems material; our duty is to revise its judgment, not the grounds on which it is rendered. Its decision on the merits requires, nay, compels, us to

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Bluebook (online)
44 La. Ann. 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cannon-la-1892.