State v. Southern Pine Co.

38 So. 2d 442, 205 Miss. 80, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 414
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 38 So. 2d 442 (State v. Southern Pine Co.) 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. Southern Pine Co., 38 So. 2d 442, 205 Miss. 80, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 414 (Mich. 1949).

Opinions

*85 Smith, J.

This novel case was appealed by the State of Mississippi from a decree of the Chancery Court of Marion *86 County, overruling its two demurrers to the original bill of appellees. The purpose of the suit was to have the trial court to grant appellees, as complainants, a decree “declaring all of said pretended assessments and pretended tax sales of lands in the NE14 of SW]4 of Section 24, Township 2, Range. 13, in Marion County, Mississippi, to be null and void, and cancelling whatever title, or claim of title the State of Mississippi may have to the land in suit by virtue of said pretended tax sales, as a cloud upon the true title of complainants to the land in suit. ’ ’ The State was the defendant.

The Southern Pine Company was averred to be the owner of the land invplved, when it was assessed and sold for taxes. The original bill contained a deraignment of title, and a full exposition of the interest of the other complainants in the suit, into which it is not necessary to go. The lands were attempted to be sold to the State. The assessment and sale thereof are attacked on many grounds by the original bill. There is no necessity for discussion of any of them except those with which we deal, post.

The original bill avers that the description of certain small tracts of the lands involved was so indefinite and uncertain as to make their sale void. The bill sets forth that the Land Commissioner, with the written approval of the Attorney General, in accordance with the statute, erased and struck such lands from the list of lands sold the State of Mississippi, and from the records of title in his office, because the State had acquired no title thereto; that he transmitted this list to the Chancery Clerk of Marion County, who noted the same on the proper records in his office; all in accordance with the statute. It is averred, thereafter the lands were assessed and taxes thereon paid.

The State of Mississippi filed the usual general demurrer in chancery, that there is no equity on the face of the bill. It filed also a special demurrer, on several grounds, —among them being that the original bill did not set out *87 any title or claim to title in the State of Mississippi; that the State of Mississippi, through its Land Commissioner and Attorney General, had stricken the sales on which suit was brought, and therefore had no title to said lands. Both demurrers were overruled, answer filed, proof heard, and a final decree entered. The court therein adjudged the sales for delinquent taxes to be void and “no title to or interest in the land in suit . . . was vested in the State of Mississippi under and by virtue of said tax sale; but said tax sale and the record thereof casts a cloud on the true title of complainants to the land in suit, and the same is hereby cancelled as a cloud on the title of complainants to the land in suit. ’ ’

It is to be noted that the act of the Land Commissioner and the Attorney General, in striking the sales from the list of lands of which the State claimed ownership, was ignored in the final decree. It is also to be observed that the Land Commissioner, with the written approval of the Attorney General, had stricken the lands because the sales were void. Thus, the court reviewed the statutory action of the State’s officials charged with the duty of disencumbering the State of lands to which it had no title, and decreed the same thing already done by the Land Commissioner on the advice of the Attorney General.

We think the chancery court then was without jurisdiction in this case, since, even though the prayer of the bill was for the removal of a cloud, the adjudication sought was, in effect, merely ratification of the legal action of a State official, lawfully empowered to act, and the statute does not provide for the ratification thereof by any court. The statute is a salutary one. It deters tyrannical oppression by the sovereign state in persisting to claim rights it does not rightfully or legally own; it prevents harassment of busy state officials by averting useless litigation; it saves the perpetuating of futile records of non-existing state titles to land; and the expense to the State of officials’ attendance upon courts in such cases *88 as the one here under review. It is fair to the taxpayer and works no harm to the State. It also puts the land back on the tax rolls, from which revenue may be derived in the form of taxes, as occurred in the case at bar.

That is, unless the statutes are unconstitutional, which attack is made upon them by appellees. Laying- aside the debatable question of their right to raise that question in this case, we address ourselves to it at this point.

Section 4073, Code 1942, which brings forward Chapter 174, Laws of 1936, reads as follows: “In all cases where it appears that the claim of title of the State to the lands on the records of the land office was acquired under tax sales which were void and which passed no title to the State, the Land Commissioner, with the written approval of the Attorney-General, is hereby authorized and directed to strike such lands from the lists of lands sold to the State for delinquent taxes, in his office, and the Land Commissioner shall transmit a list of the lands thus stricken from the records of forfeited State tax lands in his office to the clerk of the chancery court of the county in which such lands are situated, and the clerk of the chancery court shall note the same on the recorded lists in his office and shall file and preserve the list of lands thus stricken from the records in his office. The Land Commissioner shall at the same time give written notice to the assessor of the county that such lands have been stricken from the lists of lands held by the State for the non-páyment of taxes, and it shall be the duty of the assessor to assess such lands for taxes for the proper year or years at such valuation as the assessor, may deem just. Such assessment shall be made in the manner provided by law for the assessment of property which has escaped taxation for former years. And the tax collector shall collect the taxes on such lands in the manner provided by law. The striking of such lands from the lists of forfeited State tax lands in the Land Commissioner’s office, as herein provided for, shall cancel all title or claim *89 of the State to such lands, except for taxes due thereon at the time of the sale and accruing after the sale.”

Attention is especially directed to this concluding-clause of the foregoing statute: “The striking of such lands from the lists of forfeited State tax lands in the Land Commissioner’s office, as herein provided for, shall cancel all title or claim of the State to such lands, except for taxes due thereon at the time of the sale and accruing after the sale. ” Two things are notable here. One, that this act of the Land Commissioner cancelled “title or claim of the State to such lands”; and the final decree of the court “cancelled as a cloud on the title” that which, by express statutory authority, had already been cancelled, and hence no longer existed, unless the statutes be unconstitutional.

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39 So. 2d 533 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 So. 2d 442, 205 Miss. 80, 1949 Miss. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-southern-pine-co-miss-1949.