State v. Wilkinson

20 So. 2d 193, 197 Miss. 628, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 327
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1944
DocketNo. 35735.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 So. 2d 193 (State v. Wilkinson) 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. Wilkinson, 20 So. 2d 193, 197 Miss. 628, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 327 (Mich. 1944).

Opinions

This appeal involves the alleged invalidity of two tax sales made to the state on December 8, 1931, and April 6, 1932, respectively. The sales in each instance were of Sixteenth Section and other lands, which together comprise one tract, assessed to the same owner. The appellees F.W. and M.R. Wilkinson, composing the partnership of Bolivar Gin Company, were the holders of the unexpired portion of 99-year leases on the lands in Section Sixteen, and in their bill of complaint they seek to have the said tax sales declared void and cancelled as a cloud on their leasehold interest, making the State of Mississippi, as trustee for the benefit of the inhabitants of the township, and Bolivar County through its board of supervisors and county superintendent of education parties defendant in the suit. From a decree holding such sales to be void and cancelling the claim of all the defendants wherein they assert that the state now holds these Sixteenth Section school lands as such trustee, free and unburdened by the former leases, this appeal is prosecuted.

The validity of the first sale is challenged on two grounds: (1) That the tax collector's list of lands then sold to the state shows on its face that the lands were not offered for sale and sold in the manner required by law; and (2) the tax collector was without authority to make the sale on December 8, 1931, for the reason that the order of the board of supervisors directed that the same be made on "the first Monday and 7th day of December, 1931, as provided by Section 3252 of the Mississippi Code of 1930," and that this statute authorizing *Page 639 lands not sold at the regular time to be sold at any time designated by the board in its order does not contain a provision for one of such special sales to be continued from day to day.

The certified list of lands sold to the state on December 8, 1931, as transmitted by the tax collector to the chancery clerk, discloses that the tract is listed thereon in five separately described parcels on as many different lines thereof, but in consecutive order, and on each line where one of the parcels is described there is also shown the date when sold, to whom assessed, the number of acres therein, the assessed value thereof, a statement of the amount of the taxes due thereon, the tax collector's damages and fees, and then follows the total of all taxes and costs assessed or claimed against such parcel. For instance, the first of the five parcels shown on the list, comprising the one tract here in question, is listed and described on one line thereof as the SW 1/4 and SW diagonal 1/2 of SE 1/4 of Section 16, Township 24, Range 5, consisting of 240 acres, valued at $5,700, with taxes assessed thereon of $545.58; tax collector's damages, $54.55, fees, $1.50, total taxes and costs, $601.53; and the list shows that the above decribed parcel of land when sold to the state was assessed to the Bolivar Gin Company along with the four other separately assessed parcels comprising the tract of which it is a part. And the foregoing data relating to the parcel above particularly described is set forth in detail in connection with each of the other four parcels, listed in consecutive order as aforesaid, and on the same line of the list where the description of each parcel appears, except as to the difference in such description, value, acreage, taxes due on each, amount of the tax collector's damages and fees, and the total taxes and costs pertaining to each of such separately assessed parcels.

The list thus shows the taxes and costs on the first parcel of 240 acres to be the sum of $601.53, as aforesaid; on the second parcel, $1,055.98; on the third parcel, $81.02; on the fourth, $1,499.25; and on the fifth, $223.08 — in *Page 640 other words, the list of lands sold to the state and which shows as aforesaid that these five separately assessed parcels of land were sold as the property of the same owner and comprised one tract, does not show the total sum for which all of the lands were struck off to the state, except to the extent that the total sum can be determined by the addition of the several sums of taxes and costs above stated and which are set forth on the line opposite each separate parcel in the manner hereinbefore stated.

It is therefore contended by the appellees, and it was so held by the trial court, that this list shows on its face that five separate sales were made to the state for the respective amounts stated in the preceding paragraph next above instead of all of the lands thus comprising the tract being offered for sale in forty acres, then by offering another forty if no bid was received on the first one offered of a sufficient amount to satisfy the taxes and costs due on the whole tract, and so on until the entire tract was offered for sale as a whole, if necessary, in order to collect the total taxes and costs, as required by Section 3249, Code 1930.

The applicable portion of said Section 3249, relating to the manner in which the tax collector shall offer lands for sale, is that: "He shall first offer forty acres, and if the first parcel so offered do not produce the amount due, then he shall offer another similar subdivision and so on until the requisite amount be produced, or until all the land constituting one tract and assessed as the property of the same owner be offered. Upon offering the land of any delinquent taxpayer, constituting one tract, if no person will bid for it the whole amount of taxes and all costs, the collector shall strike it off to the state. The sale shall be continued from day to day within the hours for sheriff's sales until completed; but neither a failure to advertise nor error in the advertisement, nor error in conducting the sale, shall invalidate a sale at the proper time and place for taxes, of any land on which the taxes *Page 641 were due and not paid; but a sale made at the wrong time or at the wrong place shall be void." And it was held in the case of Nelson v. Abernathy, 74 Miss. 164, 21 So. 150, that a sale void for failure to offer the land for sale in such manner is not cured by the provisions of this section that no error in conducting the sale shall invalidate it.

It will be noted that this statute does not require that after the land has been first offered to individuals in the manner therein required and no person will bid for it the whole amount of taxes and costs, it shall be again offered to the state in a like manner, but merely provides that after it has been first offered in such manner and no "person" will bid for it the whole amount of taxes and all costs, the collector shall strike it off (as a whole) to the state. It is clear, however, that the statute requires that it shall be first offered to individuals in such a manner before the collector is authorized at all to strike it off to the state. These requirements were enacted for the benefit of the owner of the land, to the end that only such part of his property shall be sold as may be necessary to realize the whole amount of the taxes and costs due on the entire tract. There is always the prospect that some person will bid the whole amount due on the entire tract for the first forty offered; or at least when another is added and so on the bid may amount to more than the entire taxes and costs. But by a legal fiction the state is present and bidding the full amount — no more and no less — for all of the tracts and not merely for a part of it, in the event there is no sufficient bid by an individual.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Parker v. Touliatos
244 So. 2d 7 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1971)
Santa Cruz v. State
78 So. 2d 900 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1955)
Claughton v. Leavenworth
37 So. 2d 776 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1948)
Slush v. Patterson
28 So. 2d 738 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1947)
Barron v. Eason
25 So. 2d 188 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 So. 2d 193, 197 Miss. 628, 1944 Miss. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wilkinson-miss-1944.