Thweatt v. Black

30 Ark. 732
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Ark. 732 (Thweatt v. Black) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thweatt v. Black, 30 Ark. 732 (Ark. 1875).

Opinion

English, Ch. J.:

Bill filed in Monroe Circuit Court, 5th January, 1870, to enforce vendor’s lien and set aside tax deed.

The bill was filed by Ezekiel Black, executor of "Wm. Walker, deceased, against Wm. E. Brannon, Peter O. Thweatt, Charner T. Scaife, James R. Graham, Thomas J. G. Goode, and Parker C. Ewan, assignee of Wm. F. Brannon in bankruptcy.

The substance of the bill is, that on the 31st day of October, 1866, plaintiff Black, as executor of Walker, under directions of the will of his testator, sold to defendant Brannon, for $2800, the southwest quarter of section 9, township 1, south range 2 west, in Monroe county, of which $700 were paid in cash, and for the balance three writings obligatory, taken for $700 cash, first due 1st January, 1868, second due 1st January, 1869, and third 1st January, 1870, bearing ten per cent interest, and bond given to make a deed on payment of the obligations. That Brannon had paid nothing on the obligations, had been adjudged a bankrupt, and defendant Ewan appointed his assignee.

That on the 9th of March, 1868, the land was sold by the collector of Monroe county for the taxes of 1865, 1866 and 1867, when the taxes for the first two years named had been paid; that the defendant Thweatt purchased the land at the tax sale, took a certificate of purchase from the collector, afterwards assigned it to defendants Scaife and Graham, who obtained a deed from the collector, etc., and that defendant Goode was an occupant of the land.

The bill also alleged an offer to redeem, and tender of the redemption money, etc.

The cause was heard upon the original and amended bill, the answers of Thweatt, Scaife and Graham, exhibits, depositions, etc., and the court decreed that the tax sale was irregular and void, and condemned the land to be sold to satisfy the balance of purchase money ascertained to be due to plaintiff from Brannon.

Thweatt, Scaife and Graham appealed.

The only questions properly arising upon this appeal are, first, was the tax sale shown by the appellee to be invalid ? and, second, did he prove a tender of the redemption money as alleged?

First(a) — The bill specifically attacks the tax sale oh no other ground than that the land was sold for the taxes of 1865, 1866, and 1867, when the taxes for the last year only were unpaid.

The answers deny and--put in issue the allegation of the bill that the land was sold for the taxes of the three years, or any other than the year 1867. The burden of proof was on the appellee.

The land was assessed and sold under the provisions of Gould’s Digest, chapter 148.

The certificate of purchase made to Thweatt, by the Collector, bearing date of 9th of March, 1868, the day of sale, recites that the land was sold for the sum of $8.42, being the aggregate amount of the State, county and special taxes, penalty and charges due thereon for the year 1867.

The certificate was assigned by Thweatt to Scaife and Graham 18th of .December, 1868. The sale was made b.y Carlton, Collector, and on the 15th day of May, 1869, Wilson, his successor in the office, executed a tax ^deed to Scaife and Graham, which recites that the land was sold for the. taxes, penalty and charges-due thereon for the year 1867, amounting to $8.42. A deed was also afterwards made to them by the County Clerk,, containing similar recitals.

The tax deed .appearing to be regular and valid upon its face, its recital that the land was sold for the taxes, etc., due thereon for the year 1867, must be.taken as true unless disproved by competent evidence on the part of the appellee, who attacked and sought to overturn the deed. Hunt v. McFadger, 20 Ark.,. 284, and cases cited. Gould’s Digest, sec. 130, ch. 148.

The appellee took the deposition of Carlton, the collector, who-made the sale. Pie -deposed that the taxes were paid upon the land for 1865 and 1866, but were not paid for 1867. That the land was advertised to be sold for the taxes of 1865, 1866 and 1867, but he could not state positively whether he offered it for sale for the taxes of the three years, or for the taxes of 1867 only.

The appellee propounded special interrogatories to be answered •by Thweatt to the fourth of which (relating to the sale) he responded : “My recollection is that I purchased the land for the taxof 1867 alone, and paid $8.42 and received no other certificate than the one upon which the deed was executed.”

The appellee took the deposition of Jas. R. Berry, Auditor of' the State, (10th May, 1870), who deposed that he' had in his-office, and had examined a certified copy of the record of the sales of lands for taxes made in Monroe county on the' second Monday of .March, 1868, from which it appeared that the tract-in question -was sold for the taxes, etc., of 1865, 1866 and 1867,. and purchased by Thweatt.

The appellees produced the original record (sale book) kept by the clerk who attended the sale (Gould’s Digest ch. 148, section 123,) from which it appears that the land in question was credited with the taxes for 1865 and 1866, and noted as sold to Thweatt for the taxes, etc., of 1867.

The original record of the sale, was of a higher grade of evidence than the deposition of the Auditor who testified as to the contents of a certified copy, sent to his office by the county clerk.

The weight of the evidence produced at the hearing, taking it altogether, is against the truth of the allegation of the bill (denied by the answers), that the land was sold for the taxes of 1865, 1866 and 1867.

(6) It was insisted here for the appellee, however, that the sale was void, because the land was advertised to be sold for the taxes, etc., of 1865, 1866 and 1867, though sold for the year 1867 only, which remained unpaid to the time of the sale.

It appears from the assessment rolls and tax book produced at the hearing, that the land was assessed and taxed for 1865, in the name of William Walker, deceased, upon a valuation of $480 and the taxes paid.

That for the year 1866, it, with another tract, was assessed and taxed in the same name, both tracts being valued at $700, and the taxes paid.

That in the year 1867, the tract in controversy was assessed in the name of Malcome McNeil, a non-resident, for that and the two preceding years, at a valuation of $320 and charged upon the tax book, for the three years with $8 dollars State tax, $4.80 county tax, and $4.36 special tax, and advertised for sale by the collector, for the taxes of the three' years, as charged upon the tax book in his hands, with a penalty of $4.26 added.

It is to be inferred from facts in evidence, that before the sale by some means, it was brought to the notice of the collector, that the taxes had been paid upon the land for the years 1865 and 1866, and that he sold the land for the taxes, penalty, etc., properly charged upon it for the year 1867 only.

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30 Ark. 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thweatt-v-black-ark-1875.