Volger v. Sidener

86 Ind. 545
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1882
DocketNo. 9656
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 86 Ind. 545 (Volger v. Sidener) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Volger v. Sidener, 86 Ind. 545 (Ind. 1882).

Opinion

Zollars, J.

On the 9th day of February, 1880, appellee commenced this cause in the court below against appellants, .as, the treasurer and auditor of Bartholomew county, to enjoin the sale of the land described in the complaint, to make the •amount of the delinquent taxes charged thereon. After various rulings on motions and demurrers a trial was had. A motion by appellants for a new trial was overruled, and a judgment was rendered perpetually enjoining the sale of the land. Exceptions were taken to the several rulings as made. Upon these rulings errors are assigned in this court. No question is made as to the legality or regularity of the assessment and levy of the taxes for the several years. The injunction is asked upon the ground that the treasurer had not collected the taxes from personal property.

The complaint is in two paragraphs. The following summary of the first paragraph we take from the brief of counsel for appellee: The first paragraph of the complaint shows that Sidener owned the land, the sale of which is sought to be enjoined, on the 1st day of April, 1877, and sold and conveyed [546]*546the same to John Book on the 1st day of September, 1877. The taxes for 1877, with delinquent taxes and penalties for the. preceding year, were paid by Sidener, but the treasurer returned the land delinquent for non-payment, and the auditor recorded the land as delinquent and charged thereon the amount of $23.74 delinquent taxes. Book not paying the taxes for 1878, the amount thereof, with penalty, together with said sum of $23.74, were charged as delinquent against the land, it having been assessed in his name, and the delinquencies charged against him, and the land was advertised for sale, to pay said' alleged, and in fact, delinquencies, together with the current taxes for the year 1879. Sidener holds by a sheriff’s certificate of purchase of the land given on sale under a decree of foreclosure of mortgage executed to him by Book to secure his unpaid purchase-money, the amount exceeding the value of the land. Book is insolvent and unable to redeem. During the whole of the current delinquent year, 1879, Book had and owned in said county leviable personal property of the value of $500, and still continues to hold and own a sufficient amount of leviable personal property in said county to pay said taxes, interest, penalty and costs; that no levy or other effort has-been made to collect said unpaid taxes from the personal property of said John Book.

The portion of the second paragraph that we need notice particularly is in substance as follows: On and from the 1st day of April, until the 9th day of October, 1875, one William Kalor was the owner of and in the possession of the land. On the latter day he sold and conveyed the land to one Levi H. Young, who owned and was in possession of the same until the 20th day of January, 1877, when he conveyed it to appellee, who owned and continued in the possession of the same until the 18th day of September, 1877. On that day appellee conveyed it to John Book, and took from him and wife a mortgage to secure the purchase-money. This mortgage was foreclosed on the 29th day of March, 1879, the decree being [547]*547for the amount due on the mortgage, and costs; in all, $2,042..— 83. The land was sold by the sheriff on the 26th day of April,.. 1879, for $525. Appellee was the purchaser, received a certificate from the sheriff, and held and owned it when this action was commenced. The judgment, with interest at ten per cent.,, except the $525, is unpaid. The land is insufficient to pay th& debt. Book is insolvent, and unable to redeem. The averments; further show that the land was properly charged with taxes for the years named, as follows, viz.: 1875,$21.04; 1876, $18.82;. 1877, $16.90; 1878, $26.58; 1879, $23.88. Kalor paid $7.27 of thetaxof 1875, leaving $13.77 unpaid and delinquent. Young; did not pay the tax of 1876, nor the delinquent tax of 1875-Appellee paid the taxes of 1876 and 1877, as they became due,., but the treasurer returned them as delinquent, and they were-so charged by the auditor as delinquent. Book did not pay the tax of 1878, when it became due, nor the-delinquent tax of former years, which had been carried forward and charged to him, making in all $50.52. At the 'proper time the land-was advertised for sale to make the amount of the delinquent. 'taxes, to which was added the tax of 1879.

It is further alleged that said Kalor, on the 3d Monday of' April, 1876, “and ever since said date, has owned and held in said county a large amount of leviable personal property,, of the value of $500, out of which said taxes might have been-made;” that Young, on the third Monday of April, 1877, “and for a long time thereafter, to wit, one year, owned and had leviable personal property in said county of Bartholomew, of the value of $100, out of which all of the taxes of the year 1876, current and delinquent, could have been made; that-Book, on the third Monday of April, 1879, had and owned! in said county, leviable personal property of the value of $500,. and continued to hold and own the same in said county.”

It is further averred that no attempt has been made by the ’ treasurer of said county, by levy or otherwise, to collect said unpaid taxes from the personal property of said Kalor; that [548]*548appellee pointed out to the treasurer the personal property of Young, but he failed and refused to collect the tax, or make any effort to do so, either by levy or otherwise, out of the said property of said Young; that the treasurer failed and refused to collect the said tax, or any part thereof, from the personal property of said Book, by levy or otherwise, and .•after the third Monday of April, 1879, returned the lands as ■delinquent. Appellant filed a motion to strike out portions of this paragraph, which was overruled and he excepted. Under the repeated decisions of this court, the overruling of such a motion is not an available error.

Appellants also filed a motion to have the complaint made more specific, as to the first paragraph : “To set forth particularly the property, and kind of property, owned by Book, subject to levy and the payment of taxes, and, where it was situated, and when it was owned by him.

“To render the second paragraph of complaint more specific in this:

“1. To set forth with particularity a description of the personal property owned by William Kalor, and where the same was situated, and when it was owned by him.
“ 2. To set forth particularly the personal property owned by Levi H. Young, and where it was situated, and when he owned it.
“ 3. To set forth a specific description of the property owned by John Book and subject to levy, and where situated.”

This motion was overruled, and appellants excepted.' It was overruled on the 28th day of February, 1881. On the 7th day of March, 1881, at the same term of court, a bill of exceptions was filed embodying the motion, ruling and exception. There is no affirmative statement in the record that time was given in which to reduce to writing and file the bill. For this reason it is urged that the bill is not in the record* Under the code of 1852, in force at the time the bill was filed, it was necessary, to bring into the record an exception to a ruling upon a motion like the one above, that the bill should [549]*549be signed and filed at the time of the ruling and exception,, or that time should be then given, and the bill be filed within that time.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Ind. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/volger-v-sidener-ind-1882.