Walker v. Polk

44 So. 2d 477, 208 Miss. 389, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 256
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1950
Docket37271
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 44 So. 2d 477 (Walker v. Polk) 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
Walker v. Polk, 44 So. 2d 477, 208 Miss. 389, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 256 (Mich. 1950).

Opinions

[395]*395McGehee, O. J.

This suit seeks to have quieted and confirmed the title of 40 acres of land on account of the disturbing effect had thereon by the renewed interest of the respective claimants because of the production of oil and gas in close proximity to such land. The suit was filed on June 12, 1945, by the appellee E. E. L. Polk, purchaser of the land at a tax sale, made on April 7, 1930. The other [396]*396appellees, Superior Oil Company and M. E. Perry, who claim through Mr. Polk under an oil and gas lease and a mineral deed respectively, were allowed to intervene as complainants. The appeal is from a final decree in favor of said tax title purchaser and the other complainants, which granted the relief prayed for against the defendants, Levi Walker and the other surviving children of Celia Walker, deceased, who obtained a United States patent to the land on September 1, 1910, and who owned the land at the time of the tax sale and resided thereon and cultivated the greater portion thereof until shortly before the year of the tax- sale, when she moved to St. Louis, Missouri, after her dwelling and other improve-ments had been destroyed by fire.

It appears that the defendant Levi Walker had charge of the land shortly after his mother and the other children had moved away, and that it was for that reason assessed to him for the years 1928 to 1931, inclusive, during all of which time he paid the taxes every year, except those for 1928 which were paid for him by “Rawls & Lamp-ton”, unless there was a'failure in 1930 to pay the taxes thereon for the year 1929, as contended by appellees, before the hour of sale on April 7, 1930.

It seems that in 1934, Levi Walker also moved away, and there was some testimony at the trial to the effect that in the year 1935 the land was left under the control of one Rich Gray, who had married a daughter of Celia Walker, but who predeceased her mother, and that Gray was then residing on nearby land. However, Rich Gray neither made any use of the land nor paid any taxes thereon, but he granted permission to some of the persons to whom the tax title purchaser had rented it after 1935, agreeing that they might go ahead and cultivate certain small patches of the open land, near the edges of the 40 acres. The proof discloses that these small patches, consisting of approximately 4 acres, were cultivated for 4 years by Louis and Lefty Gray, Jr., beginning in 1935. They were later succeeded by A. L. Dampeer, and he [397]*397was succeeded by Charlie Thompson, and the latter was succeeded by Givens Draughn, and after which time Louis Gray began to again make some use of the land, all as tenants of the tax title purchaser, but three of whom also obtained the consent of Rich Gray as aforesaid to 'use the land without compensation to him therefor, they paying to Mr. Polk one-fourth of whatever agricultural products were produced.

The complainants therefore sought to have their title quieted and confirmed on two grounds, first, the alleged validity of the tax sale to the complainant R. E. L. Polk, of April 7, 1930, and second, actual adverse possession claimed to have been uninterruptedly continued for ten years, such as to vest in them a full and complete title under Sections 709 and 711, Code of 1942. The trial court sustained the bill of complaint, quieted and confirmed the title of complainants, and cancelled the claim of the defendants thereto as a cloud upon the alleged true title.

If the complainant R. E. L. Polk acquired a valid title at the tax sale of April 7,1930, it would not be necessary for us to determine the sufficiency of the evidence as to whether or not the adverse possession relied on by him was continuous for a period of • ten consecutive years; otherwise, it will become necessary that we discuss and pass on the sufficiency of such evidence.

The validity of the tax sale in question depends upon the interpretation and effect to be given the evidence, both oral and documentary, on the primary issue as to whether all taxes legally levied against the land for the year 1929 were paid by Levi Walker at any time in 1930 prior to the sale of the land for taxes on April 7, 1930.

The burden of proof was on the appellees, as complainants, seeking to have the tax title quieted and confirmed, to prove not only a valid assessment of the land was for taxes, but that the taxes for which the land-was offered for sale had not been paid. To that end they introduced the tax deed to the complainant Polk and the [398]*398duplicate of a tax receipt, dated April 7, 1930, reciting that the taxes in the sum of $14.82, for the year 1929, had been received from Levi Walker on this land (correctly describing it), and the receipt was signed "V. L. Terrell, Sheriff and Tax Collector ’ ’, but' which duplicate tax receipt also contained a notation in the blank space between the description of the land and the signature of the sheriff and tax collector to the receipt as follows: "Sold to R. E. L. Polk”, and a further notation in such space "Sold, R. E. L. Polk $19.83”. This duplicate tax receipt, a photostatic copy of which is made a part of the record, is dated “4-7-1930”, the "19” being printed, and the " 30 ” being written, with the same pencil as were the words contained in the first notation hereinbefore mentioned, "Sold to R. E. L. Polk”, and with a different pencil than the second notation, or the name "Levi Walker”, the description of the land, and the name "V. L. Terrell” were written. Of course, this would be true for the reason that such notations were made on a different occasion, subsequent to the purported tax sale and after the tax receipt had been duly issued and signed.

However, Section 6956, Hemingway’s Code of 1917 (Section 8241, Hemingway’s Code of 1927), which was then in force, requires that a tax receipt shall be given to everyone paying taxes, and that the same be dated, numbered, and filled up so as to show by whom and on what taxes were paid, and, in case of land, distinctly specifying it as it is described on the assessment roll; that any other receipt shall not be valid as evidence; and that the duplicate of the receipt, numbered and filled up so as to be an exact copy of it, shall be left in its place in the Book of Receipts. This duplicate tax receipt, as introduced' in evidence by the complainants, recited on its face, omitting the two quoted notations contained in the blank space between the description and the signature of the sheriff and tax collector, the following:

[399]*399“Sheriff’s Office, Jefferson Davis County, Miss.
“No. 4973
“4-7-1930
“Received of Levi Walker $14.82
“State and County Taxes for the fiscal year 1929, as per following statements and descriptions of real and personal property, to-wit.
‘ ‘ Total Real Assessment...... $-
1 ‘ Total Personal Assessment.. $-
“Total $-Rate per cent 57
“Division of Section S T R Valuation
“SE N W 28 ~4 18 260
Dollars Cts.
“-Tax- 14 82
“Dog Tax -
“Poll Tax -
4
“District -

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Walker v. Polk
44 So. 2d 477 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
44 So. 2d 477, 208 Miss. 389, 1950 Miss. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-polk-miss-1950.