Webb v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co.

185 P. 128, 20 Ariz. 580, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 209
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1919
DocketCivil No. 1672
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 P. 128 (Webb v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Phoenix Title & Trust Co., 185 P. 128, 20 Ariz. 580, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 209 (Ark. 1919).

Opinion

CUNNINGHAM, C. J.

(After Stating the Facts as Above). The appellant assigns as error: First, the order overruling his general demurrer to the sufficiency of the complaint to state a cause of action; second, because the judgment is contrary to law in the particular that the law (paragraph 4868, Rev. Stats. Ariz. 1913) provides for the item of real .property assessed to include two or more contiguous town lots at a joint valuation, and because, the judgment is contrary to the evidence.

The assessment item in question had reached the stage of delinquency, its return as such, and was duly carried to the “back tax book” before the appellee became the puhehaser of said lot 15. From all that appears in the record, the item on the “back tax book” is identical with the same item on the assessment-roll for the year 1915 as to the name of the owner, the description of the property, and the valuation placed on such item. In other words, the back taxes appearing due upon the delinquent real estate, said lots 14 and 15, upon a valuation of $300 for the taxes for 1915, were duly extended in the “back tax book” made under chapter 7, title 49, Revised Statutes of Arizona, paragraph 4927, Id. — at least we presume the county treasurer performed his duty under paragraph 4927.

Consequently, we are interested only in the questions involved in redeeming such delinquent real estate from the lien accompanying such property while on the said back tax book.

Any irregularities, omissions or mere defects that may have adhered to the assessment or became attached to the item at [583]*583any time prior to the transfer of the item to the delinquent list and its fentry on the back tax list book do not invalidate any such assessment tax-roll and proceeding leading up to the entry. Paragraph 4933, Id.

Paragraph 4845, Id., declares the tax lien as follows:

“Every tax levied under the provisions or authority of this act upon any real or personal property is hereby made a lien upon the property assessed, which lien shall attach on the first Monday in January in each year and shall not be satisfied or removed until such taxes, penalty, charges, and interest are all paid, or the property has absolutely vested in a purchaser under a sale for taxes. Said lien shall be prior and superior to all other liens and incumbrances upon the said property.”

Paragraph 4915, Id., declares as follows:

“The taxes due and unpaid on any real estate which has heretofore been returned delinquent and which has not been forfeited to the state . . . shall be deemed and held to be back taxes/ and the lien heretofore created in favor of the . . . state of Arizona [paragraph 4845, supra] is hereby retained on each such tract and lot of real estate to the amount of the taxes due thereon and also the interest and costs accruing under this act.”

Hence the lien on this item of assessment — that is, the lien on lots 14 and 15 of block 3 assessed to Murphy and Irwin at a valuation of $600 — “shall not be satisfied or removed until such taxes, penalty, charges, and interest are all paid,”, or a sale for taxes had and title under the sale has absolutely vested. The lien was not satisfied nor removed when the tax was returned delinquent, and became known as “back taxes,” but, on the .other hand, such lien was expressly continued “on each . . . tract and lot of real estate to the amount of the taxes due thereon, and also the interest and costs accruing” under the act for the collection of delinquent taxes.

The question here is, In what manner can the tax lien on the item of assessment be satisfied and removed from said lot 15, and said lot be relieved from the tax lien for the taxes due on it and on said lot 14, as described in the original assessment and thereafter carried to the “back tax book”?

The tax lien is, without any doubt, coextensive with the real estate assessed to one owner. Each separate or separable portion of real estate may be sold in a proper proceed[584]*584ing for the taxes due upon the Whole assessment of • real estate and personal property combined. Paragraph 4847, Rev. Stats. Ariz. 1913. No dispute can properly arise on that proposition. The dispute arises whenever the subsequent purchaser of a part of the real estate described in an assessment — the purchase being made after the taxes have become delinquent — seeks to pay a portion of the delinquent taxes, interest, penalty, charges and costs proportionately chargeable on the land purchased, the amount of which is determined from a valuation placed upon such purchased land by some authority other than the tax assessor at the time he valued the whole tract, lot, or parcel of land for the purpose of the assessment in question.

The question is not answered by attacking the original assessment upon the grounds that the assessment fails to properly describe and separately value each town lot, because “two or more contiguous lots, parcels or tracts of land, or two or more contiguous patented mines owned by the same person or corporation may be jointly assessed and one valuation fixed for the two or more lots, parcels, or tracts of land, or for the two or more patented mining claims, without placing a separate value on each parcel, or tract of land, or upon each patented mining claim.”

The assessment is therefore not open to a charge of error, defect or irregularity in the matters of description and joint valuation; the lots are contiguous, they were owned at the time of the assessment by the same owner, and they were treated on the assessment-roll, the levy, and valuation as one item.

The two lots were listed, placed on the assessment-roll, and returned delinquent as one item; they were placed on the “back tax book” as one item; in fact, we presume that the board of supervisors would have corrected any defects, omissions and irregularities at a proper time and prior to the date upon which the treasurer finally received the “back tax book” for the purpose of collecting the taxes set out in the same, as required by paragraph 4914 as amended by chapter 9, section 3, Laws of 1915 (2d Sp. Sess.), page 102.

Paragraph 4912, as amended, section 5 of chapter 9, Laws of 1915, Second Special Session, reads as follows

“On the last day of December and the last day of June of each year, the board of supervisors shall examine and com[585]*585pare the delinquent list; and if any property be incorrectly described the said board shall correct such error by the best means in their power and cause the delinquent list so corrected to be certified to by the chairman of the board.”

Chapter 4916, Eevised Statutes of Arizona of 1913, requires the county treasurer to make the back tax book for the year “from the delinquent list, and uncollected taxes in the ‘back tax book’ or books, provided for in” paragraphs 4908 and 4941, “setting forth name of the owner, the year assessed and the description, the valuation, and the amount of the taxes originally due, set forth in appropriate columns as was set forth in the original roll, together with appropriate columns for interest, fees, and such other charges as may be. provided by law. ... The sum total of taxes originally due as shown in said ‘back tax book’ must agree with the amount of the sums total shown by the several delinquent lists as corrected by the board of supervisors and such amount or total sum shall be debited at the end or close of - such ‘back tax book’ against the county treasurer.”

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Related

Davis v. State
401 P.2d 749 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P. 128, 20 Ariz. 580, 1919 Ariz. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-phoenix-title-trust-co-ariz-1919.