Witherspoon v. Duncan

21 Ark. 240
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1860
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 21 Ark. 240 (Witherspoon v. Duncan) 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
Witherspoon v. Duncan, 21 Ark. 240 (Ark. 1860).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice English

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed in the Clark Circuit Court, by Henry K. Hardy, to the March term, 1856, and he having departed this life before the return term, it was afterwards revived in the names of Witherspoon and others, as his executors.

The object of the bill was to establish and quiet the title of complainant to the S. E. qr. of Sec. 23, and the S. W. qr. of Section 24, T. 8 S. R. 22 W., situate in Clark county, and to cancel a tax title held by Duncan and Flanagin to the same lands.

The cause was heard upon the pleadings, exhibits, and agreement of facts; and the bill was dismissed for want of equity; and the executors of Hardy appealed.

The title of Hardy is derived as follows:

Timothy Harrell being a settler in that portion of the territory of Arkansas ceded to the Cherokee nation by the treaty of the 23d May, 1828, and having removed therefrom, was entitled to a donation of a quantity of land not exceeding two quarter sections, under the provisions of the act of Congress of 24th May, 1828. (commonly known as a Lovely Claim.) Having departed this life before he proved up his claim, his heirs, on the 17th May, 1830, made proof of his actual settlement and subsequent removal, before the Register and Receiver of the’ Land Office, at Little Rock, in accordance with the provisions of said act, who allowed their claim to a donation of 320 acres of land. Whereupon, they applied to the Register to enter with the donation claim so established, the lands above described, which were then situated in the Little Rock Land District, and subject to entry at that office; and wdiich entry was allowed on the 22d day of May, 1830, by the Register; and a certificate thereof, in due time, transmitted to Washington.

That the Commissioner of the General Land office (as the bill alleges), in conformity wdth law and the usage of the department, and under instructions from the Secretary of the Treasury, suspended said claim, and for some supposed defect in, or objection to the same, refused to confirm the decision of the district land office, or to sanction such entry, or cause to be issued any patent for said land, until the 5th of February, 1846, when the claim was finally confirmed, and a patent issued lor the lands to the heirs of Harrell.

On the 8th of June, 1836, Gabriel W. Denton was permitted, by mistake, to enter the same lands at the land office at Washington, Arkansas, and obtained a certificate of entry. After the confirmation of the entry of Harrell’s heirs, and the issuance of the patent to them, the sale to Denton was cancelled, and his purchase money refunded to him by the government.

The title to the land, which the bill seeks to establish and quiet, was obtained by Hardy, through the heirs of Harrell, after the issuance of the patent to them.

Duncan and Flan agin claim title to the lands as follows:

The lands were assessed for taxes, by the sheriff and assessor of Clark County, for the year 1842, in the name of Denton, as a non-resident, etc. Neither he, nor the heirs of Harrell, nor any one else, paying the taxes, etc., charged thereon, the lands were sold by the collector, on the first Monday of November, 1842, for the taxes, and purchased by Duncan and Flanagin, who obtained a certificate of purchase; and on the 1st of January, 1847, the collector executed to them a tax deed for the lands. They afterwards filed a bill in the Circuit Court of Clark county, under the statute, to confirm their title, and at the March term, 1848, after due public notice, obtained a decree of confirmation. It is admitted that the assessment and sale of the land for taxes, as well as the proceedings for confirmation, were regular and formal.

It is insisted by the appellant that the lands were not subject to taxation for the year 1842, and that the tax sale was consequently null and void, and that neither it, nor the decree of confirmation conferred any valid title to the lands upon appellees.

It is conceded that the assessment of the lands in the name of Denton, who was not the true owner, did not vitiate the sale, if the lands were subject to taxation. The point on which the counsel for appellants rests the case, is, that the lands were not subject to taxation until the entry made with the donation claim was confirmed, and the patent granted.

It has been the practice in this State, from an early period after the formation of the State government, to impose a tax upon lands after they were sold by the United States, and before the patents were issued. Thus, it was provided by the Act of 1th November, 1836, (Pamph. Acts, 1836, p. 188,) that “ there shall be levied and collected, as a state tax, on all lands lying within this State, claimed by any person, etc., by title derived from the United States, or otherwise, whether a patent may have issued from the President of the United States, or not, one-fourth of one per cent,” etc.

Again, it was provided by sec. 1, chap'. 128, of the Revised Statutes, which was in force when the lands in question were assessed and sold, that a tax should be levied upon “ all lands lying within this State,. claimed or owned by any person or corporation, whether such lands may have been patented or not, except such as are exempt from taxation by virtue of the compact between this State and the United States.”

The compact exempts from taxation lands which are the property of the United States; and, for a limited period, military bounty lands. 5 Sec.

By Sec. 9, chap. 18, Rev. Slat., it was made the duty of the Auditor annually to procure and furnish to the proper officer in each county a list of such lands as might, from year to year, become taxable, etc.

That it is within the power of the Legislature to impose a tax upon lands purchased at the United States Land Offices, before the patents are issued, does not, we think, admit of a well founded doubt. A law imposing a tax upon such lands is no violation of the clause of the Compact which declares “ that “ the General Assembly of the State shall never interfere with “ the primary 'disposal of the soil within the same by the United “ States, nor with any regulations Congress may find necessary “ for securing the title in such soil to the bona fide purchasers “ thereof.” Nor is such law a violation of that clause of the Compact which declares “ that no tax shall be imposed upon “ lands the property of the United States. See Carroll vs. Safford, 3 How. U. S. R. 400; Astrom et al. vs. Hammond, Aud , 3 McLean R. 108; Carroll vs. Perry et al., 4 Ib. 26; Gwynn vs. Niswanger, 20 Ohio R. 559; Blackwell on Tax Titles. 633.

When land is purchased at the Land Office, paid for, and the certificate of entry issued to the purchaser, it is no longer tire property of the United States, but of the purchaser. He may immediately enter upon and improve it. By our laws, he may bring ejectment for it; it is subject to execution as his property, and, on his death, it descends to his heirs. It is not within the power of the United States to sell it again, if the first sale is in accordance with law.

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