Court Opinion

ID: 6543442
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:17:39.854279+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:53.890222
License: Public Domain

Wood, J. This is a suit to annul a decree of confirmation of the Benton chancery court. The bill, after setting out the tax title which was confirmed, alleges, inter alia, “that said decree is null and void, and obtained without legal notice of the intention to make application for said confirmation decree at said term of court, and is a fraud on this plaintiff’s rights;” “that the notice given by the defendant that application would be made at the spring term, 1891, for said decree failed to state, in the same, by what authority and under what authority said tracts of land were sold; ” “that said notice failed to state the nature of the title by which said tracts were held;” “that six months had not elapsed from the last publication of said notice until the first day of the spring term, 1891, of this court,” etc. The bill further alleges that the plaintiffs each have a good, valid, and meritorious defense to the petition for confirmation of the tax title, and then proceeds to set out several, and, among others, “that the said delinquent list for said year was not published for two weeks next before the day of sale; ” “because the collector sold said tract of land for a greater sum than was due on it for taxes, penalty and costs,” etc. The bill, with sufficient formality, alleged facts which, if true, should have avoided the decree of confirmation. The demurrer admitted their truth, and therefore it should have been overruled. True, the bill does not refer to and make the notice in the suit for confirmation an exhibit, but it was not- fatally defective on that account, as that was a matter of proof. And the court may have had a defect in this respect, if any existed, cured upon motion. Henry v. Blackburn, 32 Ark. 450; Newman, Pl. & Pr. 257; Nordman v. Craighead, 27 Ark. 369. Reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer.