Court Opinion

ID: 7029931
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 06:39:46.27858+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:10:55.019601
License: Public Domain

ACTION of disseisin for certain land which the plaintiff had purchased for taxes in 1827. Held, that the statute required the assessment-roll, and the advertisement of sale for taxes, to be filed in the office of the clerk of the Circuit Court; and that therefore the assessment of the tax, and the advertisement of sale, should be proved by copies certified, not by the clerk of the board of-.justices, but by the clerk of the Circuit Court.
Held, also, that under the statute of 1824,. the defendant in *71such case may prove, notwithstanding the collectors deed, that from the time the precept came into the collector’s hands up to the time of the sale, there was sufficient personal property on the premises, out of which the taxes could have been made; and that there was also a tenant on the premises.
Held-, also, that the collector’s deed, under the above-named statute, furnishes no evidence that the tax had been legally assessed, or that it had not been duly paid, or that the' land was not exempt from taxes.
Held, also, that under that statute, such a deed-is prima facie evidence, and nothing more, of the regularity of the proceedings relative .to the purchaser’s title, so far as the acts of the collector are concerned (1).

 In a case of a sale for taxes in 1826, it was held that though the collector’s deed -wasprima fade evidence, under the statute, that the collector, after' the receipt of the precept requiring him to sell, had done his duty relative to the sale, yet that the deed was no evidence that the collector had authority to sell; and that the. existence of the precept, authorising him to act in the premises, must be proved aliunde. Doe, d. Morris v. Himelick, May term, 1838.
The language of the statute of 1824, so far as relates to the effect of the.collector’s deed as evidence of the regularity of the sale, is changed by the statute of 1831. The words of the latter statute are, that “such conveyance shall be prima fade evidence that the sale was regular according to the provisions of this act.” Rev. Code, 1831, p. 436.
That part of the revenue law which authorises the collectors to sell lands for the non-payment of taxes is repealed. Stat. 1832, p. 265. The collector now, on or before the first of December annually, returns a list of the lands on which the taxes have not been'paid, to the school commissioner of the proper county; and a period of three years from such return is given to the owner of any of the land on the delinquent list, to redeem the same by payment of the tax, &c. If payment be not made within the prescribed time, the school commissioner proceeds, according to the provisions of the statute, to cause the title of the land to be vested in the state for tho use of the common schools of the county in which it is situated. Stat. 1832, p. 264, 265. Stat. 1835, p. 37. Vide Dentler v. The State, Nov. term, 1836; Richardson’s Heirs v. The State, Nov. term, 1838.