Court Opinion

ID: 6549372
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:22:43.257559+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:03.876802
License: Public Domain

McCulloch, C. J. This is an action instituted by appellants in the chancery court of Bradley County against appellees, in which it is sought to vacate two decrees of said chancery court rendered at the January term, 1907, confirming certain tax sales under which .appellees claim title to the lands described in the decrees. The validity of the two decrees is challenged on the grounds (1) that the court did not acquire jurisdiction of the subject-matter; (2) that the decrees were rendered in vacation, and (3) that they were obtained by fraud practiced by the attorneys for the petitioner, Emma Gotsch. The case was tried on the, record in the two former proceedings, in which the decrees sought to be cancelled wpre rendered; and also upon an agreed statement of facts, and other testimony. Appellants showed that they were the owners of the original titles, and that appellees hold under a forfeiture to the State for taxes in 1869, and subsequent conveyances. It is satisfactorily proved in the present case that the petitioners for confirmation had not paid taxes for three years when the petitions were filed and the decrees were rendered, and, of course, tax receipts showing the payment of taxes for at least three years were not exhibited as required by the confirmation statute. The confirmation decrees themselves, however, recite a finding by the court that the taxes had been paid for three years prior to the filing of the petitions, and each of the decrees also recites that notice of publication had been duly pub-fished “for six weeks previous to-the petition for corn firmation, and the last day thereof appearing twenty days before the first day of the present term of this court.” Among the papers on file in the confirmation proceeding are the affidavits of the publishers showing publication of the notice, and it appears from these notices that they are signed by the clerk of the court, and also by the attorney for the petitioner. On a final hearing the court dismissed the complaint for want of equity. The basis of the charge that the court was without jurisdiction is that the statute was not complied with in the matter of giving notice. The statute concerning confirmation of tax titles provides that “the purchasers, or the heirs and legal representatives of purchasers * * * may at any time after the expiration of the time allowed for such redemption, publish six weeks in succession in some newspaper published in the county where the lands lie # # * a notice calling on all persons who can set up any right to the lands, so purchased in consequence of any informality or any irregularity connected with such sale to show cause at the first term of the circuit court of the county, or if there be a separate chancery court in the county, then at the first term of the chancery court, after the publication of the notice, why the sale so made should not be confirmed.” Kirby’s Digest, section 662. The next two sections provide that “the notice provided in the preceding section shall state the authority under which the sale took place and give the description of the land purchased and the nature of the title by which it is held,” and that “the last insertion of said notice in the newspaper shall be at least twenty days prior to the first day of the term of court at which application for confirmation is to be made. ’ ’ It will be noted that under this statute, notice is to be given by the petitioners themselves, whereas, under the act of 1899, providing for confirmation of titles, the provision is for notice by the clerk after the filing of the petition. This court has held that the act of 1899 is not applicable to confirmation of tax sales. Ex parte Morrison, 69 Ark. 517. The notice in each of the cases was in strict compliance with the statute authorizing confirmation of tax sales except that it was signed by the clerk; but as it was also signed by the attorney for the petitioners the signature of the clerk may be treated as surplusage, and the notice is sufficient as one given by the petitioner. However, if we should hold otherwise on that question, the failure to have the notice signed in the manner required by the statute was a mere irregularity which could not be taken advantage of in an attack of this kind. Porter v. Dooley, 66 Ark. 1; Johnson v. Lesser, 76 Ark. 465. The next attack upon the validity of the confirmation decrees is on the ground that they were rendered in vacation. . There is nothing in the evidence to sustain this attack. The records prepared and kept by the clerk show that the decrees were entered during term time. It is true there appears on the record preceding these decrees an order of adjournment, but it had been erased or scratched out and another order of adjournment entered following the record of the confirmation decrees. This condition of the record, even unexplained, would not be sufficient to overturn the clerk’s entry of the decrees upon the record. Fiddyment v. Bateman, 97 Ark. 76. But the condition of the record was fully explained by the testimony of the clerk, who stated that the adjourning order was at first erroneously written before these decrees were entered while the court was still in session. In support of the attack on the decrees for fraud in their procurement appellants called as a witness the attorney who acted'for the petitioners in the confirmation proceedings, and he stated, in substance, that he did not represent to the court that he had the tax receipts, but that he correctly stated the facts at the time of the rendition of the decrees. Appellants also rely upon proof that the petitioners had not in fact paid taxes on the lands for three years. This was not sufficient to show fraud in procurement of the decrees. Boynton v. Ashabranner, 75 Ark. 415; Bank of Pine Bluff v. Levi, 90 Ark. 170; Terry v. Logue, 97 Ark. 314. The facts in Boynton v. Ashabranner, supra, were very similar to the facts of the present case as to the question of alleged fraud. There the court said: “The defendant testified that he had paid the taxes for the three years preceding the confirmation, and exhibited his tax receipts, and it follows from that' testimony that the petition for confirmation could not have paid the taxes for those years. But the confirmation decree recites the exhibition by the petitioner of tax receipts, and the court necessarily found before entering the decree that petitioner had paid the taxes. It is not sufficient to show now that the finding was erroneous because, in the absence of fraud, that finding is conclusive, and another trial of the question can not be permitted. The court may have reached its conclusion upon false or incompetent testimony as to payment of taxes, yet that would not constitute grounds for reopening the question and trying it anew. * * * Mere proof, however, that the taxes were paid by the defendant is not sufficient, in the absence of an affirmative showing of fraud practiced on the court. It is the payment of taxes, and not the exhibition of tax receipts, which confers jurisdiction upon the court to confirm the tax title of the petitioner, and a finding by the court in that proceeding of that jurisdictional fact is final and conclusive until the contrary be shown, and fraud be shown to have been practiced upon the court inducing that finding.” Our conclusion is that appellants failed to establish their claim of fraud in the procurement of the confirmation decrees and that tñe chancellor was correct in refusing to vacate the decrees. Affirmed.