Court Opinion

ID: 7984959
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 01:24:32.537235+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:35:10.333453
License: Public Domain

Chalmers, J.,
delivered the opinion of the court.
To a bill filed under the act of 1860 to confirm a tax title the defendant answered and proved that he was living on the land at and before the day of sale, and at the time fixed by law for the collection of taxes, and that no demand was made on him therefor, nor any written notice left on the premises. This defence cannot avail. By the seventh section of the act of Feb. 10, 1860, it was provided that no sale of lands thereafter made “ shall be impeached or questioned in any manner, or for any cause, saving fraud or mistake in the *540assessment, or sale of the same, or upon the proof that the tax for which the same were sold had been paid prior to such sale.” Acts of 1859-60, p. 216.
All other defences save those specified are cut off. The constitutionality of this act was affirmed in Griffin v. Dogan, 48 Miss. 11, and recognized in several subsequent cases. Whatever other irregularities may be embraced in the expression “fraud or mistake in the assessment, or sale,” it is evident that by no possible construction can these words cover a failure by the sheriff to make demand for the taxes.
It is urged by counsel that we have heretofore held that this statute would not cut off the defence that the sale was made upon the wrong day, nor that the taxes for which it was made were in aid of the rebellion. This is true; but there is no analogy between those defences and that set up here. A sale for taxes in aid of the rebellion could confer no title, because an act of hostility to the United States government, and it could not have been the intention of the legislature, by a statute passed in February, 1860, to render such a title valid. A sale at a time or place other than that prescribed by law is manifestly a mistake in the sale, and is therefore embraced in the statute. It has always been held that such sales convey no title.
Becree. reversed, and cause remanded for decree.