Court Opinion

ID: 3663140
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:14:02.997183+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:29:01.929564
License: Public Domain

The case turns upon the construction of sections 51, 64, and 65, chapter 169, Laws 1897, the sale having been made and the deed of the sheriff to the defendant having been executed under the provisions of that act. It is required by section 51 that before any real estate shall be sold for taxes, the sheriff shall personally serve notice of such sale on the delinquent taxpayer or his agent at least thirty days before such sale, if the defendant resides in the State. If he is a nonresident the sheriff is required to notify him by mail and also by publication in a newspaper in his county once a week for four consecutive weeks preceding the sale, and if there is no newspaper in the county, then by a like notice for four successive weeks by posting the same on the door of the courthouse of the county. Provision is made for the form of notice. According to the construction placed by this Court on (585)  section 65, subsection 7, of chapter 169 of the aforesaid act, the sheriff's deed is only presumptive evidence that the notice to the owner or delinquent taxpayer has been given and the publication made as required by section 51. In King v. Cooper, 128 N.C. 347, the present Chief Justice assigns the reasons for this interpretation of the act and says: "For which reasons and from the context, we think the notices and publication presumed under section 69 (7) to have been given, are those required of the sheriff by section 51 of said act, but the notices required with so much particularity to be given by the purchaser, under the new sections, 64 and 65, must be proved by him."
That case correctly interprets the statute and is now approved and followed by us. It settles the meaning of the law as thoroughly as if it had been expressed in the statute with the same clearness and conclusiveness as it is stated by the Court in the language quoted. It is not liable to misconstruction nor is it a matter of doubt. Its true meaning can no longer be questioned, if we are to respect at all the salutary doctrine of stare decisis. Tested by this rule, that the sheriff's deed is only presumptive evidence of his compliance with the provisions of section 51, which requires the sheriff to serve notice on the delinquent taxpayer, the defendant has acquired no title to the property by his purchase, as the sheriff failed to serve the notice. The judge finds as a fact that the land was listed for taxation, that is, entered on the book, on 4 April, 1899, and was sold on 1 May, 1899, less than 28 days after it was listed, the length of notice being four weeks or twenty-eight days. Early v. Doe, 16 How. (U.S.), 610. So that it was impossible for the sheriff to give the required notice, and in this connection the judge further finds as follows: "It does not appear that the sheriff gave any notice by publication or otherwise of the sale, either to the owner or to the public." The presumption arising from the deed is therefore rebutted. The reasons *Page 459 
and the necessity for such a notice are fully stated and sustained (586) by cogent argument and the citation of many authorities in 1 Blackwell on Tax Titles (5 Ed.), sec. 398, and note 1: "The publication of notice to taxpayers, required by tax laws, is an indispensable preliminary to the legality of a tax sale, and it must be made in strict accordance with the statutory requirement." S. v. Neward,36 N.J. Law, 288; Farnum v. Buffum, 4 Cush., 260; Early v. Doe, supra. In this respect a distinction is made between a sheriff's sale under an ordinary execution and one under a tax assessment. 1 Blackwell, supra, sec. 397; Early v. Doe, supra. Section 51 seems to have been drawn with reference to this distinction, for the language used is appropriate to create a condition precedent. That such notice to the delinquent is essential was expressly decided in Hill v. Nicholson, 92 N.C. 24. There, it is true, a mortgagee claimed the right to be notified, and it has been held since that when the sale is sufficient to pass the title as to the mortgagor it will also conclude the mortgagee. Exum v. Baker, 115 N.C. 242;Powell v. Sikes, 119 N.C. 231; King v. Cooper, supra. But we citeHill v. Nicholson only for the principle that the notice is essential and must be given to the owner or delinquent who, in the case of a mortgage, would be the mortgagor, and in this case the plaintiff. It would seem that the statute, as construed in King v. Cooper, supra, by making the sheriff's deed only presumptive evidence that the notice was given, itself recognizes that the service of the notice is an "essential prerequisite to the validity of the sale." Subdivisions 8 and 10 of section 69, which were relied on by the defendant, are to be read in connection with the other subdivisions and construed with reference to those subdivisions. Any other construction would produce a conflict between the first seven subdivisions and subdivisions 8 and 10. Indeed, subdivision 10 is expressly made subject to the first seven subdivisions.
But we think that the affidavit of the defendant is not in compliance with sections 64 and 65. It is there required that the notice shall be inserted in the newspaper three times, the first publication to (587) be not more than five months and the last not less than three months before the time of redemption will expire, that is, the delinquent must have at least three months notice and time to redeem after the publication is completed. It is stated in the affidavit that more than three months before the expiration of the time of redemption the defendant caused the notice to be published in a weekly paper for four successive weeks. "The first insertion of said notice in said paper was made not more than five months and the last insertion not more than three months before the time of redemption expired." If by the first part of the affidavit it was intended to say that the notice was published for four *Page 460 
successive weeks and that the last publication was more than three months before the time for redemption expired, then it cannot be reconciled with the other statement that the last insertion was "not more than three months" before the expiration of the said time. But if it was intended to state that the publication was commenced more than three months before the expiration of the period of redemption and continued for four successive weeks, which is likely, it would certainly not be a sufficient allegation under the statute. It is probable that the affidavit does not set forth what was really intended, but it is impossible for us to say that it is a compliance with sections 64 and 65, as it does not clearly state the facts. Where it is said that "the last insertion was not more than three months before the time of redemption expired," the affidavit does not by any means negative the idea that the last publication was made less than three months before the expiration of the time, and yet the statute requires it to appear affirmatively from the affidavit that the last publication was not made within the three months. Perhaps the affiant intended to say "not less than three months" instead of "not more than three months"; but we must decide the case upon the record (588) as it is. Our conclusion is that the affidavit, being radically defective, was not prima facie evidence that the requisite notice had been given, and, besides, as the making of a proper affidavit was a condition precedent to the defendant's right to call for a deed, with which he has not complied, he has not acquired title to the land. There are other irregularities, but they need not be specially considered.
Reserved.
Cited: S. c., 143 N.C. 384; Eames v. Armstrong, 146 N.C. 6; Warrenv. Williford, 148 N.C. 479; Jones v. Schull, 153 N.C. 521; Rexford v.Phillips, 159 N.C. 220; Board of Education v. Remick, 160 N.C. 570;McNair v. Boyd, 163 N.C. 480; Sanders v. Covington, 176 N.C. 450;Headman v. Comrs., 177 N.C. 268; Cherokee v. McClelland, 179 N.C. 131,132. *Page 461