IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2013-CA-01490-SCT
SASS MUNI-V, LLC
v.
DESOTO COUNTY, MISSISSIPPI, W. E. DAVIS,
DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY CLERK, CITY OF
HORN LAKE, MISSISSIPPI, JOEY TREADWAY,
TAX COLLECTOR OF DESOTO COUNTY,
PARKER PICKLE, TAX ASSESSOR OF DESOTO
COUNTY, MARSHALL INVESTMENTS
CORPORATION A/K/A MARSHALL
INVESTMENTS CORPORATION OF
MINNESOTA, E. FRANKLIN CHILDRESS, JR., R.
SPENCER CLIFT, III, K. DAVID WADDELL, AS
SUBSTITUTE TRUSTEES AND MIC-ROCKY, LLC
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/31/2013
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MITCHELL M. LUNDY, JR.
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: TIMOTHY M. KALOM
R. HAYES JOHNSON, JR.
LEWIE G. NEGROTTO, IV
JOSEPH D. NEYMAN, JR.
ROBERT E. QUIMBY
BILLY C. CAMPBELL, JR.
SHANNON L. WILEY
BRIDGETTE T. THOMAS
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: DESOTO COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: TIMOTHY M. KALOM
R. HAYES JOHNSON, JR.
LEWIE G. NEGROTTO, IV
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JOSEPH D. NEYMAN, JR.
ROBERT E. QUIMBY
BILLY C. CAMPBELL, JR.
JACOB A. DICKERSON
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER
DISPOSITION: REVERSED AND REMANDED- 04/02/2015
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE WALLER, C.J., KITCHENS AND COLEMAN, JJ.
WALLER, CHIEF JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. SASS Muni-V, LLC, appeals from the DeSoto County Chancery Court’s order
dismissing its complaint seeking to void its 2008 tax-sale purchase of real property. Because
the trial court erred in finding that SASS lacked standing to pursue its claims, we reverse the
trial court’s dismissal of SASS’s complaint and remand this case for further proceedings.
FACTS & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. The instant case arises out of the tax sale of a piece of property located in the City of
Horn Lake in DeSoto County. Until August 2003, Millennium of Mississippi, LLC, owned
the property in question. On August 4, 2003, Millennium conveyed the property to DeSoto
County Development, LLC, by warranty deed. At that time, DeSoto Development granted
Marshall Investments Corporation, and Fred Spencer, as trustee, a deed of trust lien and
mortgage on the property. Marshall Investments then appointed Franklin Childress Jr.,
Spencer Clift III, and K. David Waddell as substitute trustees for the deed of trust.
Subsequently, DeSoto Development defaulted on its mortgage, and Marshall Investments
foreclosed on the property. Marshall Investments purchased the property at the foreclosure
sale and, in December 2007, executed a substitute trustee’s deed to MIC-Rocky, LLC.
¶3. DeSoto County and the City of Horn Lake levied $520,508 in ad valorem taxes on the
property for the tax year ending December 31, 2007. These taxes were never paid and
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became delinquent on February 1, 2008. The property was offered for sale at public auction
by the DeSoto County tax collector on August 25, 2008, to collect the delinquent taxes.
SASS was the successful bidder at the auction, with a bid of $530,508.1
¶4. No purported property owner or lienholder attempted to redeem the property within
the two-year statutory redemption period. On August 30, 2011, approximately a year after
the expiration of the redemption period, SASS filed a complaint in DeSoto County Chancery
Court, asking the court to declare the tax sale void and to order a refund of the purchase
price. SASS’s request for a refund was based on thee separate theories, which were
enumerated as separate “counts” in SASS’s complaint. First, SASS alleged that the tax sale
was void, because the chancery clerk had failed to provide notice of the expiration of the
redemption period to MIC-Rocky, the purported owner of the property, and Marshall
Investments and DeSoto Development, the purported lienholders, as required by the tax-sale
statutes. Second, and alternatively, SASS claimed that DeSoto Development was the true
owner of the property and was entitled to notice, because MIC-Rocky did not exist as a legal
entity at the time the property was conveyed to it. Finally, SASS argued that the assessments
on the property were grossly disproportionate to the true value of the property, constituting
a violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. The
complaint named four distinct groups of defendants: (1) DeSoto County, the DeSoto County
tax collector, the DeSoto County tax assessor, and the DeSoto County chancery clerk (“the
1
This amount included: $476,432.53 for city curb/gutter tax; $2,970.45 for gross city
taxes; $6,592.27 for gross county taxes; $98.02 for county drainage fees; $34,051.73 for
interest owed; $3.00 for printer fees; and $10,000 as an excess bid.
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County Defendants”); the City of Horn Lake (“the City Defendant”); Marshall Investments,
MIC-Rocky, and several individual trustees (“the Corporate Defendants”); and the
Mississippi Department of Revenue and the State of Mississippi (“the Nominal
Defendants”).2
¶5. The City and County Defendants each filed answers to SASS’s complaint. The
Corporate Defendants filed a motion to dismiss SASS’s complaint pursuant to Mississippi
Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). In their motion, the Corporate Defendants claimed they
had no legal or equitable interest in the property due to the expiration of the redemption
period. They also argued that SASS’s complaint failed to set forth the elements of any cause
of action against them and did not request any relief from them.
¶6. SASS served the defendants with discovery requests on March 20, 2012. In response,
the Corporate Defendants filed a motion for a protective order to stay discovery pending the
outcome of their Rule 12(b)(6) motion. The City and County Defendants also moved for
protective orders, arguing that SASS had failed to serve its discovery requests within the
period provided by Uniform Chancery Court Rule 1.10(a). SASS then moved to compel
discovery and extend the discovery deadline. On August 13, 2012, the chancery court issued
an order granting SASS’s motion for an enlargement of the discovery deadline. The
chancery court also denied the City and County Defendants’ motions for protective orders,
but temporarily stayed discovery for ninety days to allow them to “file any dispositive
2
The Nominal Defendants answered SASS’s complaint and essentially disclaimed
any interest in the litigation.
4
motions pursuant to Rule 12.” The chancellor took the Corporate Defendants’ motion to
dismiss under advisement and stayed discovery as to them.
¶7. On September 19, 2012, the County Defendants filed a motion to dismiss SASS’s
complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The County Defendants argued that SASS’s complaint
failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted because Mississippi’s tax-sale
statutes do not afford a tax-sale purchaser the remedy of voiding its purchase and obtaining
a refund. The County Defendants also asserted that the tax-sale statutes were enacted for the
protection of landowners and lienholders, not tax-sale purchasers. Thus, the County
Defendants claimed that SASS lacked standing to pursue its claims. Finally, the County
Defendants argued that the applicable statute of limitations had expired prior to the filing of
SASS’s complaint. The Corporate Defendants filed a joinder in this motion on September
24, 2012.
¶8. On September 27, 2012, the City filed its own motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule
12(b)(6). The City echoed the County Defendants’ arguments regarding standing and the
statute of limitations. In addition, the City argued that SASS’s claim was barred by the
doctrine of caveat emptor. The Corporate Defendants filed a joinder in this motion on
October 5, 2012.
¶9. The chancery court held a hearing on the defendants’ motions to dismiss on July 31,
2013. At the conclusion of the hearing, the chancellor granted the City and County
Defendants’ motions to dismiss based on lack of standing and caveat emptor. The trial court
acknowledged that this ruling applied to all defendants. The trial court did not issue a ruling
5
on the defendants’ statute-of-limitations claims. The chancellor then requested the
defendants to prepare an order of dismissal. However, the parties could not agree on the
substance of the order, so two separate orders were submitted for the chancellor’s review.
The first, prepared by the defendants, included a finding that Count III of SASS’s complaint
was barred by the statute of limitations. The second, prepared by SASS, dismissed the
complaint based solely on lack of standing. SASS alleges that the trial court signed the
defendants’ proposed order of dismissal. However, the record includes only one signed order
of dismissal, and that order is based solely on SASS’s lack of standing. The order specifically
dismissed all defendants from the case, stating, “County Defendants’ and City Defendants’
motions to dismiss, which the Corporate Defendants have properly joined, are sustained, and
this cause of action be, and the same is hereby dismissed.”
¶10. SASS now appeals the chancellor’s judgment of dismissal to this Court, raising the
following issues:
I. Whether a tax-sale purchaser has standing to initiate litigation to
set aside a void tax sale and seek a refund in situations where the
void tax sale results from the chancery clerk’s failure to provide
notice in conformity with statutory requirements.
II. Whether any statute of limitations bars SASS from receiving a
refund after a void tax sale.
III. Whether the Corporate Defendants properly joined in the motions
to dismiss filed by the County Defendants and the City.
¶11. The County Defendants, the City Defendant, and the Corporate Defendants each have
filed their own briefs in response to SASS’s appeal and also have joined in and adopted the
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arguments in each other’s briefs pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Appellate Procedure 28(j).
The National Tax Lien Association has filed an amicus curiae brief in favor of SASS.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶12. Standing is an aspect of subject-matter jurisdiction. Kirk v. Pope, 973 So. 2d 981, 990
(Miss. 2007) (citations omitted). “The existence of subject-matter jurisdiction . . . turns on
the well pleaded allegations of the complaint which are taken as true.” Am. Fid. Fire Ins.
Co. v. Athens Stove Works, Inc., 481 So. 2d 292, 296 (Miss. 1985) (citing Luckett v. Miss.
Wood, Inc., 481 So. 2d 288, 290-91 (Miss. 1985)). This Court reviews questions of standing
de novo. Gartrell v. Gartrell, 27 So. 2d 388, 391-92 (Miss. 2009).
DISCUSSION
I. Whether a tax-sale purchaser has standing to initiate litigation to
set aside a tax sale on the ground that the chancery clerk failed to
notify other parties of the expiration of the redemption period, as
required by statute.
¶13. “It is well settled that ‘Mississippi’s standing requirements are quite liberal’”
compared to the standing requirements set out in Article III of the United States
Constitution.3 State v. Quitman County, 807 So. 2d 401, 405 (quoting Dunn v. Miss. State
Dep’t of Health, 708 So. 2d 67, 70 (Miss. 1998)). To have standing to sue, a party must
“assert a colorable interest in the subject matter of the litigation or experience an adverse
effect from the conduct of the defendant, or as otherwise authorized by law.” Fordice v.
Bryan, 651 So. 2d 998, 1003 (Miss. 1995) (emphasis added). An interest is deemed
3
The United States Constitution’s strict definition of standing does not appear in the
Mississippi Constitution. See Van Slyke v. Bd. of Trustees of State Insts. of Higher
Learning, 613 So. 2d 872, 880 (Miss. 1993).
7
colorable if it “appear[s] to be true, valid, or right.” Schmidt v. Catholic Diocese of Biloxi,
18 So. 3d 814, 827 n.13 (Miss. 2009) (quoting Black’s Law Dictionary 212 (abr. 7th ed.
2000)). “[A]n individual’s legal interest or entitlement to assert a claim against a defendant
must be grounded in some legal right recognized by law, whether by statute or by common
law.” City of Picayune v. S. Reg’l Corp., 916 So. 2d 510, 525 (Miss. 2005) (quoting
Quitman Cnty., 807 So. 2d at 405)). “[F]or a plaintiff to establish standing on grounds of
experiencing an adverse effect from the conduct of the defendant/appellee, the adverse effect
experienced must be different from the adverse effect experienced by the general public.”
Hall v. City of Ridgeland, 37 So. 3d 25, 33-34 (Miss. 2010) (citing Burgess v. City of Biloxi,
814 So. 2d 149, 153 (Miss. 2002)). The question before this Court is whether SASS has
standing to challenge the chancery clerk’s compliance with the notice provisions of
Mississippi’s tax-sale statutes.4
¶14. Section 27-45-3 of the Mississippi Code allows an owner whose land was sold for
taxes, “or any persons for him with his consent, or any person interested in the land” to
redeem the property by paying the delinquent taxes, along with statutory damages and
interest, within two years after the date of the tax sale. Miss. Code Ann. § 27-45-3 (Rev.
2010). The chancery clerk is required by statute to provide the owner of the property, as well
as any mortgagees, beneficiaries, and holders of vendors’ liens, written notice of the
expiration of this redemption period. See Miss. Code Ann. §§ 27-43-1 to 27-43-11 (Rev.
2010 and Supp. 2014). Should the chancery clerk inadvertently fail to notify the property
4
Whether the tax sale actually was void under those same statutes is not an issue
before this Court.
8
owner in compliance with the statutory requirements, “the sale shall be void and the clerk
shall not be liable to the purchaser or owner upon refund of all purchase money paid.” Miss.
Code Ann. §§ 27-43-3 to 27-43-11 (Rev. 2010 and Supp. 2014) (emphasis added). In
addition, the failure to provide notice to a lien holder renders the sale void as to that lien
holder, and the purchaser “shall be entitled to a refund of all such taxes paid the state, county
or other taxing district after filing his claim therefor as provided by law.” Miss. Code Ann.
§ 27-43-11 (Rev. 2010).
¶15. While both Section 27-43-3 and Section 27-43-11 clearly provide that a refund is the
proper remedy for a tax-sale purchaser in the event that the sale is determined to be void for
lack of notice, these statutes do not explicitly state whether the purchaser may actually
initiate litigation to declare the sale void. This Court has never addressed whether a party
who is not entitled to notice – SASS, in this case – may nevertheless challenge the validity
of the tax sale based on lack of notice to another party. However, the Court of Appeals has
held that a party with an ownership interest in property sold for taxes has standing to contest
the validity of the sale under the notice statutes, even if that party was not entitled to notice
under those statutes. See Moore v. Marathon Asset Mgmt., LLC, 973 So. 2d 1017 (Miss.
Ct. App. 2008). In Moore, the plaintiff purchased the property at issue at a foreclosure sale
in 2003, unaware that the defendant had purchased the same property at a tax sale almost two
years earlier. Id. at 1018-19. The chancery clerk had failed to notify the property owner of
the expiration of the redemption period, which occurred seventy-six days after the
foreclosure sale. Id. at 1019. Upon learning of the tax sale, the plaintiff recorded his deed
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and brought suit against the defendant to quiet title, arguing that the tax sale to the defendant
was void for lack of notice to the property owner. Id. The chancery court denied the
plaintiff’s requested relief, finding that the chancery clerk had complied with the notice
statutes. Id. On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment, finding that
the chancery clerk’s failure to notify the property owner of the expiration of the redemption
period rendered the tax sale to the defendant void. Id. at 1021. The Court of Appeals
specifically held that the plaintiff had standing to challenge the validity of the tax sale, even
though he was not entitled to notice under the statutes at issue, because he had obtained an
actionable interest in the property prior to the expiration of the redemption period. Id. at
1022.
¶16. In line with this reasoning, the Attorney General has issued several opinions finding
that parties with an interest in the land in question have standing to challenge the validity of
the tax sale, even though they were not entitled to notice under the tax-sale statutes. The
Attorney General previously has advised the City of McComb that it had the authority to void
a tax sale at the request of the purchaser, where the chancery clerk had failed to notify a
lienholder of the expiration of the redemption period. Opinion No. 97-0101, 1997 WL
165790, at *1 (Miss. Att’y Gen. Mar. 21, 1997). Similarly, the Attorney General has advised
the City of Hattiesburg that it would be required to grant a municipal tax-sale purchaser’s
request for a refund, where an earlier sale of the same property for county taxes had rendered
the purchaser’s title void. Opinion No. 97-0836, 1998 WL 57357, at *1 (Miss. Att’y Gen.
Jan. 15, 1998). The Attorney General opined that the City of Bay St. Louis had standing “as
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an interested party” to initiate and participate in a lawsuit to cancel forty-one tax sales that
were determined to be void for lack of notice to the property owners. Opinion No. 2004-
0530, 2004 WL 3015463, at *2 (Miss. Att’y Gen. Nov. 5, 2004). Consistent with this
opinion, the Attorney General advised the City of Cleveland that it had the authority to void
a tax sale either by executive resolution or through judicial declaration. Opinion No. 2011-
00400, 2011 WL 5857724, at *2 (Miss. Att’y Gen. Oct. 14, 2011) (citing Miss. Code Ann.
§ 21-33-59 (Rev. 2007)). “Although Attorney General opinions are not binding, they are
certainly useful in providing guidance to this Court.” In re Assessment of Ad Valorem Taxes
on Leasehold Interest Held by Reed Mfg., Inc. ex rel. Itawamba Cnty. Bd. of Supervisors,
854 So. 2d 1066, 1071 (Miss. 2003) (citing City of Durant v. Laws Constr. Co., 721 So. 2d
598, 604 (Miss. 1998)). These opinions clearly illustrate the Attorney General’s consistent
opinion that an “interested party” has standing to seek a judicial declaration voiding a tax
sale, regardless of whether that party was entitled to notice of the expiration of the
redemption period.5
¶17. The appellees’ primary argument against SASS’s claim of standing is that the notice
provisions of the tax-sale statutes were enacted to protect the due process rights of
landowners and lienholders, not tax-sale purchasers. See Brown v. Riley, 580 So. 2d 1234,
1237 (Miss. 1991) (“Statutes dealing with land forfeitures for delinquent taxes should be
5
The appellees attempt to distinguish the Attorney General opinions cited by SASS
by pointing out that none of the situations addressed in those opinions had proceeded to
litigation. While this is assertion is true, we also find it to be irrelevant, as the Attorney
General cannot issue opinions on matters that are in litigation. See Miss. Code Ann. § 7-5-
25 (Rev. 2014).
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strictly construed in favor of the landowners.”). Thus, the appellees claim that SASS’s
lawsuit is an improper attempt to assert the rights of the property owner. See, e.g., Miss.
State Tax Comm’n by and through Marx v. Veazy, 624 So. 2d 997, 1001 (Miss. 1993)
(holding that owner of liquor store lacked standing to contest the constitutionality of Section
67-1-83 of the Mississippi Code on the ground that it violated customers’ due process rights).
¶18. We find this argument to be without merit. It is true that “[o]ne who is not prejudiced
by the enforcement of an act of the legislature cannot question its constitutionality or obtain
a decision as to its constitutionality on the ground that it impairs the rights of others.” Miss.
Ins. Guar. Ass’n v. Gandy, 289 So. 2d 677, 679 (Miss. 1973) (emphasis added and
removed). But SASS is not attempting to question the constitutionality of Section 27-43-3’s
notice requirements. Rather, SASS simply challenges the chancery clerk’s actual compliance
with the notice procedure required by law. The chancery clerk’s failure to comply with those
requirements renders the sale void, not simply voidable by the property owner, and the
commencement of a cause of action is not even necessary to set aside the sale. See Miss.
Code Ann. § 21-33-59 (Rev. 2007) (authorizing municipal authorities to declare a tax sale
void “by resolution entered upon their minutes”). Accordingly, the appellees’ argument here
is contrary to the plain language of the tax-sale statutes.
¶19. The appellees also argue that the doctrine of caveat emptor bars SASS from “backing
out” of its purchase due to the chancery clerk’s failure to comply with the statutory notice
requirements. Under Mississippi law, “the purchaser at a tax sale buys strictly under the rule
of caveat emptor.” Parsons v. Marshall, 139 So. 2d 833, 837 (Miss. 1962) (citation
12
omitted). “At a tax sale the bidders or purchasers . . . are chargeable with notice and
knowledge of the existing statutory requirements for a valid sale, and the statutory conditions
upon which a valid deed may be acquired; and must be held to have purchased subject to
such statutory provisions.” Everett v. Williamson, 163 Miss. 848, 143 So. 690, 692 (1932).
“If [the purchaser] fails to secure a good title to the property he attempts to purchase, because
of the invalidity of the tax sale, he cannot recover the amount paid therefor, either from the
taxing authorities or from the owner of the land, unless some statute in terms provides such
remedy.” Parsons, 139 So. 2d at 837 (citation omitted) (emphasis added). The Court of
Appeals has applied this reasoning to bar a tax-sale purchaser’s claim for damages against
a chancery clerk and a sheriff for their alleged failure to follow the notice statutes. See
Rebuild America v. Johnson, 99 So. 3d 1154, 1160 (Miss. Ct. App. 2010). The appellees
argue that the doctrine of caveat emptor applies to this case and prohibits SASS from
attempting to void its purchase and obtain a refund based on an alleged defect in the sale.
¶20. We find that the doctrine of caveat emptor is inapplicable to SASS’s claim. While
this Court has held that caveat emptor applies to tax sales, we also have been clear that it
applies only in the absence of a statute granting the purchaser a remedy. See Parsons, 139
So. 2d at 837. As such, the defendant in Johnson was barred from suing the chancery clerk
for damages because no statute provides for such a remedy. Here, on the other hand, SASS
is not attempting to sue any other party for damages caused by the alleged defective sale.
Rather, SASS seeks a refund of its purchase price, a remedy specifically provided for in
Sections 27-43-3 and 27-43-11. This procedure does not allow a tax-sale purchaser to “back
13
out” of its investment on a whim, but applies only when the sale is void for lack of notice.
Thus, caveat emptor does not bar SASS’s challenge to the validity of the tax sale.
¶21. Under Mississippi’s liberal standing requirements, we find that a tax-sale purchaser
has standing to challenge the validity of the sale under the notice provisions of the tax-sale
statutes. A tax-sale purchaser undeniably holds an interest in the property, both prior to and
after expiration of the redemption period, regardless of the validity of the sale. Upon the
expiration of the redemption period, assuming all prerequisites for a valid tax sale were met,
perfect legal title vests in the purchaser by operation of the tax sale, and the owner is divested
of any interest in the property. Equity Servs. Co. v. Miss. State Highway Comm’n, 192 So.
2d 431 (Miss. 1966). However, “[t]he term ‘redemption’ implies that there is something to
be redeemed, something lost to be gotten back, and hence where a sale for taxes is void and
passes no title, there can be no redemption.” Seward, 198 Miss. at 434. If, as SASS alleges,
the tax sale in question is void for lack of notice to the property owner, title to the property
did not pass to SASS at the expiration of the redemption period, and SASS cannot confirm
its title. However, SASS still holds an interest in the property as a statutory lienholder. Miss.
Code Ann. § 27-45-27(1) (Rev. 2010) (recognizing that a tax-sale purchaser retains a lien on
the property in the event that the sale is declared “illegal on some other ground”). Thus,
SASS obtained an actionable interest in the property at the expiration of the redemption
period, even though it was not entitled to notice under the statutes in question. SASS’s
interest in the validity of its title to the property gives it standing to challenge the chancery
clerk’s compliance with the notice statutes.
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II. Whether a statute of limitations bars SASS from receiving a refund
after a void tax sale.
¶22. While the appellees properly raised the issue in their motions to dismiss, the trial court
did not rule on the issue. The trial court’s judgment of dismissal was based only on SASS’s
alleged lack of standing and the doctrine of caveat emptor. Thus, we decline to address this
issue for the first time on appeal. See Joshua Products, LLC v. D1 Sports Holdings, LLC,
130 So. 3d 1089, 1092 (Miss. 2014) (declining to address appellee’s argument that
appellant’s complaint should be dismissed for failure to state a claim, which was raised but
not addressed in the trial court’s judgment of dismissal).
III. Whether the Corporate Defendants properly joined the other
defendants’ motions to dismiss.
¶23. SASS has cited no authority, either in its opening brief or reply brief, supporting its
argument that the trial court’s judgment of dismissal somehow did not apply to the Corporate
Defendants. A party’s failure to cite any authority in support of an assignment of error
precludes this Court from considering the issue on appeal. See Grey v. Grey, 638 So. 2d 488,
491 (Miss. 1994). Thus, we find that SASS’s argument here is procedurally barred. And
because we find that the trial court erred in dismissing SASS’s complaint as to all appellees,
SASS’s argument here is also moot. Thus, we decline to address this issue.
CONCLUSION
¶24. SASS, as the purchaser of the property in question at a tax sale, has standing to bring
a suit to set aside the sale due to the chancery clerk’s failure to comply with the tax-sale
notice statutes. In addition, the doctrine of caveat emptor does not bar SASS’s suit, as the
15
tax-sale statutes specifically provide for the remedy SASS seeks. Accordingly, we reverse
the chancery court’s order dismissing SASS’s complaint and remand this case to the chancery
court for further proceedings.
¶25. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
DICKINSON AND RANDOLPH, P.JJ., LAMAR, KITCHENS, CHANDLER,
PIERCE, KING AND COLEMAN, JJ., CONCUR.
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