Den on Dem. of Kelly v. Craig

Ejectment for one-fourth part of a lot of ground, No. 231, in the town of Wilmington, which was sold by the sheriff in September, 1838, for the tax due thereon for 1836, as the property of (130) one Sneed, and unlisted in 1836. The lessor of the plaintiff became the purchaser by agreeing to pay the double tax demanded by the sheriff for one-fourth part of the lot, and they had it duly laid off by the surveyor and a plat made, and took a deed from the sheriff.

To show that the land was liable to a double tax because it was not listed for taxation in 1836, the sheriff produced a book which he swore had been delivered to him by the clerk of the county court of New Hanover as the copy of the tax lists returned to the court, on which he was to collect the taxes for that year. To that book the counsel for the defendant objected, because it was not authenticated as a copy of the tax list by a certificate of the clerk thereon or otherwise. But the court admitted it; and upon inspection it appeared that lot No. 231 was not contained in the copy furnished by the clerk, as stated by the sheriff, but had been entered in another part of the book by the sheriff himself, as property not listed by the owner, and liable to double tax.

The plaintiff, as proof of the amount of tax due on the lot for 1836, offered the sheriff to prove that in 1837 he saw, either in the county court clerk's office an original tax list for 1835 or in the hands of his own predecessor a paper purporting to be a copy of that tax list made out by the clerk of the county court, in which the lot No. 231 was listed by Sneed, but that he was not certain whether it was the one or the other of those papers which he saw and from which he ascertained at what value the lot had been assesed [assessed] for 1835. It further appeared that the clerk' office had been burned in 1840, and that the original tax list of the year 1835 had not been since seen. The defendant then objected that the witness ought not to be allowed to state the contents of the paper which he had seen, as he was uncertain where he had seen it or what paper it was. Nevertheless, the court permitted the witness to give the evidence, and in the instructions to the jury the court directed them that they must be satisfied that the document of which the witness spoke was the list of taxable property for 1835; otherwise, they should disregard (131) it altogether; but if they were so satisfied, it was immaterial whether that document was an original list returned by the justice of the peace or the record thereof by the clerk, or an official copy thereof, as either was sufficient for this purpose.

The defendant then moved the court to instruct the jury that the plaintiff could not recover, because the sheriff did not return to the county court, before the sale, this lot as property upon which the tax was *Page 100 unpaid, and which he proposed to sell for the tax. But the court held that such a return was not necessary to the validity of the sale, and refused the instruction.

Many other points were raised at the trial which it is unnecessary to state, as the opinion of the Supreme Court does not turn on them. The jury found for the plaintiff, and from the judgment the defendant appealed. The Court is of opinion that the objection to the admissibility of the paper said to be a copy of the tax list for 1836 ought to have been sustained. It was not sufficiently authenticated. It was not a sworn copy, as the sheriff did not pretend to have compared it with the original, nor was the clerk called to that point. Indeed, it may be doubted whether an authentication in that way would suffice, and whether it must be by the certificate of the clerk on the transcript, attested by his signature, as in other transcripts of records; for, as has been said several times, the tax list is the warrant of the sheriff to collect taxes. Slade v. Governor, 14 N.C. 365. The list ought to be so authenticated as not only to satisfy the sheriff that it is a copy of the original, but also appear, upon inspection, to the citizens to be official evidence of their liability. It is true, they may ascertain their liability by going to the clerk's office; but that was not intended by the Legislature, as it is inconvenient and expensive; it was meant that (132) when the tax is demanded the sheriff should show by a document, purporting to be authentic and to be a copy of the recorded list, on what property the tax is laid and the amount of it. Hence, the clerk is required to record in alphabetical order the annual returns, and, by the acts of 1819 and 1822, Rev. Stat., ch. 102, sec. 41, to deliver to the sheriff a fair and accurate copy of the returns in alphabetical order, designating in such copy the separate amount of taxes accruing from each species of property, and extending the aggregate amount due from each individual. It would seem, of necessity, that a mere copy of the list, not purporting to state what it is nor whence it comes, nor by whom made, would not answer the purposes intended by the Legislature, but that the nature of the document should be stated under the hand of the clerk, at least. But, at all events, it was insufficient here, as it was not authenticated either by the certificate of the clerk or by the oath of a witness, as a copy; nothing more appearing, but that the clerk delivered the book to the sheriff and said it was a copy.

We likewise think the Superior Court erred in letting the testimony of the sheriff go to the jury to establish the contents of the tax list of *Page 101 1835, and that the error was not corrected by the instructions given to the jury upon the point. The question is not on the sufficiency of evidence, but on the competency of secondary evidence as to the contents of a written document, and is to be decided exclusively by the court. By the act of 1791, Rev. Stat., ch. 102, sec. 45, the sheriff is to collect the public tax from every person, whether mentioned in the tax list furnished by the clerk or not; and one who has not given in his property is made liable to pay double the tax he would have been liable for if his property had been given in at the proper time; and if any dispute should arise as to the amount of the tax for which any person may be thus liable, "the papers and the records in the clerk's office shall be held and deemed sufficient authority on the part of the sheriff to entitle him to distrain, provided the party hath within the two years preceding given in a list of his taxable property." By the same act, and by that of 1819, the sheriff may also have the land valued by a freeholder; but it (133) is not material to consider that, as nothing of the kind was done here. It was, therefore, indispensable to prove the assessment on the lot in 1835; and the question is whether enough was shown to let in parol evidence of the contents of the tax list of that year. Now, it is incumbent on one who wishes to be let into such evidence to show affirmatively, and not dubiously or as a conjecture of the witness, that the document itself is destroyed; for if it be in existence and not suppressed by the opposite party, the paper itself must be produced, and the want of it cannot be supplied. It is obvious that if the witness is entirely uncertain whether the document which he saw, and of which he is offered to prove the contents, was a certain paper which has been destroyed, or was a certain other paper which has not been destroyed, he fails to establish the verysubstratum on which the admissibility of the parol proof depends, namely, the loss or destruction of the instrument. It will not do to refer that question to the jury, for the law requires the court to decide on the competency of the evidence, lest the jury should be misled by a tale too easily fabricated to be entitled rationally to the confidence necessary to found a judicial decision. It is always a question of law whether the best evidence in the party's power and of which the nature of the case admits has been produced, and inferior evidence is not admissible. If, in this case, the sheriff's copy of the tax list had been offered, it would have been competent, as there was sufficient proof of the destruction of the original. So, if it had appeared that the sheriff's copy had also been lost, then the parol evidence might have been given, since the paper the contents of which were proved was certainly lost, whether it was that in the clerk's office or that in the sheriff's office. But as the sheriff's copy is yet in existence, for anything we see to the contrary, and that might have been the *Page 102 paper which the sheriff saw in 1837, he could not speak of its contents, because they would best appear from the paper itself.

The next objection the court thinks still more fatal to the plaintiff's title, since it is our opinion that the court ought to have given (134) the instruction prayed by the defendant. The act of 1819, Rev. Stat., ch. 102, sec. 52, requires that the sheriff shall, at the term of the county court next preceding the day of sale of land for taxes, return a list of the land upon which the taxes are unpaid and which he proposes to sell for taxes, therein mentioning the owners of each parcel, and if the owner be unknown, the name of the last reputed owner, and the amount of the tax due thereon; and that the list shall be read aloud in open court, recorded by the clerk upon the minutes of the court, and that a copy shall be set up by the clerk during the term, in the courtroom. It seems to us that this provision is not merely directory, but that it is to be observed by the sheriff as a part of his duty; and as far as making of the return and having it recorded, it is essential to his authority to sell the land. It was known that notice by advertisement was a very uncertain method of informing the owner, and especially of unlisted property, that his land was to be sold; and, moreover, that on account of the difficulty of a purchaser proving due advertisement at remote periods, and of the necessity, nevertheless, of supporting fair purchases, the courts had held that sales made without advertisement and without the knowledge of the owner should stand, notwithstanding the prejudice that might arise to the owner. The intention of the act of 1819 was to provide a more certain or probable notice to the owner of the intended sale of his land, and of the reason therefor, by requiring it to be given in open court at the term next preceding the sale, and to be recorded, so that the rumor thereof, at least, might reach him, and that, upon investigation, he might find at a known place a permanent and certain evidence of the truth of the matter. So, too, the bidders cannot be deceived by any false representations, as they can respecting advertisements in the country or in a newspaper, as the evidence is of record and at home, and if they choose to look they must know whether the sheriff has done his duty by the owner or not. If he has not, his sale ought not to pass the title, more than if it were by private contract, or was not made at the courthouse, or on a wrong day of the week; in all which cases the wrongful conduct of the officer must be (135) known to the bidder, and, therefore, the purchase ought not to stand. Mordecai v. Speight, 14 N.C. 428. Indeed, the proceeding directed by the act of 1819 is very much in the nature of a judgment; and a purchaser can as readily search for and find one of record as the other, and, therefore, there is as little reason to dispense with the one as with the other. The Legislature meant to give the citizens *Page 103 an effectual protection against surprise in the sale of their land for taxes, but, at the same time, to do so without exposing bidders to the danger of paying their money and not getting the benefit of their purchases, provided they would take the reasonable and not inconvenient precaution of availing themselves of the means here provided for informing themselves whether the sheriff had a right to sell or not. No person can be hurt by this construction but one who willfully keeps his eyes shut against the light the law supplies to him. We think the sale to the lessors of the plaintiff was, therefore, radically defective, and passed no title.

PER CURIAM. Venire de novo.

Cited: S. v. Woodside, 30 N.C. 107; Hair v. Melvin, 47 N.C. 62; S.v. Lutz, 65 N.C. 504; Morrison v. McLaughlin, 88 N.C. 253; S. v. Gouge,157 N.C. 608.

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