Wagner v. Arnold

Riddick, J.

(after stating the facts). This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court holding a tax sale upon which the title of defendant was based to be void. The evidence shows that the courthouse of Little River county was destroyed by fire about 1881, and that the tax records for years 1867 and 1868 were probably also destroyed by fire at that time, and cannot now be found.

To show that the land was sold for more costs than the law authorized, and to show other facts in reference to the tax sale at which it was sold which would render the sale invalid, the plaintiff, in the absence of the original records, introduced a certified transcript of the report of the sale made by the sheriff and clerk to the auditor of the state, and on file in his office. Though the defendant objected to the introduction of other documentary evidence, the bill of exceptions does not affirmatively show that he did so as to this transcript. As the trial was .before the presiding judge without a jury, we take it that the transcript was permitted to Be introduced as evidence, and that the judge might give it such weight as the law permitted. Had proper objection been made to .its introduction, we think the court should have excluded it, for neither the clerk nor the sheriff was required to make such a report to the auditor under the law in force at that time. The statute in force at that time provided that the clerk of the county court, or his deputy, should attend all sales of land for taxes, and “make a record thereof in a book to be kept, for that purpose, therein describing the several tracts of land and town lots, as they are described in the list, stating in separate column state and county taxes and costs, and how much of each tract or lot was sold, and to whom sold;” and further provided that the clerk should “make out and certify to the auditor of public accounts a copy of such record.”' Gould’s Digest, C. 148, § 123. It will be noticed, as before stated, that the statute does not require that the clerk shall make a report of the tax sale to the auditor. It required that he should make a record of the sale in a book kept for that purpose, and that he should send a certified copy of this record to the auditor. Such a record of the tax sale or a certified copy thereof would, of course, be evidence of the facts therein stated, and which the law required should be recorded by the clerk, but the mere report of a clerk to the auditor stating the facts of a tax sale is not evidence against third parties of the facts therein stated, any more than a report made by any other person not required by law to make such a report.

But, as the certified copy of this report seems to have been admitted as evidence without objection on the part of the defendant, it may be said that he has no right to complain if the court considered it as competent evidence of the facts therein set forth. Conceding that this is true, the report would only be evidence of the facts stated or certified in the report. These facts are that the land was sold to the state for nonpayment of taxes on the 30th day of April, 1868, and that the sale had previously been advertised in the Washington Telegraph for thirty days. If these statements are admitted to be true, they do not show that the sale was invalid. While in this report of the sheriff and clerk there appears in separate columns the amount of taxes, penalty. and costs, there is no statement that the land was sold for the sums named, and we do not think the report, if considered at all, can be taken as evidence of such fact. But; if we reject it as evidence of such fact, there is nothing to show that the tax sale was invalid.

The clerk, as we have before stated, was required to make a record of the sale, and send a certified transcript of this record to the auditor. Neither the auditor nor am^ one else has testified that no such transcript is on file in the auditor’s office, but if the clerk failed to file such transcript, that did not, under the statute then in force, prevent the title of the land sold to the state from vesting in the state. The title was under that statute vested in the state by virtue of the sale, and the failure of the clerk to file á proper transcript did not affect the title. Gould’s Digest, c. 148, § 134; Keith v. Freeman, 43 Ark. 303. The deed from the auditor makes a prima facie case of title for the defendant, and as there is, in our opinion, no evidence to show that' the tax sale upon which the title of the state is based was invalid, we think the court erred in holding that the plaintiff had the superior title.

Counsel for plaintiff contend that the case of Joyner v. Harrison, 56 Ark. 276, held that the act creating Little River county required that the assessment for 1867 should be made by the sheriff of that county, and that it was impossible for him to do so and file it within the time required by law. But the opinion in that case, when read in connection with the statement of facts and the quotation made from the act creating Little River county, shows, we think, that the court recognized that the sheriff of Little River county, as to the territory detached from Sevier county, was to take the assessment made by the assessor of Sevier county, and file that in the office of the clerk of the county court of Little River county, as the assessment of such property. It will be noticed also that the court upheld the tax title in that case, which, under the view of counsel, would have been invalid.

■ Ror the reasons indicated, we think the court erred in overruling motion for a new trial. The judgment of the court is therefore reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.