Morton v. Reeds

Dissenting opinion of

Tompkins Judge.

Morton brought his action of ejectment against Reeds in the circuit court of Lincoln county. The judgment of that court being given against him.he appeals to this.

Morton claims under Paul Chouteau by a deed dated the 17th day of August 1831 conveying the land in controversy to Joseph C. Laville and George Morton, and by a deed from the said Laville dated the 6th day of May 1837 conveying the undivided moiety of the said land to the said Morton.

The deed from Chouteau to Laville and Morton was recorded on the 29th day of September 1835, that from La-ville to Morton on the 10th day of July 1837. It was admitted that Morton the plaintiff had all the title to the said land which Chouteau had on the 17th day of August 1831, except such title as was conveyed to Joseph R. Suggett by the deed cf the Auditor of Public Accounts, and the other *79proceedings hereinafter stated, as given in evidence by defendant. The defendant also admitted the possession in himself of the land in controversy. The defendant on his part gave in evidence 1st. the following certificate of the Auditor of Public Accounts, viz: I Elias Barcroft Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Missouri, do hereby certify that the collector of the county of Lincoln did deliver according to law to said Auditor a list containing the following described tract, lot or parcel of ground as lying and being in the county of Lincoln aforesaid, which tract of land was assessed and taxed in the name of the person herereinaf-ter expressed as a non-resident of said county for the year 1831 with the sum annexed thereto, as a state and county tax due upon said land, or Jot, and unpaid for the year aforesaid, and the said Auditor thereupon charged the same with the aforesaid state and county tax, and the amount of the tax not having been paid on or before the first day of Deem her 1831, nor were the tax<35 and interest accrued thereon since paid as required by law before the same was advertised for sale, whereupon the said Auditor did by advertisement dated the 10th day of April 1832, advertise according to law the aforesaid tract, lot or parcel of land for sale to satisfy the taxes penalties and costs so due and unpaid to be sold ou the 15tli day of June 1832 at the door of the said Auditor’s office, reference being had to the record of the same, at the recorder’s office of the said county of Lincoln will more fully and large appfear; upon the said 15th day ot June the said State and county taxes and interest being still due and unpaid, the said Auditor then charged in addition to the taxes assessed at the rate of five per centum per month thereon from the said 1st day of December 1831, and costs amounting together to the sum also hereinafter set forth and expressed, and did thereupon expose to public sale on the 18th day of June 1832 continuing the-sale from day to day at the door of the said Auditor’s office pursuant to law and the advertisement of record aforesaid the following described tract, lot or parcel of land, or so much thereof as was sufficient to satisfy and pay the taxes, penalties and costs then due and unpaid as aforesaid, and did thereupon sell the *80quantity 'of land, or lot, or so much as hereinafter set forth and expressed and designated in words and figures for said taxes, penalties and costs, to wit: 1701 40-100 acres of land assessed in the name of Paul Chouteau being survey. No. 1744, Township 50, Range No. 1, West on Cuivre, amount f taxes, penalties and costs nine dollars ninety-seven cents. 1 do further certify that Joseph R. Suggett then aud there became the purchaser of the whole of the above mentioned, described and designated tract lot or parcel of land for the aforesaid sum of nine dollars and ninety-seven cents being the amount of the taxes, penalties and costs due thereon, and has paid the same into the treasury according to law.— Given under, &c.

Auditor’s fees paid by Joseph 'll. Suggett. , 25 cents, signed, &c.

This certificate was filed for record and recorded on-30.th January 1836 by the recorder of Lincoln county. ■

2nd. A deed from the Auditor of Public Accounts in the nsual form, dated 20th July 1834, recorded in the office of the recorder of Lincoln county on the 14th day of January 1S34,

It was admitted by the plaintiff that whatever title passed to the said Suggett by the said deed of the Auditor to him, was passed to and vested in him the said defendant Reeds ' by deed from Suggett before the commencement of this suit;

3rd, The record of the advertisement and certificate of - Elias Barcroft Auditor of Public Accounts, as the same is , recorded in the recorders office of Lincoln county, &c., as follows; _ ,

Notice is 'hereby given to all persons whom it may concern, that unless the taxes and the interest .thereon at the rate of fifteen per centum per year which-may become due on the following described real estate assessed and taxed as belonging to non-residents shall be paid into, the state trea- . sury on or before the 15th day of June 1832, the property thus described will then be s®ld-at the door of the Auditor’s office in the City of Jefferson, or so much of each tract of' land; or lot of ground will be sold as will satisfv'tfie taxes *81interest and penalty of five per centum per month to be computed from the 1st day of December 1831, as may then have accrued with an additional tax of thirty seven and a half cents as an equivalent for the costs or expenses of advertising &c. on each tract of land or lot of ground as may then remain unpaid of the following lists of lands and lots situated &c.

Here follows a tabular list of the lands advertised to be sold, which lie in Lincoln county, of which'the tract in dispute is one. Then follows the certificate,.viz: I, the undersigned Auditor of Public Accounts of the State of Missouri do hereby certify that 'the foregoing is a true copy of the advertisement of sale of lands and other property sold to individuals and to the State of Missouri at the door of the Auditor’s office in the City of Jefferson on the 16th, 18th and 19th days of June 1832, lying and being in the said county of Lincoln. And I do further certify, that the provisions of the law in such cases made and provided, have been complied with.

4. The verbal testimony of Henry Watts. This witness stated that he acted as sheriff of Lincoln county for, four years including the years 1831, 32 and 33; that several times he received from the Auditor, printed advertisements of land while he was such sheriff; thinks they were advertisements from the Treasury department of the State of lands sold for taxes; he thinks he set them up in public places of the county deeming it his duty to do so; one year he set up three such advertisements, one of them on a post in in the court house, one at Sutton’s^Mill, and one tt Auburn; he thinks they were of lands sold, because persons often applied to him to know if their lands had been sold for taxes, and he referred them to that list to ascertain. They were large printed papers about the size of the recorder’s book, and containing several leaves; he cannot say that he recei- ' ved or set up any such papers relating to the year 1831; cannot remember the year with any certainty. Having referred to the record of the advertisement in the record book above set forth, he says he thinks one set of the papers received by him contained the same names, and lists of lands *82as are found in the tabular statement of the said record* but contained more. No other testimony was given.

The plaintiff then moved the court to give the jury these following instructions, and they were refused.

1st. The defendant has not shown in evidence any legal title to the premises in any person other than the plaintiff,

2nd. The deed, given in evidence and purporting to have been made by the Auditor of Public Accounts to Joseph R. Suggett for the land in question did not convey any legal or valid title to the said land.

3rd. The land in question could not be lawfully sold for the non-payment of taxes, unless the same had been previously regularly assessed for taxation, and there is no evidence before the jury of such assessment.

4th. The land in question could not be lawfully sold for the non-payment of taxes and for penalties and costs unless the sale thereof had been previously advertised publicly according to law, and there is no lawful evidence before the jury that the sale thereof was so advertised.

5th. The Auditor of Public Accounts had no lawful authority to sell said land for non-payment of taxes, penalties and costs unless Paul Chouteau was a non-resident of Lincoln county, and there is no lawful evidence before the jo¡-ry that said Paul Chouteau wras a non-residont of said county.

On motion of the defendant the court gave the following instructions, viz:

1st. the jury believed from the evidence that the tract of land in controversy was sold by the A uditor by authority of law for the non-payment of taxes due thereon and that all the essential requisites of the law had been complied with in making said sale, granting a certificate to the purchaser, and in conveying the land to Joseph R. Suggett the purchaer at the sale, under whom the defendant claims, then they must find for the defendant.

. 2nd. That the defendant has shown a better title out of the plaintiff than the plaintiff has shown.

3rd. That the defemlant has shewn a good legal title in Joseph R. Suggett, the person under whom he claims, to *83the tract of land in controversy, and that they must therefore find for the defendant.

The instructions asked by the defendant were given and as above mentioned those asked by the plaintiff were refused, and the plaintiff excepted to the giving of the instructions for the defendant, and the refusing of those- asked by himself.

The appellant’s counsel admits that the case turns entirely on the validity of the tax title, and that all the points arising out of that title are embraced in these instructions, asked by the plaintiff, and as above mentioned refused, and in those asked by the defendant which were,given.

For Morton the appellant it is insisted “that the sale to *3uggett, as evidence on the record, is illegal and void ,• that ‘the proceeding is by special statute in derogation of the ‘common law and common right, and-therefore the act itself ‘must be strictly pursued, and every requirement of the law ‘strictly enforced against those who claim authority to strip ‘a man of his private property; that this is a plain common ‘kw principle in accordance with our bill of rights which ‘declares that no man shall be deprivéd of his life, liberty, or ‘property, but by the judgment of his peers, or the laws of ‘the land; that the books abound with cases in full confir‘mation of this principle. In Ronkendorf vs Taylor’s lessee ‘the Supreme Court of the United States say, in ex parte ‘proceedings under a special authority great strictness isre-‘quired. To divest an individual of his property agaiwt ‘his consent, every substantial requisite of the law must be -shown to have been complied with. No presumption can ‘be raised in favor of a collector who sells real estate for ‘taxes, to cover any radical defect in his proceedings ; ‘and the proof of the regularity of the proceedings de-. ‘volves upon the person, who claims under the collector’s ‘sale. That this is the uniform spirit of the decisions of the ‘Supreme Court of the United States from the earliest to ‘the latest casos; that a strong case in point is Stead’s ex’rs ‘vs. Course; that-the appellee relies upon the 11th section 'of the act of January 1827 which provides that the Auditor shall transmit, to the recorder of the county,, a copy of the *84'advertisement of sale • certifying that the provisions of th© ‘law iii such cases made, and provided have-been complied ‘with, and that-a copy of such record shall be prima faci® 'evidence of the facts contained in such certificates, whenev‘er a sale undersuch advertisement shall comeinquestion; that ‘the defendantin the circuit court relied upon this provision ‘as covering all apparent defects, and superseding the necessity of complying with the particular requisitions of the law ‘and that the circuit court, sustaining that view, instructed ‘the jury accordingly, which, it is insisted, is entirely wrong. ‘1st. Because the Auditor has not pursued the law, and the ‘record does not shew -the required' certificates. 2nd. The ‘act does not make the certificates evidence of opinions, in-Terences and matters of law, but only prima facie evidence ‘of the facts contained in such certificates; to make the certificates evidence they ought to recite the facts required' by ‘law; to say only that the requisitions of the law have been ‘complied with, is to usurp the judicial function, and to ‘give an authoritative-opinion, instead of reporting the facts ‘to those who have a right to judge, and-'this, it is said, no ‘ministerial officer can do; that a sheriff cannot return that ‘he has executed a writ according to law; be must show ‘how. 3rd. It is urged' that respect for the. legislature fór-‘bids the supposition, that the act designs to make the Auditor’s certificates evidence of things not officially known to ‘him, and of which his office did not contain the best evidence; that it would be an absurdity in- logic and oppressive in fact; that the proceedings to a-sale of land for taxes ‘are in the nature of a proceeding at law; they constitute ‘a special authority which must-be strictly pursued, that any ‘defect in any link of the chain is fatal; that assessment for ‘taxation is. an indispensable pre-requisite; yet it does not ‘appear on-the- Auditor’s proceedings that any assessment ‘was made; that if there, were any assessment at all the ‘proof of that fact must appear in Lincoln; that advertisement for sale is no less necessary, yet there is no lawful ‘proof of it; 'that the. statement of the Auditor in his certificate of sale, that he advertised according to law is no prooí ‘of it, he being a mere executive officer and. not a proper *85’judge of what is, er is not according to law. He says ‘his advertisement is dated the KHh day of April 1832, ‘does not state that it was ever printed, or if printed, when ‘or where or in what paper; 'that the act of 1825 section 36, ‘p. 617 requires advertisement in some newspaper at or nearest to the seat of government, and that the sale shall be at ‘least sixty days after publication and not after the date oi ‘the notice, for taxes and the penalty thereon, and not for ‘costs as in this instance; that to insure a better publication ‘of the advertisement for sale, the act of the 18th of January 1831 section 4, p. 72, in addition to the Auditor’s former ‘duties required him to transmit to the sheriff of each ‘ty three copies of the advertisement which the sheriff' was ‘to set up in his county; that there is no legal evidence of ‘compliance with this "law; that if it should he said that the ‘Auditor’s certificate is proper proof that he-sent the advertisements to the sheriff, it surely is not proof of what ‘did with them; that when the Auditor undertakes to jumble together in one lump, state and county taxes, penalties, ‘and costs, he commits an -abuse calculated to hide -his own ‘errors, so as to render detection -very difficult, and enable ‘him unquestioned to increase his own emoluments by multiplying tax sales, and to keep the interested in the dark ‘to the facts on which the sales depend; that tío law can ‘found to authorise the Auditor to charge costs against the ‘owners of lands sold for taxes; that the 20th section of the ‘act of 3rd January 1827 requires the ^Auditor to add ‘cents as a tax and 12|- cents as an additional tax on all lands ‘listed for advertisement after the 20th da.y of January ‘each year; that it does not appear that this'tract is one ‘that .class, and if it were thus subject to “three bits” additional tax, it is not subject to the Auditor’s arbitrary taxation of costs; besides that the two taxes imposed by the ‘last reviewed section are unconstitutional, the constitution ‘declaring that all property subject to taxation in this state, ‘shall be taxed in proportion to its value; that unless Paul ‘Chouteau was a non-resident of the county, the Auditor ‘had no power to sell the land, whatever might he due upon ‘it for state and county taxes; or th'e Auditor or printer for *86‘costs, that the fact of non-residence is not-affirmed in the ‘all concealing cloak of the Auditor’s certificate;, he states' ‘only that the collector sent him .a list importing the non-residence of Chouteau and that the land was taxed to him ; ‘that fortunately for the cause of truth and justice-there-‘was no act of the assembly making the list of the collector ‘even prima facie evidence of the facts contained in it.— ‘It was moreover contended that the land could not be sold ‘before the personal property was exhausted, and that it ‘does not appear that there was none; ahd that the whole ‘tract was sold when the law allows only so much to be sold ‘as would .be sufficient to pay the taxes: that the statutory ‘value of land is fixed by the act providing that none shall ‘be assessed at less than $1,25 per acre, and it is therefore ‘insisted that more should not have been sold, than would fhave been sufficient to pay'the taxes at that-price. Stead's ‘ex’rs-vs. Course is relied oh. See 4 Cranch 402.”

The defendant, in. the Circuit Court, appellee here, con-. tends that “the Auditor’s certificate is evidence prima faci# ‘thatthe’every act, required previous'to the salé, is done; '“but if it should be thought that this last act of setting up ‘thq advertisements of. sale by the sheriff ought, to be proved ‘by1 other testimony, that the testimony of Watts the 'sheriff ‘of Lincoln county in. 1831 is sufficient to' establish, that ‘fact.” • . t . . •

' The following .are the points, which-appear to me material to a'-correct decision of .this cause.. ,1st. Whether the Auditor possessed -o l'íróially information that the land in controversy had bee if u--.;ed, that Paul Gh'outeau was a nonresident of Line sir -. ounty, 'and that the taxes'were unpaid, and whether the ¿ud requires that he should be- officially informed that there was no personal property of Paul Chou-teau in Lincoln- coun'ty. • .

■2nd. What evidence is the Auditor’s deed to- the purchaser at the sale for taxes?- ] , • .- ■ '

3rd...Whether the several certificates of the Auditor are made conformably to law’, and if so. made, what'.is their legal effect. ■ • . .' ,

. 4th. Whether the tax .of 37| cents' Imposed .by the -20th *87section of the act of 3rd January 1831 is constitutional, and whether there be evidence that this tract of land is of the class designated by that section of the act.

5th. Whether the legislature intended that so much only of the land should be sold as would be sufficient to pay the taxes at one dollar and twenty-fivj cents per acre, and that the sale should be void because the whole tract was sold.

6th. Did Laville and Morton acquire any precedence, because Chouteau’s deed to them was recorded before that of the Auditor to Suggett was recorded ?

1st. The act of 1825 to provide for, levying, &c., State and county taxes prescribes the duty of the assessor in office In 1831; and for the taxes of that year the land in controversy was sold. By that act the assessor is required to make out, for the use of the county court, two lists of the taxable property of his county, one of which shall exhibit in alphabetical order, the names of all persons, liable to pay taxess residing within the county, the other shall exhibit in like order the names of all persons residing without the county who own property within &c. See section 17, p. 569 of the digest of 1825.

The act of 3rd January 1827 directs the several county courts so soon as all appeals shall have been determined, and the assessors lists corrected, to cause their clerk to make out, from the corrected assessment lists, two lists each exhibiting, in alphabetical order, the names of all persons resident of the county liable to pay taxqs thereon; also in like order two lists containing the names of all persons not resident of the county, who are liable-to pay taxes therein, with the enumeration, description and valuation therein contained, and assessments thereon for State anti county purposes, the former to be called the resident tax list, the latter the nonresident tax list, which lists shall be verified by the clerk under his seal of office, one of which shall be delivered td the collector of the county &c., and the other shall remain in the office of such clerk, and at. the same time the clerk is required to certify to the Auditor of Public Accounts the amount of the per centum which the county court has ordered to be assessed on the amount of State taxes for the use of the *88county, together with a list of all the real property subject to taxation, and a complete aggregate statement of the whole list with the collector’s receipt thereto, &c. See sec. ® a^ove act P* 48.

The same act of 1825 above mentioned makes it the duty of the collector of each county, on or before the first Monday in December in each year, to deliver to the Auditor of Public Accounts a complete list of the names of all persons residing out of his county liable to pay taxes therein with a description., valuation and assessment of the property taxed, and of the the amount of State and county taxes duo thereon, and remaining unpaid, and this list to be verified by oath or affirmation. See 32nd section of the act p. 676.

Thus we find that the Auditor has before him, officially, the best information that Paul Chouteau was in 1831 a nonresident of Lincoln county, that his property was assessed, and that on the first Monday in December 1831 his taxes were unpaid.. For unless property had been assessed the collector could not have reported his taxes unpaid, and that he was a non-resident. In pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by an act of the General Assembly of the State of Missouri the clerk of the county court of Lincoln county made out from the lists of the assessor corrected by the court of appeals, two lists of taxable property, one of which was given to the collector by which he was informed that this land was assessed to Paul Chouteau a nonresident; the collector again in pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by law, delivers to the Auditor his list, showing that this Paul Chouteau is still a non-resident, and that his taxes are unpaid. Had the defendant produced in evidence the corrected list deposited in the office of the clerk of the county court, it would have been evidence of assessment because it was made out by an officer in pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by law; but the •collector being furnished with a list of equal authority, delivers his list to the Auditor, not under the obligation of the official oath only, hut also under the obligation of a special oath “where an officer,” says Judge McOlean delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States in *89this same case of Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee, “does an act in pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by law, this not only makes that act evidence, blit the best evidence.” See the case 4th Peters 360.

As that case was so much relied on by the counsel for the appellant, I will advert to it more particularly than he has. The action was brought by Taylors lessee against Ronken-dorf who claimed under a collector’s sale and deed. The collector in that case was furnished with what they called a tax book made out by an officer, called a register from the original assessment lists corrected by a court of appeals.-?— The register there acted under the authority of tiie corporation, as the clerk here acted under the authority of the county court. On the trial of the cause Ronkendorf offered in evidence, to prove the assessment, by the tax book of the collector. The counsel there, bolder than the counsel here, contended not only that the tax book was no evidence, but they also contended that it ought to- be shown that the assessor was regularly and lawfully appointed, and that the original assessment lists ought to be produced 'to show that the property had been assessed. Thoge two points were considered together by the Judge, and previously to overruling them he declared the rule which the appellants counsel relies on so much that he connects it, in his quotation, with our bill of rights. In considering those two points Judge McClean says. “But it was contended that the orig‘inal lists of the assessment must be produced and also proof ‘of the appointment of the assessors. The court lecognize ‘the principle contended for by the counsel for the plaintiffs ‘in error, that in an ex parte proceeding of this kind, under ‘a special authority great strictness is required, i o divest ‘au individual of his property against his consent, every substantial requisite of the law must be shown to have been ‘complied with. No presumption can be raised in behalf of ‘a collector, who sells real estate for taxes, to cover any radical defect in his procceedings, and the proof of regularity ‘in the proceedure devolves upon the person who claims un‘der the collector’s sale.” Recognizing then the principle the Judge proceeds to deliver the opinion of the court by *90which both the points were over-ruled, the court deciding that the corporation existing under the authority of a pub-' lie law, of which all were bound to take notice, and the assessors acting under the authority of that corporation, that was the best evidence of their appointment, and that the assessor’s list, till corrected by the court of appeals, would not have been evidence, but that the tax book was the only and best evidence, because made out by an officer in pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by law. For the same reason the complete list of. our non-resident land holders, delivered on or before the first Monday in December 1S31 to the Auditor was evidence, and the best evidence that could have been given to him of the assessment of the of the land, of the non-residence of Chouteau, and of the non-payment of the taxes; for he might have paid them to the collector himself at any time before the delivery of the collectors list to the Auditor, or he might since the assessment become a resident. But it was contended that, by the act of 1825 so often before cited, the collector is bound to exhaust personal property, land that it must appear to the Auditor that there are no goods before he can sell, and that such proof ought to have been made before the circuit court. ' The 27th-section of that act, wdiich is .here relied on by the counsel for -the appellant, has reference to the taxes of those individuals only who reside in the county. By it the collector is directed to apply once at the dwelling house, and if the taxes are not .then paid, or within ten days thereafter, he shall p]í><v¡:d to collect by distress and sale of goods; and by the section he is directed to sell the lands where no goods can be found-

. In contemplation of law all taxable personal property, lying and being within a county has an owner in that county for the purpose of paying taxes. The 4th section of the act of 1825, to provide for levying, &c. State and county taxes> requires the assessor to proceed through every part of his county, and to require all persons owning, possessing, or having the care, or nianagement of property, taxable by law lying and being in the county to deliver to him written lists of the same, and by that section it is made their duty *91A nr! if at* Auditor to-d'eliver a list of all they so had on the first day of Janua-ryof that year. Possession is the most-common and noto- • ríous index of the ownership of personal-property. It would 'have -been very hard for the law to require the collector of Lincoln county to know' that Paul Chouteau owned personal property in that county, and to be able to distinguish that property from the personal property of another-man, when the said.Chouteau, for any thing appearing in this record, might have been residing among the Osage Indians, in St. Louis, or in the Oily of New Orleans. He might have paid his taxes to the collector under the provisions of the 32 section of the act of 1825, or to the; State treasurer- under those .of the 33rd section of the same act. If he-had paid to the collector, his representative the appellant might have proved it by the receipt: if to the State treasurer, the Auditor’s quietus might have , been .produced. The then knew' officially by the collector’s-return that the of Paul Chouteau had been assessed, in 1831-; and also by the same return he kne.w officially'that Paul Choateau was non-resident of Lincoln county and that -his taxes for that year- were unpaid; and finally Paul Chouteau, being thus known to he non-resident of Lincoln county, .could not in legal contemplation be the owner of any personal property in that cdunty, and if he were such owner, the statute nowhere insinuates that the collector-is to look out for the personal-property óf a non-resident' to levy on to raise-money to pay taxes due on his land. ■. i. , „ , ' .' • . . ,, . .

Tompkins Jud di£,sén. Holding ditor knew 0f. return, that controversy-bad- boon assessed m lodl _tha,t appel-sident of Lin-that Malaxes 'for that yea1' are unpaid, - . tiiat being resident of i^oould not eon-icmplation, be the owner that .county, owner ' mates, that ¡ property°of ^ non-resident taxes due on liis land.

*91, ■2nd. the next inquiry is,.what evidence ot title is the deed made by the Auditor.to the purchaser of the land }he sale for taxes. To use again the language of Judge M’- • Clean in the sainé casé, of Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee, The sale of this land was made by the Auditor and the . executed to the- purchaser by this officer “m. pursuance oí ‘a duty expressly enjoined on him -bylaw.” . This too is a person deriving no emolument from the money.pro■duced by the'sales of the lands of non-residents; all are-.matters' of record, and théy too are performed at' seat oi government on due-notice given at a time too when it is expected, that numbers will be present from every sec-*92^°n ^le ®taíe í0 atten<i ^ie saIes. This makes the deed evidence. The common law adopted by our statute presumes that every officer performs his duty until the contra-rybe proved; and the benefit of this presumption shall extend not to the officer only, but to all those who derive their c^a™ to properly through his official acts. J he chief justice of the court of appeals of the State of Kentucky de-the opinion of that court in the case of Hickman yg. Boffman, says: “It is a principle of law well settled, that „ . . ‘every officer acting under the sanction of an oath, or xn ‘whom the government reposes a trust, shall be presumed to ffiave done his duty till the contrary be proved.” This is a principle of the first necessity in society, and indispensable to the rights of those who by law are obliged to commit their rights to the management of others. The law reposes a special trust in the officer, and the citizen is obliged to trust him. 'Precarious and perplexing indeed would be the situation of the citizen if he were obliged to prove that the officer had done his duty; or if the presumption of his having done it were not to be indulged till the contrary be proved. The principle is equally applicable to a proceeding against an officer, and to a proceeding against the right of an individual derived through the acts of that officer. It was the • duty of the officer intrusted by the government, not issue a grant ih this case without the warrant having been lodged with the plat and certificate. He having issued the grant, we must presume that he had the warrant to authorise the grant till the contrary be proved. See the case in Hardins reports page 348. In this case the register who had issued the grant for the land, had no recollection that the warrant had been previously lodged with him, and had certified that he had not discovered, from an examination of the survey, .that the warrant had accompanied it.

Here is a palpable defect of a warrant, by the authority of which the defendant Hickman claimed the right to survey 3200 acres of land, and-to demand from the state a patent for the same ; the plaintiff in the inferior-court claims by right of pre-emption, a right good .in itself; but the title of Hickman was the elder of .the two., and .the .eourt of ap*93peals decided that his title was good notwithstanding it did not appear that a warrant was filed with the register; that officer having issued the grant, they would presume that a warrant had been deposited' to authorise the issue.— But hi the case now under the consideration of this court, no defect in any proceeding from the assessor to the Auditor has heen attempted to be shown. For much better reason then it ought to be presumed that the Auditor has done, his duty, and consequently that the deed made by him to the purchaser is valid,

In assuming that the Auditor’s deed to Suggett, is prima facie good evidence of title in his alienee, I feel myself sustained not only by that general rule of law so well illustrated in the two cases last above cited, v'z: Hickman vs. Boffman and Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee, but also, by a decision of the court of appeals of the State of Kentucky, which is directly in point. That case is Allen vs. Robinson 3 Bibb 326. The action was ejectment brought by Robinson vs. Allen &c. for land which’Allen claimed under a sale and conveyance made by the register of the land office for the non-payment of taxes. In the course of the trial Robinson offered evidence to avoid the register’s deed which the inferior court rejected. Allen took the case up on some point decided against him. The - court of appeals reversed the decision on the point made by Allen;. and the whole of the evidence in the case being made a part of the record,, they say, “But as a new trial must be awarded, it becomes ‘necessary to decide whether or not the circuit court deci‘ded correctly in rejecting the evidence of William Hunter,, ‘which was offered by the plaintiff in that court.”

“The sale and conveyance of the register when legally ‘made pass to the-purchaser the legal title; and, in a congest involving the validity of such sale, the,register’s de.ed ‘(ashe is an officer presumed to have done,his duty) should ‘be taken as prima facie evidence of. the requisitions of the ‘law having been fulfilled. But as the register derives his ‘authority to sell’land.for the, non-payment of taxes from the-. ‘law, to make his deed effectual tp pass the. title, that authority must.be strictly pursued, and although the deed..will prh-*94‘ma facie prove the correct exercise of the authority, it may ‘be repelled by making proof that the law was not regularly pursued in making the sale.”

“As therefore the plaintiff in the court below could avoid ‘the effect of the register’s deed by proof of the sale having ‘been illegally made, it results that the evidence offered by ‘him in that court, but which was rejected, if it tended to ‘prove such illegality, ought to have been admitted. That ‘the evidence tended to such proof we think evident. The ‘law requires that the register should advertise the time and ‘place of sale for three months, twice in each month successively, in the gazette of the public printer. The obvious ‘moaning of this provision of the statute requires, that the time and place of sale should be advertised at least three ‘months before the-sale. The eviden.ce which was rejected should have been received, as it tended to prove that the register did not advertise the time of sale for three months ‘as the law requires.”

From other parts of this case it appears that the Auditor sends to the register of the land office a book containing a list of the lands of non-residents the taxes on which are unpaid wtlh the amount of taxes &c. The register then does not see the return either of the assessor, or of the collector, and yet the the court of appeals of that state presumes 1st. that the assessor has done his duty correctly, 2nd. that the collector has done his duty correctly, 3rd. that the Auditor has sent to the register a book containing a correct list of the lands'of non-residents, on which the taxes are unpaid; and consequently that this register is officially informed that those lands were assessed, that the taxes were unpaid, and that the owners were non-residents. Thus informed the register sells the land and makes the deed; and the courts of that state decide that this deed of the register conveys to the purchaser a title prima facie good and valid, and that the presumption of this validity shall avail the purchaser, until it be proved that some illegality of the proceedings of tb e register, or of some of the subordinate officers, renders the deed invalid.

The Auditor of the State of Missouri stands one step nea-*95rw to the fountain whence this official information flows, consequently there is one chance less for the commission of-a mistake. Why then should not the presumption of the validity of the Auditor’s deed be extended .to the purchaser of this land, and also be indulged until the contrary be shown? The Supreme Court of the United States has decided, in the two cases of Stead’s executors vs. Course, and Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee, that the purchaser of lands sold by a collector for taxes, must prove the regularity of the proceedings of the collector’s sale. But in this case the land was sold by the Auditor, and not by the collector the taxes; as in Kentucky the land was sold by the Register, and not by the collector. The collector sells in his county the lauds of the delinquents of that county, the Auditor sells at the seat of government the lands of the .delinquents ©f the whole State in the view too of persons .collected together from every part of the State either to pay the taxes due on their own lands, or to purchase the lands'of others, that may be offered for sale. He is incited by no interest to raise the money to pay taxes, he receives no money, it being all paid to the treasurer. Moreover all his acts are record. The case of Stead’s ex’rs vs Course in reality nothing more than the decision of a Georgia Court on their, own statute ; for in deciding cases arising under the statutes of a State legislature the Supreme Court of the United States always make the decisions of the respectivo Stats courts; the rule of their own decision. The case of Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee originated under an act of Congress, and the Supreme Court of the United States were this case unshackled by the decisions of any State court. But that sale as before observed was made by a collector of taxes, and this by the Auditor of Public Accounts. Should this difference in the two cases, be considered not a sufficient reason for a difference in the rule of evidence which should govern in the two cases; then I would say that the Supreme Court of the United States in deciding that the purchaser of laud at the sale of a collector of taxes “must prove the regularity of the procedure” have decided inconsistently with their own rule declared in the same case. For the *96collector making sale of the lot to raise money to'pay taxes for the use of the corporation, was actually an officer acting hi pursuance of a duty expressly enjoined on him by law whh the register, who made out the tax books from the assessor’s lists corrected by the court of appeals, or with the assessor who returned the lists from which the register under the correction of the court of appeals made out his tax book, and for that reason he was equally entitled to the credit and presumption of having done his duty until the contrary be proved. It would be a base and unprincipled act in a government to cause the land either of a resident or of a non-resident to be sold for taxes on evidence insufficient to raise the presumption that the owner was delinquent. It would be not less unprincipled in that government after receiving the money of the purchaser to tell him that the evidence, which, before the sale, had raised the presumption that the owner of the land had been delinquent should not be held by its courts to be sufficient to continue that presumption in his behalf until the person, -whose lands had been sold, proved the contrary. And whether this rule be made by tiie -'legislature expressly or by implication it is equally unprincipled. Courts ought therefore in my opinion to lean against such a construction of the acts of their legislatures. But the reason given by the Supreme Court of the United States for that decision is also insufficient, or rather no reason is given. That court says, “to divest an in* ‘dividual of his property against his consent every requisite ‘of the law must be complied with,” &c. In all communities, and especially in these United States every person assents either expressly or impliedly to the laws in force, and consequently, each member of the community consents, that if he fail to pay his taxes, his property may be sold to l'aise the money in such manner as the law has, or may prescribe; and nobody ever contended, at least in this state, that by the Auditor’s sale and deed the non-resident was divested of his property. The only question was whether he, whose land had been sold by the Auditor, should not be held to prove that injustice had been done him in some part of the proceedings preparatory to the sale, or in the sale itself.

Auditor to of lan^at?* sale for taxes* the purchaser ? 41.41® pCi,!ta facte valid.

But the .powers' of the Auditor of .Public Accounts of State, equally with those-of the corporation of the City Washington are all conferred by a public law. He is an fleer too of much moré relative importance to the State Missouri, and to her courts than the corporation of the of Washington is to the United States, and to their courts. The same observation may be made with regard to the enue office'rs of the State of -Kentucky, and the laws which they act. The courts of that State then, having less extensive jurisdiction than .those of the United may without any manner of disrespect to the.Supreme Court of the United States, be presumed to make much ter decisions .on their- own revenue laws to them so. vitally important, than that court would on on the acts 'of Congress-made for the regulation of the fiscal concerns of the corpo-. ration of the City of Washington. But the Kentucky. courts have decided that -the deed of their-register conveys'to the purchaser of lands, sold by him for taxes, a title prima facie valid, and for as good a reason the deed of our Auditor ought to convey to the purchaser of lands, sold by him taxes a title prima fae'e valid. We are in the same case of Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee told that because the powers of the corporation are conferred by a public law, therefore their acts prove themselves, and that the assessors acting under the authority of that corporation are presumed to be duly appointed. Then because our Auditor’s pow-p ers are equally conferred by a public law, his acts also prove themselves, and his deed must be presumed to be valid, till the contrary be proved. In concluding then that the deed of the Auditor conveys to Suggett, the purchaser of the land, a title prima.facie valid, I conceive that I am sustained not only by the two cases cited from the Kentucky books, but also by the case of Ronkendorf vs. Taylor’s lessee, or at least by the rule of decision declared by that court' in deci-J , the two farst m that case.

3rd. Are the several certificates of the Auditor given in evidence made conformably to law, and if so made, 'what is their legdl effect? . •• '

The first certificate in order of time is the certificate of *98purchase made by the Auditor to Suggett. Among many other things the Auditor certifies that the collector of Lincoln county did deliver to him according to law a list of lands of non-residents on which the taxes were unpaid.— By the 28th section of the revenue act of 1825 p„ 674 the collector is directed to give to the purchaser of a tract of land, lot or any part thereof a certificate of such sale and by the 36th section of the same act it is made the duty of the Auditor and treasurer (Auditor alone now) to give the same kind of certificate, and the 11th section of the act of the 3rd January 1827 requires that this certificate shall always refer to the advertisement of record in the county. If then the Auditor did insert in his certificate “that, the .collector of ‘Lincoln county did deliver to him according to law a list of ‘lands, &c.” it was clone at the expense of his own labor, and his gratuitous insertions are not to be allowed either to injure the purchaser, or aid the delinquent non-resident.

There are two other .certificates both of which are set out in the same instrument of writing, and they are both copied into the statement of the case-, they are both made under the 11th section of the act above cited.'which is in these words, “Be it &c. that upon all sales of real estate for taxes due thereon, made by the Auditor of Public Accounts and Treasurer, it shall be the duty of the Auditor and Treasurer to transmit to the recorder of the county wherein the land is situated, a copy of the advertisement, of sale certified to be a true copy; and a further certificate that the provisions of the law in such cases made and provided have been complied with, which copy of the advertisement so certified, and further certificate shall be, by the recorder, recorded in the record of deeds, and a copy of such record shall be prima facie evidence of the facts contained in such certificates, whenever a sale under such advertisement shall come in question; and the certificate of sale to be given to the purchaser in such cases shall always refer to the record under which such sale was made.

The objection to these certificates is that they do not pursue the law; that they ought to state facts, that the act do.eis not make the certificates, evidence of opinion, and inferences *99and matters of law, but only prima facie evidonco of the J x facts contained in such certificates, that no ministerial cer can give his opinion on the law of the case, that a sheriff cannot return that he has served a writ according to ° law.

The first certificate states that the collector did deliver a list according to law, and that the Auditor did by advertisement dated on the IOth day of April 1832 advertise accor-ing to law: these statements with perhaps many others made in the first certificate i. e. the ceitificate of sale, were not required by the statute, and the giatuitous act of the Auditor as before obiorved is neither to injure the purchaser nor to aid the delinquent non-resident.

To the cert feat.-, of the advertisement no objection is tal en.

The further certificate, which the law requires to accompany the advertisement is in the very words of the law, viz: «•nut the provisions, of the law in such cases made and provided have been complied with” and the law declares that a copy of the record shall be prima facie evidence of the facts contained in such certificates. The only facte required by law to be stated are, in 1¿ie firs t certificate that Suggeti was tiie purchaser, in the second, that the copy of the advertisement sent to the recorder is a true copy, and in the third that the provisions of the law in such cases made have been ■complied with; for unless this be admitted to be a certificate of facts, then there is no certificate, and the only question here is, whether that part of the 11 th sretion of 182?, which relates to the further certificate of the Auditor, be a dead letter, ^ nullity in law. And certainly if we are, in construing this section of the act, to restrict the meaning of the word/acifs to the sense in which.it is technically used in a bill of exceptions as contradistinguished from conclusions of law,that part of the section will.be a nullity. Forth© Auditor to state that the land had been assessed would have been superfluous and idle, for without assessment the collector could have had no list to inform him either of the taxes due, or of the non-residence of Paul Chouteau, and conse» quentlv he could have nsado no list of non-resident?, whose *100taxes .were unpaid, to deliver to the Auditor; for tluvAudftor t0 state at what time, at. what place, and in- what paper the advertisement of sale was made would have-been equalty useless, for' no court sits to examine his proceed!igs either to forbid the sales or to annul them, after they have- beet* made for any irregularity that'may have-óccurred. The Auditor of Public Accounts of this State is not a ministerial of-fücer, ap hás been insinuated, rather than said. He is a- high .executive-officer.of the.state acting on the reports of the-several collectors of the several; counties, who themselves are immediately accountable to their respective county courts .and to the treasury.of the state for money collected, and to him-for-the list of- non-residents whose taxes are unpaid; from .their reports he draws his' conclusions of law, which enable him to decide when the lands of non-residents are liable to be sold for taxes. And he who is legally qualified to decide when the lands-of non-residents may lawfully be sold for taxes, may certainly, by an act of the assembly be au-.thorised to certify that those lands have been lawfully sold. ■ ®r in the words of the act “that the provisions of the law in ‘such cases made and provided have been complied with,’* and that certificate, if the law so declare, will be good evidence. “The fairest and most rational method to interpret ‘the will of the legislator is by exploring his intention, at ‘the-time the law was made, by signs the most natural and ‘-probable, and these are either the words, the context, the ‘subject matter, the effects and consequence, or the spirit ‘and reason of the law. Words are generally to be- unde-r- / stood in their usual and most known signification, not so ‘much regarding the propriety of grammar, as their general ‘and popular use.” 1 Bl. Com. p. 59, it has already been shown that it would have'been useless to require the Auditor to.state, in his certificates, the facts relating'to the pre-juratory steps for the sale, for those facts were already ae-Gessible to those'interested,'and no court of revision and appeal sat to to revise and correct his decisions. We ara bound in decency to suppose that the legislature did mean -something when.they directed him to certify, and we ar® equally bound to suppose that this certificate was intended-*101to be evidence of something. He was directed to certify "that the provisions of the law in such cases made and pro‘vided had been complied with,” he has certified it, and it is ■evident that the legislature intended this certificate to raise the presumption that every act ¡ re/aratory to the sale had been duly performed, and that this presumption should avail the purchaser till the contrary he proved. Any person but one, who had -learned a little law, and had improved that s'tock of -learning by some exferience.in taking bills of exceptions would assent to this proposition, that it. is a fact» that the Auditor has, or has not complied with the provisions of the law in making his sale! of non-re .ideut’s lands-The legislature, in my opinion, never contemplated that the Auditor should state any fact either of assessment, 01 of -non-residence, or of publication When he certifies in the words of the law, “that the provisions of the law in such ‘cases made and provided have been complied with,” he has •certified all that the law required him to certify; and if we will not allow this certificate of his legal conclusions to be received as evidence, then that provision of the law is nugatory. .. ■'

That the under the oftionofthoact 3rd 1827 were-m co”£or“ity and that they boon^ceotved as-evidence prima facie that every to iand5aan(¡ making that sale, had been complied ¡twa^suffi™1 dent for the. X'te'inh'ia ' wonOTidíorms ‘ that the láw°in cuch.10 wises made & provided have been complied with.”

*101My opinion, for the. reasons above given, is that, the Auditor’s certificates are made agreeabh7 to law, and that they ought to be received in the courts as evidmce prima íacie} that every provision of the law preparatory to the sale the land, and in making that sale had been complied with. But it is urged that this certificate of the Auditor, if it be admitted to be evidence that lie sent throe copies of the ad-vertisemeut of sale to the sheriff of Lincoln county, is not evidence that the sheriff set ih cm up at the three most' public 1 r 1 • ,1 , , . . places ot the county, as is required by the 4th section 01 the act of the 18th of January .1831.' When the Auditor’s certificate raises the presumption that he transmitted the vertisements, the law itself raises the presumption that they arrived at the place of.destination, and that the sheriff did his 1 T„. , 1 ■ ■ ■ . , " ■ duty. VVithout this presumption .the Auditor could not have sold; and.the same presumption of law, -that authoris--ed him to sell, shall’ according to. the'authorites above cited, avail the,purchaser .till the'contrary he proved,- The book's *102inform U3 that it is sufficient notice of a protest ia the case both of a foreign and an inland bill of exchange, if the letter be put into the mail, even though it miscarry. But the tos-timony of the sheriff Watts proved the notices set up, as plainly as the most scrupulous could require. He commit-Indeed a blunder in stating; that they were advertise-of lands sold; but as the law require 1 no such advcr-lisements, we are to presume that they were such as the law ¿pq require, especially as he says that ho did not notice them . \ 1 , , , . , , , particu any. ihe whole of the objections taken both to tjje certificates, and to their legal effect, appear to me to be nothing more than verbal criticism, which with equal plausibility might have been much farther extended.

4th. it was contended that the tax of 37} cents imposed by the 2!)th section of the act of 3rd January 1S27 is unconstitutional, and that there is no evidence that this tract of land was of that class on which th.it tax was intended to he imposed.

The words of the section are, “It chalí be the duty of the Auditor to make out duplicate copies of the non-resident tax lists in the month of January in each and every year; one of which ¡shall be be kept in his office by w hich to make sales, the other to be for the printer by which to advertise the lands to he sold-for taxes, which shad be handed to him by the Auditor; and twenty-five cents ¡.hall be added as a tax on each tract advertised to be sold for taxe ■, and twelve and a half rents as an additional tase on each tract or lot the copies of which are made out by f!,c 4 ¡A dor for the purposes above mentioned after the Si'll; ¡h.j of J; a i y in each and every year.

The record of the Auditor’s adveni e- offi, ;n ' A ia the office of the recorder of Lincoln con , . o at this tract of land was one of those subject •.•> the fa ■ of 37} cents; that advertisement wats set out > f-n- b:¡: ef exceptions. It is apparent from the letter a,:.’ sprit of file section above quoted, that this tax of 37} ce'ii.i w.v; a taxon the delinquent intended, as the Audito, i?; hi; adwi’-tL'ement very correctly states to be an equivalent for the costs or expenses of advertising &c., and although, it vas no part of *103his duty to state the object of the tax, yet it seem; to me to have been entirely úselas; to lavish so much harsh language against, him in a studied written argument, on that account. For by charging the sum as costs in the aggregate along with the taxes and penalty, ho most certainly did not“com-'■rnit an abiuc calculate:! to hide his owii errors so as to render detection extremely difficult, and enable him unquestioned to increase hi; own emoluments by multiplying tax ‘sales.” The amount of the state and county taxes imy at any time be ascertained either at the office of the Auditor, or at that of the clerk of the county court, and a very moderate portion of skill in arithmetic will enable one to calculate the in'ered, and to add the tax of 37} cent;. He can’ by no means multiply the tax sales, for they depend, for their number entirely on the collector’s return. This tax then of 37¿ cents is a tax on the negligence of Chouteau to indemnify the state for costs of advertising las land to be sold for taxes: and it costs as much to advertise a small tract as a lame one, as much to advertise a worthless tract as a valuable one. A tax for the support of the government ought to be in proportion to the value of the laud; hut a tax in the nature of a penally to indemnify the state for the expenses of advertising the delinquent land to be sold for taxes ought to he in proportion to tko costs of advertising.

oentshnposcii ky tho^aoth Jan. l^tii °“ ea.ci\ advertised to equivalent for the expenses of advertising f0/.13 c?nat1' Thai i.h<’

By the 40th section of the revenue act of KS23 a tax one dollar is imposed on each person convicted of a criminal offence. No exception was ever taken to this tax because one criminal might be richer than another. The tax of 37} cents is not in my opinion unconstitutional.

5th. Did the legislature intend that no land should bo sold for the taxes due thereon at a less price than $1,25 cents per aero; and is this sale void because the whole tract was soldi

. The act of 1835, under the provisions of which this tract was sold, directs the Auditor to purchase the land for the state if no person will pay the taxes for the whole tract.— See sections 28 & 36 of that act. But the appellant relies on the case of Stead’s ex’rs vs. Course, 4 Cranch 402 in which the Supreme Court of the United States decided that *104the sale was void where the .whole, tract was sold for taxes by a collector. In that'case the whole tract was.advertised to be sold for' taxes, and other circumstances indicative of fraud-were proved., In this case the advertisement was, as the law. requires, of the whole tract, or of so much thereof as-would b.e sufficient to pay the taxes, and no circumstance •-.indicative of fraud were proved.

That it was - - n of the Ie: should bo sold •leas price'11.^ than one. Jar and-.twen*.. t’y five cents;-. thésal^of the land in cqnt-ro \o/d'beeause tkq whole ■ ■tract was sold for- taxes, it i'hat1 any1 son-was wil-whole traet'of .land. . • ■ .That pellant-diü. not gain any ucoountvfthe deed 'to him cpntror'oi--sy bemg recorded prior so thafof tlie peUoe’s^raator, as the áoth sect, of reVenua p^vi°df¿s18th5at shall he on°aH * jands a°ld for

*104:The two 'cases resemble each other in this only, that in ■ the one.case the whole tract was sold for taxes, and in the other the'.whole. tract was sold for taxes. Butin the case ’ cited the land was sold for the sum of $552,89 a sum much • larger than was probably due, for the amount of taxes did not appear in the evidence ; and, in the case under the consideration of this court,'the land was sold for no more than ' the amount.of taxes &c. due.

The legi lature then did not, in my. opinion, intend that no lands should be sold for taxes at a less price than one and twenty-dive cents per acre, and the sale- is not in nry opinion void because the whole tract was sold for taxes i-t-'not-appearmg'-that any person was willing • to pay the tax-for ]ess than- tile wp0.je tract of land. '

. ■ . , ;'6íñ«. Did Laville and Morton acquire'any precedence, be-caP®e Chbuteaii’s 'deed to them was recorded before that ol the Auditor -to Suggett was recorded V

. The deed-of Chouteau to Laville and Morton was executed on the. 17th day of August '1831,.. By the 25th- .section J ° ■ of the revenue act of 1825' it is provided that there shall be perpetual lien on all -lands sold for taxes &c. i his land wa?'sold fo-f the. taxes of 1831, and therefore Chouteau con-to-Laville and Moi ton subject to bis lien anc^ consequently it avails them nothing to have recorded a d.eed which conveys no title against the claim of the puiy at the sale for taxes.

• -ft or the reasons above given 1 am oí opinion that the Au-possessed cfficial information that the land in contro-'.ve-rsv-had-been assessed, that Paul Chouteau was á non res-id en t of .Lincoln county in the year 1831, -and that his taxes’for- that, year were unpaid, and that the law did -not re- ' . -. . - • . . . quire -the collector to infprm the Auditor whether there *105were, or were not personal property of said Chouteau in Lincoln county. It L moreover my opinion that the deed of the Auditor to the purchaser of this laud is of itself good prima facie evidence of title in such purchaser, or his alienee; that the several certificates of the Auditor are made conformably to law, and that they are good statutory evidence that all the proceedings, from the assessment of 1 ° , , the land to the sale thereof for' taxes, were regular; the legislature did not impose an unconstitutional tax on land when by the 20th section of the act of the 3rd of uaiy 1827 the Auditor was directed to add twenty-five cents as a tax on each tract of land advertised to be sold for taxes, and twelve and a half cents as an additional tax on each tract of land the copies of which are made out by the Auditor for the purposes in that section mentioned, i. e. one for the use of the Auditor to make sales by, and the other for the use of the printer,-and that there is evidence on the re-eoi’d of the case that this tract of land is one of the class subject to the tax last above mentioned. I am further of opinion that the legislature did not intend to take land for taxes due from non-resident land holders at the price of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre in cases where no person would give more, and that the Auditor acted correctly in selling the whole tract for the taxes due, no person offering to pay them for less; that it avails Morton the appellant nothing that Chouteau’s deed for the land in controversy to Laville and Morton was recorded before the Auditor’s deed to Suggett.

m proofs of the the^auditoNs proceedings ters of record -which the law presumes to bo, in this deuce — and^ e°lut dcnco to in-prooft!!^be-0 camo ,t5ic du' court to difor th# defendant.

The proofs of the correctness of the Auditor’s proceedings being all matters of record, which the law presumes to be ill this case good j>rima facie evidence, and the in the circuit court having offered no evidence there to invalidate those proofs, it became, in my opinion, the duty of that court to direct the jury to find for the defendant there, appellee here. That court then, in my opinion;’ committed no error either m refusing to give the instructions asked by the j 1 lintifi', or in giving those asked by the defendant, therefore its judgment ought in my opinion to be affirmed,