Gay v. Hebert

Howell, J.

The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment dissolving *197an injunction sued out by him to restrain the defendant, as tax collector, irorn selling property to pay his State taxes.

Only two grounds are urged in this court to sustain the injunction, to wit:

First — That the clerk, sheriff and recorder, before proceeding to make the assessment on which the tax is levied, gave no notice in the official journal of the parish, as required by section forty of the Revenue law of 1871.” Acts 1871, 116.

Said section is in the following words :

“That the property described in the description rolls of the tax collectors, shall be assessed by the clerk of the district court, the recorder and sheriff of the parish, who are hereby charged with such assessment, in addition to their other duties. Eor this purpose they shall give notice in the official journal of the parish to all taxpayers, and where there is no official paper, they will post on the courthouse door of the parish such notice, that they will assess the property of the parish for one month, commencing on the first day of August and ending on the first day of September.”

It seems that there were three weekly papers published at the time, in the parish of Iberville, one of which was selected under the State law, as the official journal, another selected by the police jury as the official journal for the parish, and the other without any pretension to an official capacity; that the notice required by the above section was not published in the State official journal, but was published in the other two; that the agent of the plaintiff appeared before the board of assessors to procure the reduction of the assessment; that the plaintiff paid his parish taxes, which were levied under the same law, by the same parties, upon the same assessment, at the same time and in the same manner in every respect, as the State taxes; that he promised several times to pay the State taxes, and that he is making no complaint in this proceeding of any error, injury or injustice in the assessment and laying of the taxes, but is simply objecting on technical grounds to paying State taxes, having paid his parish taxes.

Why the notice and assessment should be good and sufficient as to one, and illegal and insufficient as to the other, we are at a loss to comprehend.

The object of the law is to give the taxpayer notice, that he may have an opportunity to have errors corrected, and a just assessment made. This the plaintiff had, and we can perceive no reasonable ground for the complaint he is urging, and particularly as lie shows no injury to him by the assessment and levying of his tax.

8eeond — The sale could not be made in ten and fifty acre lots; first, because there is no constitutional authority; and secondly, the pro*198vision of section sixty-three of the Revenue law is inoperative — no modus being' provided in the act.

The said section is as follows:

“ That all lands sold in pursuance of this act shall be divided in accordance with article one hundred and thirty-two of the constitution, and the cost of the survey for the purpose of division shall be borne by the party purchasing.”

There is no prohibition in the constitution against the sale of property for taxes in lots of from ten to fifty acres, or any other quantity. The fact that the constitution directs that all lands sold in pursuance of decrees of courts should be divided into tracts of from ten to fifty acres, does not inhibit the legislature from directing lands sold under other process to be similarily divided.

The impracticability of the proceeding and the imposing of the cost thereof upon the purchaser, are not good grounds for an injunction on the part of the taxpayer. He can avoid all trouble on the subject by paying his taxes, and if he fails to do so, the consequences referred to will rest with the State and the purchaser.

Judgment affirmed.

Note. — It has been deemed unnecessary to report the oases of Carmelite Pioou, Charles A. Slack, Emily Woolforket al., and Andrew H. Gay, against the same collector, because the reasons assigned for judgment in those suits are the identical ones given in this case. — Retoetee.