Blakemore v. Brown

McCulloch, C. J.

This action involves an attack on the validity of a tax sale under which appellee asserts title to the tract of land in controversy. There were numerous grounds for the attack stated in the complaint, but all of them appear to have been abandoned except the one that the sale was void for the reason that the school taxes were not properly levied by the county court.

The record of the proceedings in the county court showing the levy of the school taxes for the year mentioned was introduced, and it appears from the face of that record that in one of the school districts the tax was not voted for the full amount which the court levied. This, of course, would render void the sale of lands covered by that levy, but appellee calls attention in the brief to the fact that it does not appear in the record now before the court that the tract of land in controversy was situated within the school district mentioned, and it is positively asserted that as a matter of fact the tract is not ip that district, It is true that there is nothing in this record, as abstracted, to show that the land in controversy is in school district No. 54, the one to which the record of the county court relates. If we could take judicial knowledge of the location of particular tracts within the boundaries of a school district (which we do not decide), it is unnecessary for us to attempt to make our theoretical knowledge real by proper investigation since appellant has not challenged the statement of appellee in his brief that the tract of land in controversy is not within that school district. We should assume, therefore, without investigation, even if we could take judicial knowledge of the fact, that appellee’s statement is correct, for it devolves on appellant to show that the decree is erroneous.

It is further contended, however, that the record of the county court introduced in evidence in this case shows that there was no valid levy of school taxes in any of the districts of the county, and. that the sale of the tract of land in controversy was void, whether it was situated in School District No. 54 or in some other district.

The statute (Kirby’s Digest, § 1498) provides, with respect to the records of county court proceedings, that “the names of those members of the court voting in the affirmative and of those voting in the negative on all propositions or motions to levy a tax or appropriate money shall be entered at large on said record.”

We have decided that this provision of the statute is mandatory, and that a levy of taxes or the appropriation of funds by the quorum court is void unless the record shows affirmatively the names of the members of the court voting on the question. Hilliard v. Bunker, 68 Ark. 340; Alexander v. Capps, 100 Ark. 488; Morris v. Levy Lumber Co., 103 Ark. 579.

The record in this case discloses an opening order of the quorum court on the day the tax levies were made, reciting the names of the justices of the peace present, and that those present constituted a majority of the justices of the peace of the county. Under the heading of “School Tax Levy” there was a recital that the court took up “the matter of levy of school tax for the various school districts” voted on at the district school meetings, that the “same are presented to the court and all of the justices and are by them examined, and the result of said election held in each is by the court and justices ascertained, and from which the court and justices finds that said school districts have voted the following levy for the purposes hereinafter set forth as follows:” Then follows a list of the several school districts, giving the amount of tax voted at the school meetings. Then follows the order relating to levy of tax in district No. 54, and the concluding sentence of the order of the court on this subject is as follows:

“It is further considered, ordered and adjudged by the court, all of the justices concurring, that a levy of special tax on all school districts in the county other than School District No. 54, be and the same is hereby made respectively as herein set forth for the year 1914.”

It is therefore seen from the above that there is a recital of the presence of a majority of the justices of the peace, giving their names, at the time the school tax was levied, a recital of the amount of tax voted in each school district, and a further recital of the order of the court, “all of the justices concurring,” that the school tax be levied as voted in the several districts. What more, therefore, was necessary in order to constitute an affirmative showing on the record of the “names of those members of the court voting in the affirmative and. those voting in the negative” on the proposition to levy the school tax? The record must be. considered in its entirety, and, when thus viewed, it shows the presence of the justices of the peace, and that they all manifested in some form their favorable vote for the levy of the school tax. This brings the case within the rule announced by this court in Hilliard v. Bunker, supra, that where the record shows affirmatively that there was a vote on the proposition to levy taxes, that the vote was unanimous, and the record also recites the presence of a majority of the justices of the peace of the county and their names, this was a sufficient compliance with the statute.

Counsel for appellant earnestly contends, however, that the recital of a concurrence of all of the justices of the peace does not show that there was a vote on the question or that concurrence was manifested by any overt act of the justices present. It is argued that the concurring attitude of the justices may have been expressed by mere silence and that this is not sufficient compliance with the statute, which requires a vote.

This is, we think, a rather strained interpretation of the words, “all of the justices concurring,” as found in the record. There is, as we have already seen, a recital in the beginning that the school taxes for the various districts as certified by the county court were examined by all of the justices, and in the concluding paragraph of the order it was recited that all of the justices concurred in the order of the court levying the taxes. The use of the word “concurring” necessarily implied consent, evidenced in some overt way, and not a mere silent acquiescence or submission. 2 Words and Phrases, p. 1390. The use of the word “vote” would not carry with it any stronger implication of some affirmative act of the justices in manifesting their favorable expression.

We are of the opinion, therefore, that when the record is considered as a whole it shows sufficient compliance with the statute by giving the names of those voting on the proposition to levy school taxes.

Affirmed.