Carlisle v. Goode
Carlisle v. Goode
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The failure of the assessor to file his land assessment-roll until the nineteenth day of July, 1889, was fatal to its validity. The verbal refinements which may be employed in any attempt to distinguish the delivery to the clerk of the board of supervisors of a completed and certified assessment-roll, verified by the prescribed affidavit by the assessor, on the day appointed by law, from the filing of such roll by the proper officer on the appointed day, cannot be permitted to prevail. The filing of the roll is simply the evidence of the completion, certification and delivery by the assessor to the clerk, as required by §499, code of 1880. See Griffin v. Ellis, 63 Miss., 348, and cases there cited.
Chapter 36, acts of 1892, must be construed to validate the assessment-rolls of 1889 and 1890, in so far as future sales under them might be supposed to be affected. We cannot impute to the law-making department a purpose to wrest from the citizen his title to lands by a mere legislative declaration, after an attempt to do so under a void assessment, and a failure in such attempt.
In Dingey v. Paxton, 60 Miss., 1038, the effort was to vali
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George W. Carlisle v. Burton Goode
- Cited By
- 4 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Tax-title. Void assessment-roll. Filing after time. Gode 1880, # 499. Under § 499, code 1880, requiring the tax-assessor to deliver the land assessment-roll to the clerk of the board of supervisors on or before the first Monday in July, failure by a tax-assessor to file the roll of 1889 until the nineteenth day of July of that year rendered the assessment invalid, and a sale for taxes based thereon conferred no title. Stovall v. Gornnor, 58 Miss., 138. 2. Same. Void assessment. Gwrative act of 1892. The act of 1892 (Laws, p. 28), validating and legalizing- assessments of lands in all counties for the years 1889 and 1890, cannot apply retrospectively so as to cure a sale for taxes made previous to said act under a void assessment. Dingey v. Paxton, 60 Miss., 1038.