In an action to set aside and have declared void a tax deed,
made upon a sale for taxes of the plaintiff's land, upon the ground
of a discrimination in the assessment against the plaintiff as a
nonresident, it appearing that the laws under which it was made did
not require the assessment to be more favorable to resident owners
than to nonresidents, and that the question to be decided related
only to the action of a single assessor, or to the action of a
board of equalization, and there being no sufficient evidence of
such a discrimination against the owner of the lands,
held
that mere errors in assessment should be corrected by proceedings
which the law allows before such sale, or before the deed was
finally made.
This was an action to set aside a tax sale of lands in Iowa. The
federal question is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MILLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of
Iowa. In one of the inferior courts of that state, Strother M.
Page 124 U. S. 57
Beeson brought suit against Henry Johns and Henry Ohrt, the
defendants in error. Beeson having died, the present plaintiffs, as
his executors, were substituted, and, as the record comes to us
from the supreme court of the state, there was filed in that court
an abstract of the case from the court below. The object of the
suit was to set aside and have declared void three tax deeds
purporting to have been made upon sales for taxes on lands of the
plaintiff Beeson.
The original petition relied mainly upon the fact that there was
fraud in the tax sale by reason of a combination of bidders to
prevent a fair competition and sale. An amended petition set
out:
"First. That there was no legal and valid assessment for taxes
of the land so sold, neither to plaintiff or his grantor nor to
unknown owners, and that in fact there was no assessment of the
land for that year."
"Second. That said lands belonged at the time of assessment for
the year 1869, and on the first day of January, A.D. 1869, to a
nonresident of the State of Iowa, and that if any assessment of
said land for the year 1869 was ever made, it, together with all
the lands belonging to nonresidents of the state in the township in
which said land is situated, was assessed and valued, and equalized
and taxed, by the officers and authorities making such assessment
and equalization and taxation at a higher price and value, and at a
higher rate of tax, than the property and lands of resident owners
of property and lands in said township and county for the same
year, and that all the other lands and property in said township,
except the lands of nonresidents of Iowa, were assessed, equalized,
and taxed at a value and rate far below its actual cash value, and
the said assessment was void, and was in fact no legal assessment
of said land, and the proceedings based thereon and sale, are
void."
"Third. That at the time the assessment of said land was made,
there was a rule established by the board of supervisors and
equalization of said county, and recognized and followed by the
assessors of the different townships, including the township where
said land was situated, to assess improved lands belonging to
resident owners and personal property at from
Page 124 U. S. 58
one-third to one-half of its actual cash value, and that said
assessment for the year 1869 was made on that basis and value, and
at from one-third to one-half its value, and the same was illegal
and void."
These allegations were put in issue by a general denial.
It is in regard to these last two charges in the amended
petition that the plaintiff in error claims a right to bring the
case to this Court. That right he bases in his brief first upon a
provision of the ordinance of 1787, to the effect that in no case
shall nonresident proprietors be taxed higher than residents, and
also to a similar provision contained in the Act of Congress of
March 3, 1845, providing for the admission of the states of Iowa
and Florida into the union.
As the case was decided against the right set up by the
plaintiffs in error under this act of Congress, we must inquire
whether the decision of the supreme court of the state on that
subject is sound. After carefully examining the testimony on this
subject as found in the record, it does not appear to us, as it did
not appear to the Iowa Supreme Court, that there was any clear
discrimination in the valuation of the property of this nonresident
owner in the State of Iowa, nor any purpose to discriminate against
citizens of other states in favor of those residing in that state.
The only evidence on this subject which had any tendency whatever
in that direction was the statement of one witness that lands which
had valuable improvements upon them were not estimated so near
their real cash value, taken altogether, as were the lands which
had no improvements upon them, and the following extract from the
proceedings of the board of equalization of the county in which the
lands in controversy lay, to-wit:
"On motion, the board proceeded to the equalization of
assessments. A motion was made that that all lands in the county
assessed to unknown owners be assessed at six dollars per acre, and
an amendment was offered that said lands be assessed at five
dollars per acre, which motion carried, after which the motion, as
amended, was adopted."
It is true that one witness testified that the improved lands
were mainly owned by residents. The language of the supreme
Page 124 U. S. 59
court of the state on this subject, in its opinion, is as
follows:
"Conceding the land in controversy belonged to nonresidents, and
that it was assessed at a greater value than similar land belonging
to residents, is the tax title void under the Ordinance of 1787, or
the act of Congress admitting the State of Iowa into the union? We
are not prepared to say, if such an assessment was objected to at
the proper time and manner, it could be sustained, but we do not
believe, under the facts in this case, the title of the purchaser
at the tax sale by reason thereof is void. The authorities cited by
counsel for appellant do not go to this extent. Fraud is not
alleged or shown, nor is it claimed that there was an actual intent
to discriminate against nonresidents. At most, it appears the
improved lands of residents were not assessed as high in proportion
as the unimproved lands. No discrimination was made between the
unimproved lands of residents and nonresidents. For aught that
appears, the relative value of the improved and unimproved lands
was erroneous only. Under such circumstances, a correction or
abatement should have been applied for as provided for by law. The
assessment and levy were not void, and for the correction of the
error the remedy provided by law is ample for the complete
protection of the taxpayer."
While we do not decide that in no case of a settled purpose to
discriminate in the taxation of lands in a county or state against
owners residing in another state would such a sale be held void, we
do not see in the case before us any reason for holding the tax
sale complained of here to be void on that account. If a tax were
levied under a law of the state which required either the
assessment or the rate levied upon that assessment to be more
favorable to the resident owners of the property than those who
resided in another state, all assessments and sale under such a
statute might possibly be declared to be void. But where the
question relates to the action of a single assessor, or of a
township or county board of equalization, and does not profess to
be carried on with any purpose of making such discrimination, the
mere errors in assessment should be corrected by proceedings which
the law allows before
Page 124 U. S. 60
such sale or before a deed is finally made. There is no
sufficient evidence in this case of any purpose to discriminate
against the owner of the lands in controversy, nor of any actual
injury to him by the assessment which was made upon his property.
The only discrimination made was between improved and unimproved
lands, without regard to the residence of the owners, and the
accidental circumstance that more improved lands were owned by
residents than by nonresidents does not show a violation or a
purpose to violate the act of Congress.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Iowa is
affirmed.