The system established by the State of West Virginia under which
lands liable to taxation are forfeited to the state by reason of
the owner's not having them placed or caused to be placed, during
five consecutive years, on the proper land books for taxation, and
caused himself to be charged with the taxes thereon, and under
which, on petition required to be filed by the representative of
the state in the proper circuit court, such lands are sold for the
benefit of the school fund, with liberty to the owner, upon due
notice of the proceeding, to intervene by petition and secure a
redemption of his lands from the forfeiture declared by paying the
taxes and charges due upon them, is not inconsistent with the due
process of law required by the Constitution of the United States or
the Constitution of the state.
As neither the plaintiff nor those under whom he claims title
availed themselves of the remedy provided by the statutes of West
Virginia for removing the forfeiture arising from the fact that,
during the years 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887 and 1888, the lands in
question were not charged on the proper land books with the state
taxes thereon for that period or any part thereof, the forfeiture
of such lands to the state was not displaced or discharged, and the
circuit court properly directed the jury to find a verdict for the
defendants. The plaintiff was entitled to recover only on the
strength of his own title. Whether the defendants had a good title
or not, the plaintiff had no such interest in or claim to the lands
as enabled him to maintain this action of ejectment.
Reusens v.Lawson, 91 Va. 226, approved and followed to
the point that
"In an action of ejectment, the plaintiff must recover on the
strength of his own title, and if it appear that the legal title is
in another, whether that other be the defendant, the Commonwealth,
or some third person,
Page 171 U. S. 405
it is sufficient to defeat the plaintiff. If it appears that the
title has been"
forfeited to the commonwealth for the nonpayment of taxes or
other cause, and there is no evidence that it has been redeemed by
the owner, or resold, or regranted by the commonwealth, the
presumption is that the title is still outstanding in the
commonwealth.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action of ejectment was brought to recover that part lying
in the State of West Virginia of a tract of 500,000 acres of land
patented by the Commonwealth of Virginia in 1795 to Robert Morris,
assignee of Wilson Cary Nicholas.
The persons sued were very numerous, but M. B. Mullins,
Alexander McClintock, and John McClintock having elected to sever
in their defense from other defendants, the case was tried only as
between them and the plaintiff, King.
At the trial in the circuit court, the plaintiff introduced in
evidence the patent to Morris, showing that the lands therein
described were granted without conditions. Evidence was also
introduced tending to show that, by sundry mesne conveyances and
legislative and judicial proceedings, the title of Morris became
vested in 1866 in Robert Randall, trustee; in John R. Reed,
trustee, on the 29th day of June, 1886, and through sundry mesne
conveyances by Reed, trustee, David W. Armstrong, and John v. Le
Moyne in the plaintiff, King, on the 27th day of December,
1893.
The defendants resisted the claim of the plaintiff upon the
general ground that, prior to the date of the deed from Le Moyne,
the lands embraced in the patent were absolutely forfeited to the
state, and were so forfeited when the present action was
instituted.
Page 171 U. S. 406
To show an outstanding title in the state to the lands in
dispute by forfeiture, the defendants read in evidence a
certificate of the auditor of the state, dated October 29, 1895,
showing that neither Randall, trustee, nor Reed, trustee, nor Le
Moyne, King, Armstrong, and others named had entered on the land
books of Wyoming, McDowell, Logan, Boone, or Mingo Counties, or
either of them, for the years 1883, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888,
1889, 1890, 1891, 1892, 1893, and 1894, or either of them, a tract
of 500,000 acres of land, nor paid taxes upon the land for any of
those years. The certificate further stated that the tract of
500,000 acres was not entered on the books of the assessor in any
of those counties for any of the years named, that no land was
entered on the assessor's book in the name of any of said parties
for any of those years, and that none of the above persons are
charged on the land books with state taxes on any part of those
lands.
We assume from the record that the greater part, at least, of
the lands in West Virginia embraced in the Morris patent are in the
above-named counties.
The defendants, further to maintain the issues on their part,
offered in evidence:
1. A certified copy of the order of the Circuit Court of Wyoming
County, West Virginia (in which county part of the original tract
was situated), showing the appointment and qualification on the
18th day of April, 1890, of E. M. Senter, commissioner of school
lands for that county.
2. Also, the annual report made by that officer to the Circuit
Court of Wyoming County, March 31, 1894, and filed, of all tracts
and parcels of land liable to be sold for the benefit of the school
fund, as required by section 5 of chapter 105 of the Code of West
Virginia, as amended by the act of the legislature of 1893, chapter
24. That report gives the list of various tracts in the County of
Wyoming
"heretofore purchased for the state at sales thereof for
delinquent taxes, and not redeemed within one year, or within the
time required by law, made up from the records in the auditor's
office, and certified by the auditor to the clerk of the circuit
court to be sold by the commissioner of school lands."
The report also
Page 171 U. S. 407
states:
"Said commissioner of school lands would further report that in
the annual report of the commissioner of school lands for the year
1889 there was reported for sale, for the benefit of the school
fund, 50,000 acres, forfeited in the name of the Pittsburgh
National Bank of Commerce, and sold on the ___ day of _____ for the
nonpayment of the taxes due thereon for the years 1883 and 1884,
and purchased by the state. . . . The commissioner of the circuit
court, who was appointed to report upon proceedings heretofore
instituted to sell the lands of said Pittsburgh National Bank of
Commerce and Smith and Fougeray, reported them a part of
500,000-acre survey, Robert Morris patent, known as the 'Robert E.
Randall Land,' and that a suit was pending in the Circuit or
District Court of the United States for the District of West
Virginia, and that proceedings to sell the same under said formal
proceedings had been enjoined. Said commissioner is advised that an
error was made in said matter, and that no suit was pending in said
United States court with reference to said 500,000-acre survey. The
said commissioner of school lands would further report that it has
come to his knowledge from Henry C. King, the present owner and
claimant thereof, that a tract of 500,000 acres of land, lying
partly in this county and partly in the Counties of Logan and
McDowell, and the greater portion in the States of Virginia and
Kentucky, was at the April term, 1883, of the circuit court of this
county, redeemed from a former forfeiture by Robert E. Randall,
trustee, and all the taxes thereon paid, prior to and including the
year 1883; that since said redemption, the said land has been
omitted from the land books of this county for five consecutive
years, to-wit, for the years 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, and 1888, and
thereby the same has been forfeited to the state in the name of
Robert E. Randall, trustee. The said commissioner of school lands
further reports that each of said tracts hereinbefore mentioned are
liable to be sold for the benefit of the school fund of this state
on account of the forfeiture herein stated. All of which is
respectfully submitted."
3. A certified copy of an order of the Circuit Court of
Page 171 U. S. 408
Logan County, West Virginia made April 1, 1889, showing the
appointment of U. B. Buskirk as commissioner of school lands of
that county, and his annual report, as such commissioner, of all
tracts and parcels of land in Logan County theretofore reported for
sale for the benefit of the school fund to the clerk of the circuit
court of that county, under sections 1 and 2 of chapter 105 of the
Code of West Virginia, and all lands in that county not theretofore
reported which in his opinion were liable to sale for the benefit
of that fund.
4. A certified copy of an order of the Circuit Court of Logan
County, West Virginia ordering suit to be brought in the name of
the state for the sale of the lands mentioned in the report of
Commissioner Buskirk.
The defendants having rested their case, the plaintiff, to prove
that no forfeiture of the land or outstanding title thereto
existed, or was claimed by the State of West Virginia, and that
there was no record of any forfeiture where the same would be
found, if it existed, introduced and read in evidence a certificate
of the auditor of the state dated October 30, 1895, certifying that
he had carefully examined the record books of forfeited lands
returned and kept in his office, as required by law, for the
Counties of Logan, Mingo, Wyoming, and McDowell, West Virginia from
and including the year 1883 to date, and there did not appear on
such books a tract of 500,000 acres of land, or any part thereof,
or any other tract forfeited for any cause, in the name of either
Robert E. Randall, Robert E. Randall, trustee, A.D. Maupertures,
John R. Reed, John R. Reed, trustee, John v. Le Moyne, David W.
Armstrong or Henry C. King; that there were no lands from any of
those counties entered on the record of forfeited lands of his
office for either of those years in the name of either or any of
those parties; that he had carefully examined the record books of
delinquent lands returned and kept in his office, as required by
law, for the Counties of Logan, Mingo, Wyoming, and McDowell, West
Virginia from and including the year 1883 to date, and there did
not appear on such record books a tract of 500,000 acres of land,
or any part thereof, or any other tract, delinquent for
Page 171 U. S. 409
any cause, in the name of either Robert E. Randall, Robert E.
Randall, trustee, A.D. Maupertures, John R. Reed, John R. Reed,
trustee, John v. Le Moyne, David W. Armstrong, or Henry C. King,
and that there were no lands from any of those counties entered on
the record of delinquent lands of his office for either or any of
those years in the name of either or any of those parties.
The plaintiff further offered evidence tending to prove that all
taxes of the State of West Virginia charged or chargeable upon said
tract of land up to and including the year 1883 had been fully paid
and discharged by Robert E. Randall, trustee, under whom plaintiff
claimed title, and proved further that plaintiff was a purchaser of
said tract, for a valuable consideration, and without knowledge or
notice of any alleged forfeiture thereof, or outstanding title
thereto in West Virginia, or of any of the facts set out in the
auditor's certificate, shown and referred to in plaintiff's bill of
exceptions, except such notice as the land books and records duly
kept disclosed.
At the instance of the defendants, the court instructed the
jury
"that the title to the land claimed by the plaintiff, granted to
one Robert Morris by the Commonwealth of Virginia, by patent dated
June 23, 1795, was (prior to the date of the deed made by John v.
Le Moyne to Henry C. King, under which the plaintiff now claims),
under the provisions of the Constitution of the State of West
Virginia, forfeited to and vested in said state, and was so
forfeited at the time this suit was instituted, and that therefore
the plaintiff took and has no title to said land, and the jury are
further instructed to render a verdict in favor of the
defendants."
To this instruction the plaintiff objected upon the ground that
the provisions of the Constitution of West Virginia for the
forfeiture of lands were repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment of
the Constitution of the United States, and to Article 3, sections
4, 5, 9, 10, 20, and Article 5, section 1, of the state
constitution, and upon the further ground that if there were a
forfeiture of said land to, and an outstanding title in, the state,
such title could not be set up against the plaintiff in this
action, he being a purchaser for value without
Page 171 U. S. 410
knowledge or notice of such forfeiture or of such outstanding
title.
The plaintiff's objection having been overruled, and a verdict
having been rendered by direction of the court for the defendants,
judgment was entered that the plaintiff take nothing by his
action.
The controlling question in this case relates to the validity,
under the Constitution of the United States, of certain provisions
in the Constitution and statutes of West Virginia for the
forfeiture of lands by reason of the failure of the owners, during
a given period, to have them placed upon the proper land books for
taxation.
The Constitution of West Virginia provides that all private
rights and interests in lands in that state derived from or under
the laws of Virginia, and from or under the Constitution and laws
of West Virginia, prior to the time such Constitution went into
operation, should
"remain valid and secure, and shall be determined by the laws in
force in Virginia prior to the formation of this state, and by the
constitution and laws in force in this state prior to the time this
constitution goes into effect."
Article XIII, § 1.
In view of this provision, it is proper to look at the
legislation of Virginia and the decisions of its highest court
touching the forfeiture of lands for noncompliance by the owners
with the requirements of the law relating to taxation.
By the first section of an Act of the General Assembly of
Virginia, passed February 27, 1835, further time was given until
July 1, 1836, for the redemption of all lands and lots theretofore
returned as delinquent for the nonpayment of taxes,
west of the
Alleghany Mountains, and which had become vested on the
previous 1st day of October in the president and directors of the
literary fund, saving the title of any
bona fide occupant
claiming under a junior grant, whose rights were protected and
secured under prior legislation.
That act further provided:
"And whereas it is known to the General Assembly that many large
tracts of lands lying west of the Alleghany Mountains which were
granted by the commonwealth before the
Page 171 U. S. 411
first day of April, 1831, never were, or have not been for many
years past, entered on the books of the commissioners of the
revenue where they respectively lie, by reason whereof no
forfeiture for the nonpayment of taxes has occurred, or can accrue,
under the existing laws, the commonwealth is defrauded of her just
demands, and the settlement and improvement of the country is
delayed and embarrassed; for remedy whereof,"
"2.
Be it enacted that each and every owner or
proprietor of any such tract or parcel of land shall, on or before
the first day of July, 1836, enter or cause to be entered on the
books of the commissioners of the revenue for the county wherein
any such tract or parcel of land may lie all such lands now owned
or claimed by him, her or them, through title derived mediately or
immediately under grants from the commonwealth, and have the same
charged with all taxes and damages in arrears, or property
chargeable thereon, and shall also actually pay and satisfy all
such taxes and damages which would not have been relinquished and
exonerated by the second section of the act concerning delinquent
and forfeited lands, passed March 10, 1832, had they been returned
for their delinquency prior to the passage of that act, and upon
their failure to do so, all such lands or parcels thereof not now
in the actual possession of such owner or proprietor by himself, or
his tenant in possession, shall become forfeited to the
commonwealth, after the 1st day of July 1836, except only as
hereinafter excepted."
"3. That all right, title and interest which may hereafter be
vested in the commonwealth by virtue of the provisions of the
section of this act next preceding herein shall be transferred and
absolutely vested in any and every person or persons other than
those for whose default the same have been forfeited, their heirs
or devisees, who are now in actual possession of said lands or any
part or parcel of them, for so much thereof as such person or
persons have just title or claim to, legal or equitable,
bona
fide claimed, held or derived from or under any grant of the
commonwealth bearing date previous to the 1st day of April 1831,
who shall have discharged
Page 171 U. S. 412
all taxes duly assessed and charged against him, her or them
upon such lands, and all taxes that ought to have been assessed and
charged thereon from the time when he, she or they acquired his,
her or their title thereto, whether legal or equitable; provided,
that nothing in this section contained shall be so construed as to
impair the right or title of any person or persons who have
obtained grants from the commonwealth for the same land and have
regularly paid the taxes thereon, but in all such cases the parties
shall be left to the strength of their original titles."
Laws Va. 1834-35, pp. 11-13.
Other acts were passed in Virginia relating to delinquent and
forfeited lands, and extending the time for redemption, all of them
proceeding upon the ground that the state had the power to forfeit
lands for failure to have them charged with taxes, as well as for
failure to pay the taxes so charged.
The first case in which the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia
had occasion to pass upon the validity of the above statute of
1835, so far as it forfeited lands which the owner failed to have
put on the proper land books and pay taxes upon, was
Staat's
Lessee v. Board, 10 Gratt. 400, 402, decided in 1853. That
court said:
"It further seems to the court that, as by the Act of March 23,
1836, Sess. Acts, p. 7, time was allowed from the 1st day of
November, 1836, for all persons to cause their omitted lands to be
entered with the commissioner of the revenue, and to pay the taxes
thereon, in the manner prescribed in the second section of the Act
of February 27, 1835, the forfeiture became absolute from and after
the 1st of November, 1836; that the provision of the Act of March
30, 1837, giving time for redemption until the 15th of January,
1838, did not release the forfeitures which had accrued, except in
such cases where the owner or proprietor availed himself of the
privilege of redeeming. And it further seems to the court that such
forfeiture became
absolute and
complete by the
failure to enter and pay the taxes thereon in the manner prescribed
by the Act of 27th of February, 1835. And
no inquisition or
judicial proceedings or inquest, or finding of any kind was
required to consummate such forfeiture. "
Page 171 U. S. 413
The same principle was announced in
Wild's Lessee v.
Serpell, 10 Gratt. 405, 408 (1853). The court said:
"That the provisions of our statutes passed from time to time,
making it the duty of the owners of lands to pay all taxes properly
chargeable thereon, and, where they have been omitted from the
books of the commissioners of the revenue, to cause them to be
entered thereon in the proper counties, and to be charged with all
arrearages of taxes and damages, and to pay all such arrearages as
shall be found not to be released by law, and, in case of failure
so to do, forfeiting to the commonwealth all right and title
whatever of the parties in default (under the modifications and
restrictions provided by the acts), are within the constitutional
competency of the legislature, has been sufficiently affirmed in
decisions which have been made during the present term of this
Court in cases arising under these several statutes.
Staats v.
Board, 10 Gratt. 400;
Smith's Lessee v. Chapman, 10
Gratt. 445. The same cases also sufficiently establish that, in
order to consummate and perfect a forfeiture in such a case, no
judgment or decree, or other matter of record, nor any inquest of
office, is necessary, but that the statutes themselves,
of
their own force and by their own energy, work out their own
purpose, and operate effectually to divest the title out of the
defaulting owner, and perfectly to vest it in the commonwealth,
without the machinery of any proceeding of record or anything
in the nature of an inquest of office. And as the title is
thus, in a proper case, divested out of the owner, and vested in
the commonwealth by the operation of the statutes, so, where the
forfeiture inures to the benefit of a third person, claiming under
the commonwealth, by virtue of another and distinct right, the
transfer of the title to such person is in like manner perfect and
complete, without any new grant from the commonwealth or any
proceeding to manifest the transfer by matter of record or
otherwise. Upon these subjects I have nothing therefore to say upon
this occasion except that, considering the peculiar condition of
things in that part of the state lying west of the Alleghany
Mountains, and the serious check to population and the improvement
of the country,
Page 171 U. S. 414
and the development of its resources growing out of it, a resort
to the stringent measures of legislation that were adopted was, in
my opinion, as wise and expedient as the constitutional powers of
the legislature to enact them was clear and unquestionable."
This case was cited in
Armstrong v.
Morrill, 14 Wall. 120,
81 U. S. 134,
which was an action of ejectment, brought prior to the adoption of
the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States,
and in which therefore the rights of the parties must have been
determined without reference to the prohibition in that amendment
against the deprivation of property without due process of law.
In
Levasser v. Washburn, 11 Gratt. 572, 580-581 (1854),
it was said:
"According to the decisions of this court in the cases just
referred to, and also in the cases of
Wild v. Serpell, 10
Gratt. 405, and
Smith's Lessee v. Chapman, 10 Gratt. 445,
the circuit court also erred in its opinion as to the time at which
the forfeiture under the Girond grant occurred or became complete.
It appears to have proceeded on the notion that some inquest of
office, or decree, or other proceeding, should have been had, in
order to declare and perfect the forfeiture. Nothing of the kind
was necessary. The act of the 27th of February, 1835, Sess. Acts,
p. 11, declaring that lands which had been omitted from the books
of the commissioners of the revenue should be forfeited unless the
owners should cause the same to be entered and charged with taxes,
and should pay the same, except such as might be released by law,
was intended
by its own force and energy to render the
forfeiture absolute and complete without the necessity of any
inquisition, judicial proceeding, or finding of any kind, in order
to consummate it. It was perfectly within the competency of
the legislature to declare such forfeiture and divest the title by
the mere operation of the act itself, and the whole legislation
upon the subject of delinquent and forfeited lands plainly
manifests the intention to exercise its power in this form."
See also Usher's Heirs v. Pride, 15 Gratt. 190, and
Smith v. Tharp, 17 Gratt. 221.
In this connection, it may be well to refer to
Martin v.
Snowden, 18 Gratt. 100, 135-136, 139-140, in which the Supreme
Court of Appeals of Virginia had occasion to
Page 171 U. S. 415
determine, as between the parties before it, the effect of the
provisions in the Acts of Congress of August 5, 1861, 12 Stat. 292,
c. 45, and June 7, 1862, 12 Stat. 422, c. 98, relating to the
direct taxation of lands. By the latter act, it was provided
that
"the title of, in and to each and every piece or parcel of land
upon which said tax has not been paid as above provided, shall
thereupon become forfeited to the United States,"
and
"upon the sale hereinafter provided for, shall vest in the
United States or in the purchasers at such sale, in fee simple,
free and discharged from all prior liens, encumbrances, right,
title and claim whatsoever."
Section 4. One of the questions presented in that case was
whether the first of the clauses just quoted worked,
proprio
vigore, a transfer to the United States of the title to the
land declared to be forfeited. The court held that the acts of
Congress did not, and were not intended to, create such a
forfeiture of the land to the United States as that it ceased,
ipso facto, to be the property of the former owner, and
became the absolute property of the United States; that Congress
was without constitutional power to impose the penalty of
forfeiture of lands for the nonpayment of taxes; that Congress had
all the powers for enforcing the collection of its taxes that were
in use by the Crown in England, or were in use by the states at the
time of the adoption of the Constitution, but forfeiture of the
land assessed with the tax was not then in use, either in England
or the states, as a mode of collecting the tax. Referring to
Murray's Lessee v. Hoboken
Land and Improvement Co., 18 How. 272, the state
court further said:
"Can a forfeiture of the land charged with taxes, such as is
contended for in these cases, be regarded as 'due process of law'
upon the principles established by that case? Literally speaking,
it is not any process at all, but operates by force of law, and
without any process or proceeding whatever except the ascertainment
by the commissioners of the sum chargeable on the land. But that is
probably immaterial. The forfeiture of land to the Crown does not
appear to have been a means recognized and employed in England at
any period of its history for enforcing the payment of taxes or
other debts to the Crown. If it had been, we should have
Page 171 U. S. 416
found such forfeitures treated of in the English law books, but
we nowhere find them mentioned."
Again:
"These references will show what were the ordinary methods of
enforcing the payment of taxes in use in Virginia about the time of
the adoption of the Constitution. And it may be worth mentioning
that, before the adoption of the Constitution of the United States,
the Legislature of Virginia had reenacted the provision of Magna
Charta that no freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or be deprived
of his freehold or liberties or free customs, or be outlawed or
exiled, or any otherwise destroyed, nor shall the commonwealth pass
upon him nor condemn him, but by the lawful judgment of his peers,
or by the law of the land. 12 Hening's St. at L., c. 81, p. 186.
Looking at the spirit which animated all this legislation, we
cannot doubt as to what would have been thought at that day of a
statute declaring an immediate and absolute forfeiture of the whole
land as a penalty for the nonpayment of the tax within sixty days
after the assessment of it, without notice to the owner, by
advertisement or otherwise, of the assessment, and without any --
even the least -- effort to collect it."
The case of
Martin v. Snowden was brought here, and is
reported under the title of
Bennett v.
Hunter, 9 Wall. 326,
76 U. S.
335-337 (1869). This Court did not deem it necessary in
that case to decide whether the United States could
constitutionally take to itself the absolute title to lands merely
because of the nonpayment of taxes thereon within a prescribed
time, and without some proceeding equivalent to office found.
Speaking by Chief Justice Chase, it said:
"We are first to consider whether the first clause of this
section,
proprio vigore, worked a transfer to the United
States of the land declared to be forfeited. The counsel for the
plaintiff in error have insisted earnestly that such was its
effect. But it must be remembered that the primary object of the
act was undoubtedly revenue, to be raised by collection of taxes
assessed upon lands. It is true that a different purpose appears to
have dictated the provisions relating to redemption after sale, and
to the disposition of the lands purchased by the government -- a
policy which had reference to the suppression of rebellion,
rather
Page 171 U. S. 417
than to revenue. But this purpose did not affect the operation
of the act before sale, for, until sale actually made, there could
be, properly, no redemption. The assessment of the tax merely
created a lien on the land, which might be discharged by the
payment of the debt. And it seems unreasonable to give to the act,
considered as a revenue measure, a construction which would defeat
the right of the owner to pay the amount assessed, and relieve his
lands from the lien. The first clause of the act therefore is not
to be considered as working
an actual transfer of the land to
the United States if a more liberal construction can be given
to it consistently with its terms.
Now the general principles
of the law of forfeiture seem to be inconsistent with such a
transfer. Without pausing to inquire whether, in any case, the
title of a citizen to his land can be divested by forfeiture and
vested absolutely in the United States, without any inquisition of
record, or some public transaction equivalent to office found, it
is certainly proper to assume that an act of sovereignty so highly
penal is not to be inferred from language capable of any milder
construction.
Fairfax's Devisee v. Hunter's
Lessee, 7 Cranch 625. In the case of lands
forfeited by alienage, the King could not acquire an interest in
the lands except by inquest of office. 3 Bl.Comm. 258. And so of
other instances where the title of the sovereign was derived from
forfeiture."
Again:
"Applying these principles to the case in hand, it seems quite
clear that the first clause of the fourth section was not intended
by Congress to have the effect attributed to it independently of
the second clause. It does not direct the possession and
appropriation of the land. It was designed, rather, as we think, to
declare the ground of the forfeiture of title -- namely, nonpayment
of taxes -- while the second clause was intended to work the actual
investment of the title through a public act of the government in
the United States, or in the purchaser at the tax sale. The sale
was the public act, which is the equivalent of office found. What
preceded the sale was merely preliminary, and, independently of the
sale, worked no divestiture of title. The title, indeed, was
forfeited by nonpayment of the tax -- in other words, it became
Page 171 U. S. 418
subject to be vested in the United States, and, upon public
sale, became actually vested in the United States, or in any other
purchaser, but not before such public sale. It follows that in the
case before us, the title remained in the tenant for life, with
remainder to the defendant in error, at least until sale, though
forfeited, in the sense just stated, to the United States."
We come now to an examination of the West Virginia Constitution,
and statutory provisions relating to the forfeiture to the state of
lands subject to taxation.
By article 13 of the Constitution of West Virginia of 1872, it
was provided:
"4. All lands in this state, waste and unappropriated, or
heretofore or hereafter for any cause forfeited or treated as
forfeited or escheated to the State of Virginia or this state, or
purchased by either and become irredeemable, not redeemed,
released, transferred or otherwise disposed of, the title whereto
shall remain in this state till such sale as is hereinafter
mentioned be made, shall by proceedings in the circuit court of the
county in which the lands or a part thereof, are situated, be sold
to the highest bidder."
"5. The former owner of any such land shall be entitled to
receive the excess of the sum for which the land may be sold over
the taxes charged and chargeable thereon, or which, if the land had
not been forfeited, would have been charged or chargeable thereon
since the formation of this state, with interest at the rate of
twelve percentum per annum, and the costs of the proceedings, if
his claim be filed in the circuit court that decrees the sale,
within two years thereafter."
"6. It shall be the duty of every owner of land to have it
entered on the land books of the county in which it, or a part of
it, is situated, and to cause himself to be charged with the taxes
thereon, and pay the same.
When, for any five successive years
after the year 1869, the owner of any tract of land containing one
thousand acres or more shall not have been charged on such books
with state tax on said land, then by operation hereof, the land
shall be forfeited and the title thereto vest in the state.
But if, for any one or more of such five
Page 171 U. S. 419
years, the owner shall have been charged with state tax on any
part of the land, such part thereof shall not be forfeited for such
cause. And any owner of land so forfeited, or of any interest
therein at the time of the forfeiture thereof, who shall then be an
infant, married woman, or insane person, may, until the expiration
of three years after the removal of such disability, have the land,
or such interest charged on such books, with all state and other
taxes that shall be, and but for the forfeiture would be,
chargeable on the land or interest therein for the year 1863, and
every year thereafter with interest at the rate of ten percentum
per annum, and pay all taxes and interest thereon for all such
years, and thereby redeem the land or interest therein,
provided such right to redeem shall in no case extend
beyond twenty years from the time such land was forfeited."
The duty imposed upon owners of land by the first clause of this
section was also prescribed by the statutes of the state.
Such being the provisions of the Constitution of West Virginia
in relation to the forfeiture of lands, the Supreme Court of
Appeals of that state had occasion, in
McClure v.
Maitland, 24 W.Va. 561, 575-578, to determine their scope and
effect. In that case it was said:
"In the year 1831, as we have endeavored to show in a former
part of this opinion, the land titles in that portion of the
Commonwealth of Virginia now embraced within this state were in a
most wretched and embarrassed condition. Many owners of large
tracts, covering in some cases almost entire counties, would
neither pay their taxes nor settle and improve their lands; thus
paralyzing the energy and contravening the prosperity of the
people, and the advancement and population of the state to an
almost inconceivable extent. In this emergency, and to remedy this
calamitous evil, the General Assembly of Virginia inaugurated the
system of delinquent and forfeiture laws that form the basis of the
provisions of our present constitution on that subject. The whole
history of that system shows a most earnest and determined effort
on the part of the legislature, the judiciary, and the people,
speaking through our present constitution, to destroy and
annihilate the titles of such delinquent
Page 171 U. S. 420
owners, who should, after every reasonable opportunity had been
given them to comply with the laws, continue in default, and to
protect actual settlers and those not in default. The purpose of
the statutes passed to enforce this system was not merely to create
a lien for the taxes on these delinquent and unoccupied lands, but
to effect,
by their own force and vigor, an absolute forfeiture
of them, and effectually vest the title thereto in the state
without the machinery of any proceeding of record or anything in
the nature of an inquest of office. Such was intended to be, and
such was in fact, the effect of these statutes. The
constitutional competency of the legislature to pass these laws,
and thus consummate the forfeiture, and perfectly divest all the
right, title, and interest of the former owner by the mere energy
and operation of the statutes themselves, has been repeatedly
affirmed by the Court of Appeals of Virginia."
citing
Staats v. Board, 10 Gratt. 400;
Wild's
Lessee v. Serpell, 10 Gratt. 405;
Levasser v.
Washburn, 11 Gratt. 572;
Usher v. Pride, 15
Gratt.190, and
Smith v. Tharp, 17 W.Va. 221.
So, in
Coal Co. v. Howell, 36 W.Va. 489, 501, the court
referred to its former decisions, above cited, and, after observing
that they had been adhered to with only a seeming exception,
said:
"The forfeitures became complete and absolute by operation of
law -- in the case of delinquent lands, on the 1st day of October,
1834, and in the case of omitted lands, on 1st November, 1836,
and no inquisition or judicial proceeding or inquest or finding
of any kind was required to consummate such forfeiture."
Now the plaintiff contends that the provision in the
Constitution of West Virginia which forfeits, and vests absolutely
in the state, without inquisition of record, or some public
transaction equivalent to office found, the title to lands which
for five successive years after 1869 have not been charged with
state taxes on the land books of the proper county, is repugnant to
the clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the
United States declaring that no state shall deprive any person of
his property without due process of law.
In support of this contention, numerous authorities have
Page 171 U. S. 421
been cited by the plaintiff, those most directly in point being
Griffin v. Mixon, 38 Miss. 424 (1860), and
Marshall v.
McDaniel, 12 Bush 378, 382-385 (1876). In the first of those
cases, the High Court of Errors and Appeals of Mississippi,
speaking by Judge Harris, held a statute of that state declaring
the forfeiture of lands on the failure simply of the owner to pay
the taxes due thereon, without notice or hearing in any form, to be
in violation of the constitutional provisions prohibiting the
taking of private property for public use without just compensation
being first made therefor, or the deprivation of property without
due process of law. In the other case, the Court of Appeals of
Kentucky held to be unconstitutional a provision in a statute of
that state declaring
"that in all cases where any lands shall hereafter be forfeited
for failing to list for taxation, or stricken off to the state, the
title of such lands shall vest in this commonwealth by virtue of
this act without any inquest of office found unless said lands
shall have been redeemed according to law."
That court, speaking by Chief Justice Lindsay, said:
"In pursuing this inquiry, we need not call in question the
power of the legislature to provide for the levy and collection of
taxes in the most summary manner. The right of the commonwealth,
through its executive and ministerial officers, to assess property
for taxation, to ascertain the sum payable by each taxpayer, and to
seize and sell his property in satisfaction of such sum, is not
open to doubt. It is equally clear the legislature may impose upon
the taxpayer the duty of listing his property for taxation, and may
prescribe, for the neglect of the duty so imposed, penalties
reaching even to the forfeiture of the estate not listed. But when
such laws are enacted, the forfeitures prescribed must be regarded
as penalties, and they cannot be inflicted until inquiry has first
been made, and the commission of the offense ascertained by"
"due course of law. . . . To enjoin what shall be done or what
left undone, and to secure obedience to the injunction by
appropriate penalties, belongs exclusively to legislation. To
ascertain a violation of such injunction, and inflict the penalty,
belongs to the judicial function."
"
Gaines v. Buford, 1 Dana 481.
Page 171 U. S. 422
By the Magna Charta it is declared that no citizen shall be
disseised of his freehold, or be condemned, but by the lawful
judgment of his peers, or by the law of the land. The substance of
this declaration is contained in our bill of rights. Its meaning
and intention is that no man shall be deprived of his property
without being first heard in his own defense. . . . We conclude
without hesitation that so much of the act of 1825 as provided that
for a mere failure to list lands for taxation the title should be
forfeited, and should
ipso facto, without inquiry or
trial, and without opportunity to the party supposed to be in
default even to manifest his innocence, be vested in the
commonwealth, is unconstitutional and void."
The question of constitutional law thus presented is one of
unusual gravity. On the one hand, it must not be forgotten that the
clause of the national constitution which this Court is now asked
to interpret is a part of the supreme law of the land, and that it
must be given full force and effect throughout the entire Union.
The due process of law enjoined by the Fourteenth Amendment must
mean the same thing in all the states. On the other hand, a
decision of this Court declaring that that amendment forbids a
state, by force alone of its Constitution or statutes, and without
inquisition or inquiry in any form, to take to itself the absolute
title to lands of the citizen because of his failure to put them on
record for taxation or to pay the taxes thereon, might greatly
disturb the land titles of two states under a system which has long
been upheld and enforced by their respective legislatures and
courts. Under these circumstances, our duty is not to go beyond
what is necessary to the decision of the particular case before us.
If the rights of the parties in this case can be fully determined
without passing upon the general question whether the clause of the
West Virginia Constitution in question,
alone considered,
is consistent with the national Constitution, that question may
properly be left for examination until it arises in some case in
which it must be decided.
We come then to inquire whether, looking at the Constitution and
the statutes of West Virginia together, a remedy
Page 171 U. S. 423
was not provided which, if pursued, furnished to the plaintiff
and those under whom he asserts title all the opportunity that "due
process of law" required in order to vindicate any rights that he
or they had in respect of the lands in question.
We have seen that the lands embraced by the patent to Robert
Morris were not put upon the land books of the proper counties
during the years 1883 to 1894, both inclusive. They were redeemed
in 1883 from forfeiture by Randall, trustee, in whom, as we take
it, the title was at that time vested. Let it be assumed that they
were again forfeited to the state upon the expiration of the five
consecutive years after 1883 during which they were not placed on
the land books for taxation; in other words, that for that reason
they were forfeited to the state after the year 1888. What at the
time of such forfeiture, were the rights of the owner? Did the
statutes of the state give him any remedy whereby he could be
relieved from such forfeiture? Was he denied all opportunity to
hold the lands upon terms just and reasonable both to him and the
state?
We pass by the Act of November 18, 1873, providing for the sale
of escheated, forfeited, and unappropriated lands for the benefit
of the school fund, Acts West Virginia 1872 73, p. 449, c. 134, and
also, for the present, the Act of March 25, 1882, on the same
subject, Acts West Virginia 1882, p. 253, c. 95, because both of
those acts are amendatory of the Code of West Virginia, and their
provisions, so far as they directly or indirectly bear upon the
present controversy, are preserved and extended in the Code
published in 1887, which contained the law of the state in
reference to forfeited lands as it was at that time.
From Chapter 105 of the Code of West Virginia, published in
1887, it appears that all lands forfeited to the state for the
failure to have the same entered upon the land books of the proper
county and charged with the taxes thereon as provided by law -- so
far as the title thereof was not vested in junior grantees or
claimants under the provisions of the constitution and laws of the
state -- were
required to be sold for the benefit of the
school fund, the auditor to certify
Page 171 U. S. 424
to the clerk of the circuit court a list of all such lands which
or the greater part of which were in his county, within sixty days
after the title thereto vested in the state. That act made it the
duty of the commissioner of school lands to file his
petition in the circuit court and pray for the sale of the lands
for the benefit of the school fund. He was required to state in his
petition
"all the tracts, lots, and parts and parcels of any tract or lot
of land so liable to sale, in the circuit court of his county,
praying that the same be sold for the benefit of the school
fund,"
and, according to the best of his information and belief,
"the local situation, quantity or supposed quantity, and
probable value of each tract, lot or parcel, and part of a tract of
land therein mentioned, together with all the facts at his command,
in relation to the title to the same, and to each tract, lot, part
or parcel thereof,
the claimant or claimants thereof, and
their residence, if known, and, if not known, that fact shall be
stated, and stating also how and when and in whose name every such
tract, lot and parcel, and part of a tract or lot, was forfeited to
the state."
Provision was made for the reference of the petition to a
commissioner in chancery,
"with instructions to inquire into and report upon the matters
and things therein contained, and such others as the court may
think proper to direct, and particularly to enquire and report as
to the amount of taxes and interest due and unpaid on each tract,
lot and parcel, and part of a tract or lot of land mentioned in the
petition, in whose name it was forfeited, and when and how
forfeited, in whom the legal title was at the time of the
forfeiture, and if more than one person claimed adverse titles
thereto at the date of the forfeiture, the name of each of such
claimants and a reference to the deed book or books in which the
title papers of any claimant thereof can be found; what portion or
portions, if any, of such lands is claimed by any person or persons
under the provisions of section three of article thirteen of the
constitution of this state, with the names of such claimants and
the amount claimed by each as far as he can ascertain the
same."
If there were no exception to this report, or if there were any
which were overruled,
"the court
Page 171 U. S. 425
shall confirm the same
and decree a sale of the lands,
or any part of them, therein mentioned which are subject to sale,
for the benefit of the school fund upon such terms and conditions
as to the court may seem right and proper, and in any decree of
sale made under this chapter, the court may provide that the
commissioner of school lands, or other person, appointed
commissioner to make such sale, may receive bids for such lands,
without any notice of sale, and if the former owner or owners, or
person in whose name the land was returned delinquent, and
forfeited, or the heirs or grantee of such owner or person, or any
person or persons, holding a valid subsisting lien thereon at the
time of such forfeiture, bid a sum sufficient to satisfy such
decree and the costs of the proceeding and sale, and such person or
persons, so bidding, be the highest bidder, said commissioner shall
sell the land on such bid, and report the same to the court for
confirmation; but if the commissioner receive no bid from any such
person, or if he shall receive a higher bid therefor from any other
person not so mentioned, then and in either event the said
commissioner shall sell the land at public auction to the highest
bidder after first giving such notice, as may be provided by such
decree."
By the same act it was provided:
"The former owner of any such land shall be entitled to recover
the excess of the sum for which the land may be sold over the taxes
charged and chargeable thereon, or which, if the land had not been
forfeited, would have been charged or chargeable thereon since the
formation of this state, with interest at the rate of twelve
percentum per annum and the costs of the proceedings, if his claim
be filed in the circuit court that decrees the sale within two
years thereafter, as provided in the next succeeding section."
But the part of Chapter 105 of the Code which has the most
direct bearing on the question under consideration is section 14,
which, after providing that the owner may, upon his petition to the
circuit court, obtain an order for the payment to himself of the
excess just mentioned, proceeds:
"At any time during the pendency of the proceedings for the sale
of any such land as hereinbefore mentioned, such former owner, or
any
Page 171 U. S. 426
creditor of such former owner of such land, having a lien
thereon, may file his petition in said circuit court as
hereinbefore provided, and asking to be allowed
to redeem such
part or parts of any tract of land so forfeited, or the whole
thereof, as he may desire, and upon such proof's being made as
would entitle the petitioner to the excess of purchase money
hereinbefore mentioned, such court may allow him to redeem the
whole of such tract if he desire to redeem the whole, or such part
or parts thereof, as he may desire less than the whole, upon the
payment into court, or to the commissioner of school lands, all
costs, taxes and interest due thereon, as provided in this chapter,
if he desire to redeem the whole of such tract; or if he desire to
redeem less than the whole of such tract, upon the payment, as
aforesaid, of so much of the costs, taxes and interest due on such
tract as will be a due proportion thereof for the quantity so
redeemed. But if the petition be for the redemption of a less
quantity than the whole of such tract, it shall be accompanied with
a plat and certificate of survey of the part or parts thereof
sought to be redeemed. Whenever it shall satisfactorily appear that
the petitioner is entitled to redeem such tract or any part or
parts thereof, the court shall make an order showing the sum paid
in order to redeem the whole tract or the part or parts thereof
which the petitioner desires to redeem, and
declaring the
tract, or part or parts thereof, redeemed from such forfeiture
so far as the title thereto was in the state immediately before the
date of such order, which order, when so made,
shall operate as
a release of such forfeiture so far as the state is concerned,
and of all former taxes on said tract or part or parts thereof so
redeemed, and no sale thereof shall be made. If the redemption be
of a part or parts of a tract, the plat or plats and certificate of
the survey thereof hereinbefore mentioned, together with a copy of
the order allowing the redemption, shall be recorded in a deed book
in the office of the clerk of the county court.
Provided
that such payment and redemption shall in no way affect or impair
the title to any portion of such land transferred to and vested in
any person, as provided in section three of article thirteen of the
constitution of this state. "
Page 171 U. S. 427
It thus appears that when the lands in question and others
embraced in the Morris patent were, as is contended, forfeited to
the state for the failure of the owner during the five consecutive
years after they were redeemed by Randall, trustee, in 1883, to
have them entered upon the land books of the proper county, and
charged with the taxes thereon, it was provided by the statutes of
West Virginia:
That all lands thus forfeited to the state should be sold for
the benefit of the school fund;
That the sale should be sought by petition filed by the
commissioner of school lands in the proper circuit court, to which
proceeding all claimants should be made parties, and be brought in
by personal service of summons upon all found in the county, or by
publication as to those who could not be found;
That the petition should be referred to a commissioner in
chancery, who should report upon the same and upon such other
things as the court might direct, and particularly as to the amount
of taxes due and unpaid upon any lands mentioned in the petition,
in whose name and when and how forfeited, and in whom the legal
title was at the time of the forfeiture;
That if there were no exceptions to the report, or if there were
exceptions which were overruled, the court was required to confirm
the same and decree a sale of the lands for the benefit of the
school fund; and
That at any time during the pendency of the proceedings
instituted for the sale of forfeited lands for the benefit of the
school fund, the owner, or any creditor of the owner having a lien
thereon, might file his petition in the circuit court of the county
for the redemption of his lands, upon the payment into court, or to
the commissioner of school lands, of all costs, taxes, and interest
due thereon, and obtain a decree or order declaring the lands
redeemed, so far as the title thereto was in the state immediately
before the date of such order.
These provisions were substantially preserved in chapter 105, as
amended and reenacted in 1891 and 1893. Code West Va. 1891, p. 731;
Acts West Va. 1893, p. 57. But in the Code of 1891 will be found
this additional and important provision, Acts 1891, c. 94:
Page 171 U. S. 428
"SEC. 18. In every such suit brought under the provisions of
this chapter, the court shall have full jurisdiction, power and
authority to hear, try and determine
all questions of title,
possession and boundary which may arise therein, as well as any and
all conflicting claims whatever to the real estate in question
arising therein. And the court, in its discretion, may at any
time, regardless of the evidence, if any, already taken therein,
direct an issue to be made up and tried at its bar as to any
question, matter, or thing arising therein which, in the opinion of
the court, is proper to be tried by a jury. And if any such issue
be as to the question of title, possession or boundary of the land
in question, as any part of it, it shall be tried and determined in
all respects as if such issue was made up in an action pending in
such court. And every such issue shall be proceeded in, and the
trial thereof shall be governed by, the law and practice applicable
to the trial of an issue out of chancery, and the court may grant a
new trial therein as in other cases tried by a jury."
And this provision was preserved, substantially, in the act of
1893, amendatory of chapter 105 of the Code of West Virginia.
If, as contended, the state, without an inquisition or
proceeding of some kind declaring a forfeiture of lands for failure
during a named period to list them for taxation, and by force alone
of its constitution or statutes, could not take the absolute title
to such lands, still it was in its power by legislation to provide,
as it did, a mode in which the attempted forfeiture or liability to
forfeiture could be removed, and the owner enabled to retain the
full possession of, and title to, his lands. We should therefore
look to the constitution and statutes of the state together for the
purpose of ascertaining whether the
system of taxation
established by the state was, in its essential features, consistent
with due process of law. If, in addition to the provisions
contained in the constitution, that instrument had itself provided
for the sale of forfeited lands for the benefit of the school fund,
but reserved the right to the owner, before sale and within a
reasonable period, to pay the taxes and charges due thereon, and
thereby relieve his land from forfeiture, we do not suppose that
such a system would
Page 171 U. S. 429
be held to be inconsistent with due process of law. If this be
true, it would seem to follow necessarily that if the statutes of
the state, in connection with the constitution, gave the taxpayer
reasonable opportunity to protect his lands against a forfeiture
arising from his failure to place them upon the land books, there
is no ground for him to complain that his propers has been taken
without due process of law.
Much of the argument on behalf of the plaintiff proceeds upon
the erroneous theory that all the principles involved in due
process of law, as applied to proceedings strictly judicial in
their nature, apply equally to proceedings for the collection of
public revenue by taxation. On the contrary, it is well settled
that very summary remedies may be used in the collection of taxes
that could not be applied in cases of a judicial character. This
subject was fully considered in
Murray's
Lessee v. Hoboken Land and Improvement Co., 18 How.
272,
59 U. S.
280-282, which arose under the Act of Congress of May
15, 1820, providing for the better organization of the Treasury
Department. The account of a collector of customs having been
audited by the first Auditor, and certified by the first
Comptroller, of the Treasury, a distress warrant for the balance
found to be due was issued by the Solicitor of the Treasury in
accordance with the act of Congress, and levied upon the lands of
the collector. The question presented was whether such a proceeding
was consistent with due process of law, the objection to it being
that it was judicial in its nature, and that it operated to deprive
the debtor of his property without a hearing or trial by jury, and
without due process of law. This Court said, among other
things:
"Tested by the common and statute law of England prior to the
emigration of our ancestors, and by the laws of many of the states
at the time of the adoption of this amendment, the proceedings
authorized by the act of 1820 cannot be denied to be due process of
law when applied to the ascertainment and recovery of balances due
to the government from a collector of customs unless there exists
in the Constitution some other provision which restrains Congress
from authorizing such proceedings. For, though 'due process of law'
generally
Page 171 U. S. 430
implies and includes
actor, reus, judgex, regular
allegations, opportunity to answer, and a trial according to some
settled course of judicial proceedings, 2 Inst. 47, 50;
Hoke v.
Henderson, 15 N.C. 15;
Taylor v. Porter, 4 Hill 140,
146;
Van Zandt v. Waddel, 2 Yerger 260;
State Bank v.
Cooper, 2 Yerger 599;
Jones' Heirs v. Perry, 10
Yerger 59;
Greene v. Briggs, 1 Curtis 311, yet this is not
universally true. There may be, and we have seen that there are,
cases, under the law of England after Magna Charta, and as it was
brought to this country and acted on here, in which process, in its
nature final, issues against the body, lands, and goods of certain
public debtors without any such trial, and this brings us to the
question whether those provisions of the Constitution which relate
to the judicial power are incompatible with these proceedings."
Again:
"The power to collect and disburse revenue, and to make all laws
which shall be necessary and proper for carrying that power into
effect, includes all known and appropriate means of effectually
collecting and disbursing that revenue, unless some such means
should be forbidden in some other part of the Constitution. The
power has not been exhausted by the receipt of the money by the
collector. Its purpose is to raise money, and use it in payment of
the debts of the government, and whoever may have possession of the
public money until it is actually disbursed, the power to use those
known and appropriate means to secure its due application
continues. As we have already shown, the means provided by the act
of 1820 do not differ in principle from those employed in England
from remote antiquity -- and in many of the states, so far as we
know, without objection -- for this purpose at the time the
Constitution was formed. It may be added that probably there are
few governments which do or can permit their claims for public
taxes, either on the citizen or the officer employed for their
collection or disbursement, to become subjects of judicial
controversy, according to the course of the law of the land.
Imperative necessity has forced a distinction between such claims
and all others, which has sometimes been carried out by summary
methods of proceeding and sometimes by
Page 171 U. S. 431
systems of fines and penalties, but always in some way observed
and yielded to."
In
Bell's Gap Railroad v. Pennsylvania, 134 U.
S. 232,
134 U. S. 239,
it was said that
"the process of taxation does not require the same kind of
notice as is required in a suit at law, or even in proceedings for
taking private property under the power of eminent domain. It
involves no violation of due process of law when it is executed
according to customary forms and established usages, or in
subordination to the principles which underlie them."
This must be so, else the existence of government might be put
in peril by the delays attendant upon formal judicial proceedings
for the collection of taxes.
In this connection, reference may be made to what was said by
the Supreme Court of Appeals in
McClure v. Maitland, above
cited, touching the rights of the owner of lands forfeited to the
state, and for the sale of which proceedings were instituted by the
commissioner of school lands. That court said:
"The title to the land and all the right and interest of the
former owner having thus, by his default and the operation of the
law, become absolutely vested in the state and become irredeemable,
she, having thus acquired a perfect title to and unqualified
dominion over the land, had the undoubted right to hold or dispose
of it for any proper purpose in any manner and upon any terms and
conditions she might in her sovereign capacity deem proper, without
consulting the former owner or anyone else. For after the
forfeiture had become complete, as it had in the case before us,
the former owner had no more claim to or lien upon the land than
one who never had pretended to own it. In the exercise of this
perfect dominion over her own property, the state saw proper to
transfer and vest her title to so much of said land owned by her,
in any person, other than those who occasioned the default, as such
person may have been in the actual possession of, or have just
title to claiming the same, and was not in default for the taxes
thereon chargeable to him. . . . The laws, as we have shown, by
their own force, transferred to and vested the title to the land
absolutely in the state, without any judicial inquiry or inquest of
any kind. There could
Page 171 U. S. 432
therefore be no necessity or reason for proceeding
in
rem against the land. That had already become the absolute
property of the state, and she had a perfect right to sell it
without further inquiry. All the laws providing for the sale of
these lands presupposed the title to have vested in the state prior
to the commencement of the proceedings. In fact, the whole
authority of the commissioner and the jurisdiction of the court are
based upon the assumption that the unconditional title is in the
state, for unless such is the fact, neither has any authority to
act.
Twiggs v. Chevallie, 4 W.Va. 463. And all the right,
title, and interest of the former owner having been completely
divested, he has not a particle of interest in the land -- no more
than if he had never owned it. There is therefore no possible
reason for making him a party, or proceeding against him
in
personam or otherwise. The proceeding is, of necessity, then,
neither
in rem nor
in personam, and as all
judicial proceedings, properly so styled, must belong to either the
one or the other of these classes, it follows that this is not, and
cannot be, in any technical sense, a judicial proceeding."
It is said that this shows that the taxpayer, after his land is
forfeited to the state, is left by the statutes of West Virginia
without any right or opportunity, by any form of judicial
proceeding, to get it back or to prevent its sale, and therefore,
it is argued, he is absolutely divested of his lands solely by
reason of his failure to place them on the proper land books.
An answer to this view is that what was said in
McClure v.
Maitland on this point had reference to proceedings under the
Act of November 18, 1873, Acts 1872-73, p. 449, c. 134, which were
not judicial in their nature, but administrative. But as declared
in
Hays v. Camden's Heirs, 38 W.Va. 109, 110, the act of
1873 was so amended by the Act of March 25, 1882, Acts W.Va. 1882,
p. 253, c. 95, as to make the proceeding in the circuit court for
the sale of forfeited lands, in which the owners or claimants could
intervene and effect a redemption of their lands from forfeiture, a
judicial proceeding. This view was reaffirmed in
Wiant v.
Hays, 38 W.Va. 681, 684, in which Judge Brannon,
Page 171 U. S. 433
delivering the unanimous judgment of the state court, observed
that what was said in
McClure v. Maitland as to the
landowner's not being entitled of right to be made a party to the
proceeding instituted for the sale of forfeited lands for the
benefit of the school funds had reference to the then existing act,
which was changed by the act of 1882. Answering the suggestion that
the proceedings under the new law were not judicial, the court
said:
"Now why, with parties plaintiff and defendant, process,
pleading, hearing between the parties, decree, etc., it is not, if
not technically a chancery suit, yet a suit, I cannot see -- a suit
under a special statute, it is true, but nonetheless a suit. So,
substantially, it was regarded in
Hays v. Camden's Heirs,
38 W.Va. 109. Proceedings at rules take place as in ordinary and
common lawsuits. In some places it is called a 'suit.' But I know
that it is said by those holding the other view that the question
is not to be tested by the circumstances such as I have alluded to
-- the presence of pleading, process, hearing, etc. -- but it must
be tested by the nature of the proceeding; that is, that it is only
an administrative process by the state, through an officer and
court, to realize money on its own property. But to this I reply
that though the state might make the proceeding such, and did in
its acts up to 1882, yet by its act in 1882, it changed the
proceeding from one
ex parte to one
inter partes,
and clothed the proceeding with all the habiliments of a suit, and
still it did not proceed against the land, taking the act of
forfeiture as a concession, and simply at one sell the land, but it
subjected its right and title under the supposed forfeiture to
question and investigation under the law through a suit, called in
all interested adversely to its claim, and gave them leave to
contest its right, and made its claim the subject of
litigation."
It thus appears that under the statutes of West Virginia in
force after 1882, the owner of the forfeited lands had the right to
become a party to a judicial proceeding, of which he was entitled
to notice, and in which the court had authority to relieve him,
upon terms that were reasonable, from the forfeiture of his
lands.
Page 171 U. S. 434
It is said that the landowner will be without remedy if the
commissioner of the school fund should fail to institute the
proceeding in which the statute permitted such owner to intervene
by petition, and obtain a redemption of his lands from the
forfeiture claimed by the state. It cannot be assumed that the
commissioner will neglect to discharge a duty expressly imposed
upon him by law, nor that the courts are without power to compel
him to act where his action becomes necessary for the protection of
the rights of the landowner.
It is further said that a forfeiture may arise under the
Constitution of West Virginia despite any effort of the landowner
to prevent it; that, although the owner may direct his lands to be
entered on the proper land books, and that he be charged with the
taxes due thereon, the custodian of such books may neglect to
perform his duty. Thus, it is argued, the lands may be forfeited by
reason of the landowner's not having been in fact charged on the
land books with the taxes due from him, although he was not
responsible for such neglect. We do not so interpret the state
constitution or the statutes enacted under it. If the landowner
does all that is reasonably in his power to have his lands entered
upon the land books and to cause himself to be charged with taxes
thereon, no forfeiture can arise from the owner's not having been
"charged on such books" with the state tax. The state could not
acquire any title to the lands merely through the neglect of its
agent having custody or control of its land books. Any steps
attempted to be taken by the officers of the state based upon such
neglect of its agent, the taxpayer not being in default, would be
without legal sanction, and could be restrained by any court having
jurisdiction in the premises. We go further and say that any sale
had under the statute providing for a sale, under the order of
court, for the benefit of the school fund, of lands alleged to be
forfeited by reason of their not having been charged on the land
books for five consecutive years with the state tax due thereon
would be absolutely void if the landowner was not before the court,
or had not been duly notified of the proceedings, but had done all
that he could reasonably do to have his lands entered
Page 171 U. S. 435
on the proper books, and to cause himself to be charged with the
taxes due thereon. If the state was not entitled to treat them
as forfeited lands, that fact could be shown in the
proceeding instituted for their sale as lands of that character,
and the rights of the owner fully protected. In the present case,
it does not appear that any evidence was offered tending to show
that the absence from the land books of any charge of taxes on the
lands claimed by the plaintiff during five consecutive years after
their redemption by Randall, trustee, in 1883, was due to any
neglect of the officers of the state, or that the plaintiff, or
those under whom he asserts title, entered or attempted to enter
the lands upon the land books, or that he or they caused or
attempted to cause the lands to be charged with taxes thereon. But
there was evidence tending to show that the requirements of the
constitution were not met during any of the years from 1883 to the
bringing of this action. So far as the record discloses, it is a
case of sheer neglect upon the part of the landowner to perform the
duty required of him by the constitutional and statutes of the
state.
Another point made by the plaintiff in error is that the
provision of the Constitution of Virginia exempting tracts of less
than one thousand acres from forfeiture is a discrimination against
the owner of tracts containing one thousand acres or more, which
amounts to a denial to citizens or landowners of the latter class
of the equal protection of the laws. We do not concur in this view.
The evil intended to be remedied by the Constitution and laws of
West Virginia was the persistent failure of those who owned or
claimed to own large tracts of lands, patented in the last century,
or early in the present century, to put them on the land books so
that the extent and boundaries of such tracts could be easily
ascertained by the officers charged with the duty of assessing and
collecting taxes. Where the tract was a small one, the probability
was that it was actually occupied by someone, and its extent or
boundary could be readily ascertained for purposes of assessment
and taxation. We can well understand why one policy could be
properly adopted as to large tracts, which the necessities of the
public revenue did not require to be prescribed
Page 171 U. S. 436
as to small tracts. The judiciary should be very reluctant to
interfere with the taxing systems of a state, and should never do
so unless that which the state attempts to do is in palpable
violation of the constitutional rights of the owners of property.
Under this view of our duty, we are unwilling to hold that the
provision referred to is repugnant to the clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment forbidding a denial of the equal protection of the
laws.
For the reasons stated, we hold that the system established by
West Virginia under which lands liable to taxation are forfeited to
the state by reason of the owner not having them placed, or caused
to be placed, during five consecutive years, on the proper land
books for taxation, and caused himself to be charged with the taxes
thereon, and under which, on petition required to be filed by the
representative of the state in the proper circuit court, such lands
are sold for the benefit of the school fund, with liberty to the
owner, upon due notice of the proceeding, to intervene by petition,
and secure a redemption of his lands from the forfeiture declared,
by paying the taxes and charges due upon them, is not inconsistent
with the due process of law required by the Constitution of the
United States or the constitution of the state.
Having discussed all the points suggested by the assignments of
error which we deem it necessary to examine, we conclude this
opinion by saying that, as neither the plaintiff nor those under
whom he claims title availed themselves of the remedy provided by
the statutes of West Virginia for removing the forfeiture arising
from the fact that, during the years 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, and
1888 the lands in question were not charged on the proper land
books with the state taxes thereon for that period, or any part
thereof, the forfeiture of such lands to the state was not
displaced or discharged, and the circuit court properly directed
the jury to find a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff was
entitled to recover only on the strength of his own title. Whether
the defendants had a good title or not, the plaintiff had no such
interest in or claim to the lands as enabled him to maintain this
action of ejectment. We concur in what the Supreme Court of Appeals
of Virginia said
Page 171 U. S. 437
in a case recently decided:
"In an action of ejectment, the plaintiff must recover on the
strength of his own title, and if it appear that the legal title is
in another, whether that other be the defendant, the commonwealth,
or some third person, it is sufficient to defeat the plaintiff. If
it appears that the title has been forfeited to the commonwealth
for the nonpayment of taxes or other cause, and there is no
evidence that it has been redeemed by the owner, or resold, or
regranted by the commonwealth, the presumption is that the title is
still outstanding in the commonwealth."
Reusens v.Lawson, 91 Va. 226.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of the United States is
Affirmed.