An owner of property must be held to knowledge that failure to
pay duly assessed taxes will be followed by sale, and if the
statute gives him full opportunity to be heard as to the assessment
on definite days, and definitely fixes the time for payment and the
time for sale in case of default, so that he cannot fail, if duly
diligent, to learn of the pendency of the sale, he is not denied
due process of law because the notice of sale is by publication,
and not by personal service, and the validity of a tax sale under
the law of Michigan sustained.
144 Mich. 55 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 209 U. S. 415
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Michigan. That
court rendered judgment for the defendants in error, who were the
original plaintiffs, against the plaintiff in error, who was the
original defendant, in an action of ejectment to recover a certain
lot of land. The defendant was at one time the owner of the land in
dispute, but it was conveyed to the plaintiffs by a deed given in
pursuance of a sale for taxes. The title to the land depends upon
the validity of the tax title, which was upheld by the court below.
The issue in this Court is narrowed to the question whether the
sale of the land for the enforcement and collection of the taxes,
which it is conceded were duly levied, violated the due process of
law guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of
the United States.
The method in Michigan of the assessment and collection of taxes
on real property is as follows: on or before the third Monday in
May, the supervisor of the township makes a tax roll on which each
parcel of real property is described, and the name of its owner, if
known, set opposite. The supervisor then estimates the true cash
value of the property. On the Tuesday next following the third
Monday of May, the supervisor submits his assessment roll to a
board of review for correction and approval. On the fourth Monday
of May and the day following, the board sits, and at the request of
any taxpayer, has the power to correct the assessment on his
property. The members of the board have authority to administer the
oath and to examine witnesses. The assessment roll is then finally
made up and certified. The supervisor then proceeds to assess taxes
in accordance with the assessment roll, and from the first day of
December following, they become a lien upon the property until
payment. Act 206 of the Laws of 1893 provides for
Page 209 U. S. 416
the enforcement and collection of delinquent taxes by sale. All
lands, the taxes upon which have remained unpaid for a year, after
the lands have been returned to the auditor general or the county
treasurers as delinquent, are declared to be subject to sale in
satisfaction of the tax lien. The law provides, § 61,
that,
"as soon as practicable after the first day of June . . . , the
auditor general shall prepare and file in the office of the county
clerk . . . a petition addressed to the circuit court for said
county, in chancery, stating therein by apt reference to lists or
schedules annexed thereto, a description of all lands in such
county upon which taxes have remained unpaid for more than one year
prior to . . . the first day of May of the year in which the
petition is filed, and the total amount of such taxes. . . . Such
petition shall pray a decree in favor of the State of Michigan
against said land for the payment of the several amounts so
specified therein, and, in default thereof, that such lands be
sold."
The petition is then entered in "a substantial record book,"
with a list of the lands and the taxes upon them. The circuit judge
thereupon makes an order that the petition will be brought to
hearing and decree at a time and place named at which all persons
interested who desire to contest the lien of the state may appear
and file their objections, and that, in default of appearance, a
decree as prayed for will be entered. The petition, with the order
thereon, must then be published at least once a week for four weeks
next prior to the time fixed for hearing, in some newspaper
published and circulating in the county, to be designated by the
auditor general. If there is no such newspaper, or none such can be
secured, the petition and order must be printed and furnished to
each voter in the county, and copies posted in three public places
in each township. The foregoing publication is declared by the law
to be
"equivalent to a personal service of notice on all persons who
are interested in the lands specified in such petition, of the
filing thereof, of all proceedings thereon, and of the sale of the
lands under the decree, and shall give the court jurisdiction
Page 209 U. S. 417
to proceed to a decree. An appeal to the supreme court may be
taken by either party. On the first Monday of December following,
the county treasurer begins to make the sales decreed by the court,
must report them to the clerk of the court, and eight days after
the sales are reported to the clerk of the court are given for
objections to the sale, which may be set aside as is the practice
in cases of sales in equity on the foreclosure of mortgages. The
sale is then confirmed, subject to a right of redemption, which may
be exercised at any time within one year from the sale. The sale,
however, may be set aside within one year after the owner has
notice of the sale, if the taxes have been paid or the property was
exempt."
The sale in the case at bar was made after proceedings which in
all respects conformed to the statute. The single objection made in
behalf of the plaintiff in error is that the statute denies to him,
then being a resident of the state, the due process of law required
by the Constitution in that it substitutes notice by publication of
the proceedings for sale for personal service. It has been shown
that the Michigan law provides a board of review, which holds
sessions on days fixed by the laws, where every person whose
property is on the provisional assessment roll submitted by the
supervisor may be heard to correct the assessment. It would seem
that this opportunity for hearing, coupled with the provision for
setting aside the sale within one year after notice of it, which
has been stated, satisfies the requirement of due process of law
made by the Fourteenth Amendment, and that the state may be left to
enforce the collection of the taxes as it chooses. But we pass this
question without deciding it, simply observing that, in
Winona
& St. Peter Land Co. v. Minnesota, 159 U.
S. 526, it was said, p.
159 U. S. 537,
that the Fourteenth Amendment was not violated
"if the owner has an opportunity to question the validity or the
amount of it either before that amount is determined or in
subsequent proceedings for its collection."
If it be assumed that the delinquent taxpayer, who has already
had an opportunity to be heard upon the assessment of the
Page 209 U. S. 418
tax upon his property, is entitled to further notice of the
pendency of proceedings to sell the land in satisfaction of the tax
lien, then the statute before us requires a sufficient notice. It
is no objection that the notice was only by publication. In the
case of
Leigh v. Green, 193 U. S. 79, a
case of publication, the authorities were reviewed, and it was
said, p.
193 U. S.
92:
"Where the state seeks directly, or by authorization to others,
to sell land for taxes upon proceedings to enforce a lien for the
payment thereof, it may proceed directly against the land within
the jurisdiction of the court, and a notice which permits all
interested, who are 'so minded,' to ascertain that it is to be
subjected to sale to answer for taxes, and to appear and be heard,
whether to be found within the jurisdiction or not, is due process
of law within the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution."
Moreover, the case at bar cannot be distinguished from
Winona & St. Peter Land Co. v. Minnesota, supra.
There, a statute similar to the one now before us was held to
afford due process of law. The only distinction suggested is that
the Minnesota statute fixed more definitely than the Michigan
statute the time of filing the petition, of making the order for
hearing, and of the hearing itself. But those times are fixed with
sufficient certainty here. The owner of property whose taxes, duly
assessed, have remained unpaid for more than one year, must be held
to the knowledge that proceedings for sale are liable to be begun
as soon as practicable after the first day of June, and that the
law contemplates that they will be ended before December 1, when
the sales will be made by the county treasurer. The proceedings are
inscribed on the public records and otherwise made notorious. If he
exercises due vigilance, he cannot fail to learn of their pendency,
and that full opportunity to defend is afforded to him. This
satisfies the demands of due process of law, and the judgment
is
Affirmed.