A statement that a statutory sale was not sufficiently
advertised is a pure conclusion of law, and, in the absence of
allegations of fact to sustain it, is an empty assertion that is
not admitted by demurrer. Statements that the amount of taxes for
which the property was sold was excessive must be read in
connection with other statements in the pleading admitting that the
taxes were delinquent, and therefore augmented by the statutory
penalties.
Page 231 U. S. 163
A construction by the Supreme Court of the Territory that is not
manifestly wrong will not be rejected by this Court, and so
held as to a construction of the words "in accordance with
this act" as meaning "under this act."
Treat v. Grand Canyon
Railway Co., 222 U. S. 448. A
statute correcting irregularities in compliance with statutory
provisions in regard to tax sales is remedial in nature, and,
unless violative of constitutional restriction, is not a denial of
due process of law as retrospective legislation, and so
held as to § 25 of c. 22 of the laws of New Mexico of
1899, providing that sales for taxes made under that act shall not
be invalidated except on the ground of prior payment of the taxes
or exemption of the property from taxation.
One attacking a statute on the ground that it is
unconstitutional is limited to his own case as the statute has been
applied therein; he cannot rely on a possible construction of the
statute that might make it unconstitutional.
Castillo v.
McConnico, 168 U. S. 674.
16 N.M. 442 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a tax sale and the
constitutionality of a statute of New Mexico relative to tax deeds,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 231 U. S. 167
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit to quiet the title to three tracts of land in
Quay County, in the Territory of New Mexico. In the court of first
instance, a demurrer to the complaint was sustained, and, the
plaintiff declining to amend, a decree of dismissal was entered
which subsequently was affirmed by the supreme court of the
Territory. 16 N.M. 442. An appeal from the decree of affirmance
brings the case here under the Act of March 3, 1885, 23 Stat. 443,
c. 355.
The complaint purported to state four causes of action. In the
first, embracing all the tracts, it was alleged that the plaintiff
was the owner in fee simple, and that the defendant was making some
adverse claim, not described. In the others, each embracing a
single tract, the plaintiff's ownership was reiterated and it was
alleged that the defendant was claiming title under tax deeds
issued in consummation of tax sales which were characterized as
void for designated reasons. But, notwithstanding its form, the
complaint, as the record discloses, was treated in both of the
territorial courts, with the acquiescence of the parties, as
intended to challenge the validity of the tax deeds only upon the
grounds designated in the last
Page 231 U. S. 168
three causes of action -- that is, as if the general charge in
the first cause of action was intended to be restrained and limited
by the more specific charges in the others. We therefore treat the
complaint in the same way.
It was not alleged that the lands were not subject to taxation,
or that the taxes on account of which the sales were had were in
any wise invalid, or that the taxes or any part of them had been
paid or tendered, or that they had not been delinquent for such a
period as justified their enforcement by a sale of the lands, or
that the sales were in any wise tainted with fraud, or that there
had been any attempt to redeem the lands, or any of them, within
the three years allowed therefor, or that that period had not
elapsed after the sales and before the deeds were issued. On the
contrary, the sole grounds on which the complaint assailed the tax
title were (a) that the sales were "not sufficiently
advertised;"(b) that proof of publication of the notice of sale was
not transmitted by the printer to the county collector "immediately
after the last publication;"(c) that the collector did not cause to
be made an affidavit of the public posting of the notice of sale,
and did not cause proof of publication or of posting to be
deposited with the probate clerk; (d) that the probate clerk did
not "carefully preserve" any such proofs, and (e) that the amount
of the delinquency sought to be satisfied by the sales was, in one
instance, 16 cents, and in another 24 cents, more than the taxes
levied on the particular tract.
Plainly, the allegation that the sales were "not sufficiently
advertised" was purely a conclusion of law, and must be
disregarded. No facts being set forth to sustain it, the statement
of the conclusion was merely an empty assertion, and, under the
rule that a demurrer admits only facts well pleaded, the conclusion
was not admitted.
The charge that the delinquency sought to be satisfied by the
sales was in excess of the taxes levied must be read in connection
with the fact, otherwise appearing in
Page 231 U. S. 169
the complaint, that the taxes were delinquent, and in connection
with the statutory provisions augmenting the delinquency by
designated penalties and costs. When this is done, it is quite
evident that the amount sought to be collected was not
excessive.
The remaining objections advanced in the complaint are founded
upon a failure to comply with local statutory provisions directing
the making and preserving of proofs of the publication and posting
of the notice of sale. The supreme court of the territory held, in
effect, that compliance with these statutory provisions was not
essential in a constitutional sense to the validity of tax sales,
and therefore that the territorial legislature was free to declare
that noncompliance should not render the sales invalid, and, with
this as a premise, the court further held that the objections could
not prevail, because the statute under which the sales were had
contained a provision that
"no bill of review or other action attacking the title to any
property sold at tax sale in accordance with this act shall be
entertained by any court, nor shall such sale or title be
invalidated by any proceedings, except upon the ground that the
taxes, penalties, interest, and costs had been paid before the
sale, or that the property was not subject to taxation."
Laws New Mexico, 1899, c. 22, § 25.
The appellant assigns error upon this ruling, and insists that
the provision just quoted (a) is in terms restricted to sales made
"in accordance with this act," and so cannot be applied to any sale
wherein some requirements of the act were not followed, and (b) is
repugnant to the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment as applied to the territory by the organic act.
The supreme court of the territory construed the words "in
accordance with this act" as meaning "under this act," and we think
this was right. At least, we cannot say that it was manifestly
wrong, as must be done
Page 231 U. S. 170
to justify us in rejecting the local interpretation of a
territorial statute.
Fox v. Haarstick, 156 U.
S. 674,
156 U. S. 679;
Treat v. Grand Canyon Railway Co., 222 U.
S. 448,
222 U. S. 452. Of
course, the provision was intended to have some operation and
effect, and it hardly could have any if restricted to sales made in
accordance with the act, in the stricter sense, for such sales
would be as valid without the provision as with it.
While statutes authorizing tax sales often provide for making
and preserving some designated form of record evidence of
compliance with the requirements respecting notice of the sale, the
subject is one which rests in legislative discretion, being quite
apart from those fundamental rights which are embraced in a right
conception of due process of law. And if there be legislative
provision upon the subject, it does not assume the dignity of an
essential element of due process of law in the constitutional sense
(
Castillo v. McConnico, 168 U. S. 674,
168 U. S.
683), but belongs to that class of regulations of which
it is said, in
Williams v. Albany County, 122 U.
S. 154,
122 U. S.
164:
"Where directions upon the subject might originally have been
dispensed with, or executed at another time, irregularities arising
from neglect to follow them may be remedied by the legislature,
unless its action in this respect is restrained by constitutional
provisions prohibiting retrospective legislation."
We are not here concerned with retrospective legislation or with
any prohibition of it, for, as before shown, the remedial or
relieving provision was embodied in the act under which the sales
were had.
It is contended, however, that the remedial or relieving
provision is so broad in its terms as to give effect to a sale not
founded upon a prior assessment, or where no opportunity was
afforded for a hearing in opposition to the tax, and therefore that
it is violative of due process. To this it is a sufficient answer
to repeat what was said in
Castillo v. McConnico, (p.
168 U. S.
680), in disposing of a like contention:
Page 231 U. S. 171
"But, as thus stated, the proposition presents a purely moot
question. The plaintiff in error has no interest to assert that the
statute is unconstitutional because it might be construed so as to
cause it to violate the Constitution. His right is limited solely
to the inquiry whether, in the case which he presents, the effect
of applying the statute is to deprive him of his property without
due process of law."
As none of the objections advanced in the complaint against the
defendant's tax title appears to have been well taken, we think the
demurrer was rightly sustained.
Decree affirmed.