DocketNumber: 7 Div. 222.
Citation Numbers: 174 So. 796, 27 Ala. App. 460, 1937 Ala. App. LEXIS 65
Judges: Rice
Filed Date: 2/2/1937
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Instrument as copied below was offered by appellee to appellant for recordation. Appellee tendered the amount necessary to pay for the recording, proper, plus the sum *Page 461 of thirty cents "State filing tax." Appellant refused to accept the paper for recordation unless and until appellee paid to him, in addition, the sum of fifty cents as and for the "deed tax" due in the premises. It was, presently with the offer for recordation, made known to appellant that a cash payment of $150 had been made on the car described in said instrument at the time of purchase.
Writ of mandamus ordering appellant to receive and accept said paper for recordation in accordance with the tender of appellee was issued below. This appeal followed.
The instrument referred to above is, in words and figures, as follows:
"J. R. Benton [L.S.] "Purchaser. "W. H. Smith, [L.S.] "Seller."
We think there can be no doubt that "the determination of the amount of tax to be paid on an instrument [offered for recordation] is left to the probate judge." Long, Judge, v. Jasper Land Co.,
True, he "may accept as prima facie correct the recitals of the deed [or bill of sale, we interpolate] * * * and may act accordingly, in the absence of any fact or circumstance to thecontrary, coming to his attention calculated to put on notice areasonably prudent person." (Italics supplied.) Long, Judge, v. Jasper Land Co., supra.
A reading of the opinion in the Long, Judge, v. Jasper Land Co. Case, just cited, persuades us that appellant, here, was within his rights in ascertaining that a cash payment of $150 had been made on the purchase price of the car described in the instrument offered for recordation at the time of its purchase. And, having ascertained this fact, it was his duty to govern himself by that information.
So, in coming to consider the propriety vel non of the action above mentioned of the circuit court, we read the instrument copied above as though it had inserted therein — as a substitute for the words "for the total time price of $ _________, payable $ _________ in cash," the words "for the total time price of $300.00, payable $150.00 in cash."
When so read, it seems to us, and we hold, that the instrument offered for record falls squarely within the provisions of section 21 1/2 of the Act of the Legislature approved July 22, 1927 (Gen. Acts Ala. 1927, pp. 139, 163). And that the "deed tax," to so denominate it, of fifty cents, was due, in accordance therewith, on the $150 cash payment; just as was demanded by appellant.
The "authorities" cited here by appellee's distinguished counsel, as we view them, hold nothing to the contrary.
It results that the judgment of the circuit court was laid in error.
The same is reversed; and judgment here entered that appellee's petition for mandamus be overruled and denied. Code 1928, § 8981.
Reversed and rendered.