Absetz v. McClellan

290 N.W. 298, 207 Minn. 202, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 644
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 16, 1940
DocketNo. 32,389.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 290 N.W. 298 (Absetz v. McClellan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Absetz v. McClellan, 290 N.W. 298, 207 Minn. 202, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 644 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

Defendants Burns and Moilan appeal from a judgment. The problems presented involve them and plaintiff only. So they alone will be referred to as defendants.

Title to and right of possession of certain real estate in the city of Virginia are to be determined. Plaintiff in her representative capacities is conceded to be the owner unless her title has been divested or encumbered by reason of certain tax proceedings noiv to be related. Taxes duly levied and assessed for the year 1926 Avere not paid. As a consequence a tax judgment Avas entered March 24, 1928. At the tax sale held on May 14, that year, a certificate of tax sale was issued to defendants’ assignor. Subsequent taxes have been paid by defendants or their assignor. The court found that “the net amount of such taxes, penalties, interest and costs so paid by defendants” or their assignor was $1,280.68, “computed to December 13, 1938.” (Defendants’ claim is $1,684.95, but that is not presently important.) No one questions the legality of the tax, entry of judgment, or tax sale.

By L. 1927, c. 119, §§ 2, 3 (1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 2139-1 and 2139-2), applicable to taxes for 1926 and subsequent years, a neAv theory Avas adopted so as to do away with the necessity of *204 service of any notice of expiration of redemption by anyone. Thereby the taxed rdal estate—

“hereafter duly sold at the annual delinquent tax sale, * * * shall at the expiration of five years .from the date of such sale become and be the absolute property of. the purchaser or of the state, or of his or its assigns, without the doing .of any act or thing whatsoever, without any right of redemption, and no notice of expiration of the time to redeem from any such sale shall be required.”

The law as to taxes levied prior to 1926 required service of notice of expiration of redemption before title of the owner could be divested. 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 2163. Under the provisions of 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 2169 and 2170, it was also required that notice of expiration and service thereof must be had within six years, and that the tax certificate showing service of notice of expiration and that the redemption period had expired should be recorded in the office of the register of deeds of the county in which the involved premises were located within seven years from the date of sale. If the certificate holder failed to comply with these requirements his title and interest in the property was wholly lost. Such “failure [as to notice and recording] * * shall operate to extinguish the lien of said purchaser” not only as to taxes represented by the certificate but also “of all subsequent taxes paid under such certificate.”

The 1927 act remained operative and in force until the 1933 legislative session, when L. 1933, c. 366 (3 Mason Minn. St. 1938 Supp. §§ 2164-1 and 2164-2), ivas enacted. It provides that:

“Right of redemption from any sale for delinquent taxes shall continue for a period of twelve months after proof of service, in the manner required by law, of a notice of expiration of the time Avithin which redemption can be made, has been filed in the office of the county auditor * * (Italics supplied.) (Section 2 repeals all inconsistent acts, and § 3 provides that it shall take effect from and after its passage. It Avas approved April 21, 1933.)

*205 It Avill thus be seen that the 1933 law came into effect less than a month before the time when under the 1927 act defendants’ title would have become “absolute,” and this “without the doing of any act or thing whatsoever” on the part of anyone. On March 9, 1934, the opinion in State ex rel. Standard Inv. Co. v. Erickson, 191 Minn. 188, 253 N. W. 529, was filed. On March 29, following, notice of expiration was duly issued by the county auditor and personally served by the sheriff upon tenant McClellan April 14, “at that time in possession of that part of said premises known as 201 Fourth Avenue South,” and on May 11 was returned and filed in the office of the county auditor with proof of such service. The premises were then' assessed in the Name of Alice Curry (plaintiff’s intestate). Of course no notice could be served upon her. The building occupied by McClellan was used for business purposes as a shop or store. A dwelling house known as 203 Fourth Avenue South was occupied by Martenus and wife and one Stella Robke. They were not served. McClellan’s monthly rental was $20; that of the dwelling house $12. The certificate of sale was not recorded until December 30, 1935.

On May 29, 1935, defendants secured possession of the property upon their claim of ownership and have since received certain rentals amounting to $609.20. Upon these facts the court concluded that the notice of expiration was not properly served and that defendants’ claim as to title failed; also, that because of inadequate service of notice and the certificate not having been recorded within the period fixed by 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 2.169, 2170, that all taxes paid by defendants under their certificate of sale, including the certificate itself and the record thereof, should be cancelled and annulled, and that plaintiff should have and recover from defendants the rental income received by them while in possession, with interest, the whole amounting to $689.70, plus costs and disbursements $45.04. Judgment was entered accordingly. This appeal followed.

The result reached seems unduly harsh and unreasonable. Defendants’ good faith in acquiring the tax certificate by assign *206 ment from the original tax purchaser cannot he questioned. There is no finding otherwise.

1. Our decisions have gone a long way to protect the landowner against tax forfeitures. But our statutes and cases decided thereunder do not aim at forfeiture of the tax certificate holder’s interest even if he is unsuccessful in getting absolute title under it. Hence it is that while in tax title proceedings “it is elementary that * * * to divest title to real estate there must be strict compliance with the statute,” Warroad Co-op. Creamery Co. v. Hoyez, 182 Minn. 73, 75, 233 N. W. 824, 825, yet the holder of an “invalid tax title is entitled to lien for all subsequent taxes, penalties, interest, and costs paid by him, even though a part thereof was covered by an assignment certificate which lie had surrendered for cancellation, assuming that he had acquired title under his prior certificate.” Id. (citing in support 1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 2188).

2. Equally well established is the rule that: “The validity of a tax certificate and the rights of the holder are to be determined by the laws in force at the time the certificate is acquired.” Klasen v. Thompson, 189 Minn. 254, 255, 248 N. W. 817, 818. As to right of redemption, see 6 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed. & 1934 Supp.) § 9406, and cases under notes.

3. As we have seen, the service of notice of expiration of redemption was entirely eliminated from the 1927 statute (1 Mason Minn. St. 1927, §§ 2139-1 and 2139-2). As there was to be no notice of expiration, of course there could remain no six- or seven-year limitation within which such notice should be issued and served and the certificate recorded.

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 298, 207 Minn. 202, 1940 Minn. LEXIS 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/absetz-v-mcclellan-minn-1940.