Allen v. Allen

91 N.W. 218, 114 Wis. 615, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 179
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 91 N.W. 218 (Allen v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. Allen, 91 N.W. 218, 114 Wis. 615, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 179 (Wis. 1902).

Opinion

Winst.ow, J.

The validity of the tax deed secured by Field is attacked on several grounds, which will be briefly considered in their order.

1. The sale took place May 16, 1893; the last publication of the delinquent list and notice of sale was made May 10th; [621]*621the delinquent list and notice was duly published the required number of times, but no affidavit of publication was filed until May 20th, being four days after the sale, and ten days after the last publication. The statute (sec. 1132, Stats. 1898) provides that the printer’s affidavit showing the proper publication of the list and notice shall be transmitted to the county treasurer immediately after the last publication, and further that, if the same be not transmitted within six days, the printer shall not be paid for the publication. It is argued that this requirement is mandatory and jurisdictional, and that failure to comply therewith is fatal. The fact of publication for the required time is of course jurisdictional, and it is true also that the affidavit of publication required by the statute is the exclusive proof of such publication, without the filing of which the sale will be held invalid. Iverslie v. Spaulding, 32 Wis. 394; Hebard v. Ashland Co. 55 Wis. 148, 12 N. W. 437. It has not been held, however, that if the affidavit be not filed within the six days, but be actually filed a few days thereafter, the sale is void. The penalty attached to the six-day requirement is a clear indication that its main object was to compel obedience on the part of the printer. So far as notice to the parties is concerned, every substantial right is as well conserved by the filing of the affidavit ten days after the last publication as by the filing within six days thereafter, providing it be thereafter duly deposited with the county clerk, as was the case here; and, while the rule of strict compliance with all statutory provisions regulating tax sales is well understood, we are not inclined to hold that the variance here shown should invalidate the sale.

2. It is argued that the affidavits of posting the delinquent list and notice of sale were insufficient. The statute requires (sec. 1130, Stats. 1898) that the treasurer shall, at least four-weeks before the day of sale, cause to be posted up “copies of such statement and notice in at least four public places in [622]*622said county, one of which copies shall be posted up in some conspicuous place in his office; ” and also requires (sec. 1132) that an affidavit or affidavits showing such posting shall be made and preserved by him and thereafter deposited with the county clerk (sec. 1141). There were several affidavits of posting duly filed. One affidavit stated that one of the notices was posted up “at the inside door of the treasurer’s office,” April 1Y, 1893; three other affidavits showed, respectively, that the notice was, on the lYth day of April, posted up “at the postoffiee in the village of Hillsboro in said county,” “at the postoffiee on the outside of the building in the village of Westboro in said county,” and “at the postoffiee building in the village of Ooon Valley in said county.” The claim is that these affidavits do not satisfy the requirements of the statute, and the case of Hilgers v. Quinney, 51 Wis. 62, 8 N. W. 17, is relied on in support of the contention. In that case it was held that an affidavit which stated that the notices were posted up at four public places in the village of Chilton in said county, — “one at the Chilton House, one at the drug store of William Mahoney, one at the Washington House, and one at the office of the county treasurer,” — was insufficient, because: (1) Eour public places in the village of Chilton were not necessarily four public places so far as the county was concerned; (2) because “at” is not synonymous with “in;” and (3) because it did not appear that the posting in the treasurer’s office was- in a “conspicuous place.” It must be conceded that the decision was an extremely strict one, and we certainly do not feel that it should be extended to a case not squarely within its lines. This court has held (Hart v. Smith, 44 Wis. 213) that it will be presumed that postoffices in cities and villages are public places, and that posting therein constitutes posting in public places, though the affidavit does not state that they are public places. There can be no doubt, therefore, that the affidavits in tire present case show posting “at” three public places in the county. [623]*623•Should the “inside door” of the county treasurers office he presumed to he a “conspicuous place” in such office? Wé think it should. The words should be given their natural meaning, and they naturally indicate an inner entrance door into the treasurer’s office, and hence, necessarily, a conspicuous place in the office. There is only left to he considered the question whether the use of the word “at” instead •of “in” is fatal. Notwithstanding what was said on this subject in the Hilgers Gase, we do not feel that we ought to hold that this variance alone is fatal. The word “post,” when used in the present connection, means “to attach to a post, a wall, or other usual place of affixing public notices” (Webst. Tnt. Diet.) ; “to bring to the notice or attention of the public by affixing to a post, or putting up in some public place” (Standard Diet.). Giving the word this meaning, it seems •certain that posting “at” a public place is substantially the equivalent of posting “in” a public place, and we therefore hold that the affidavits of posting in the present case were sufficient.

3. The statute requires (sec. 1141, Stats. 1898) that the -county treasurer shall, immediately after the tax sale, deposit in the office of the county clerk, with all affidavits, notices, and papers relative to the sale, “a statement containing a particular description of each tract or parcel thereof of land .so sold by him, specifying the name of the person to whom .sold, the amount for which the same was sold, and the name of the owner, if known,” and that the treasurer and clerk shall each record, such statement in their respective offices. In Hie present case the court found that the treasurer did not make or file this statement, but that a list of said lands so •sold was kept in the county clerk’s office, contained in a book called the “sales book,” but not signed by the treasurer. This finding was based simply upon the evidence of the county •clerk, who became such in 1899, that he had found no list made by the treasurer in 1893 in his office, though he had [624]*624made search therefor, hut had found the sales hook containing the list of the lands sold by the county treasurer in 1893. The sales hook is the record referred to in sec. 1141; it should he the recorded copy of the original list filed by the county treasurer under that section, and can only be legitimately made from that original; it appears, then, that this recorded copy is now in the clerk’s office; we think it might well he held that its presence in the clerk’s office is prima facie proof that the original was duly filed, because the record could only he legitimately made from the original list filed. But the court having found as a fact that the original list was never in fact filed, and this finding not having been excepted to by either party, it cannot he reviewed, but must he accepted as a fact.

The question of the effect of the omission to file this statement upon the tax sale and deed seems never to have been discussed in this court. The fact appeared in the case of Pier v. Oneida Co. 93 Wis. 463, 67 N. W. 702.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.W. 218, 114 Wis. 615, 1902 Wisc. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-allen-wis-1902.