Arnold v. Custer County

269 P. 396, 83 Mont. 130, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 7
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1928
DocketNo. 6,308.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 269 P. 396 (Arnold v. Custer County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Custer County, 269 P. 396, 83 Mont. 130, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 7 (Mo. 1928).

Opinion

*133 MR. JUSTICE MYERS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appeal in this case is taken from an order of the trial court, refusing to grant an injunction pendente lite and dissolving a restraining order.

Custer County had bid in and purchased, at tax sale, certain pieces of real. estate situate therein and sold for delinquent taxes. The period for redemption thereof having expired, the Board of County Commissioners decided to take steps to obtain deeds thereof to the county. An offer was made, to the board, by the Custer Abstract Company, engaged in the title abstract business in Custer County, to furnish certain information appertaining and necessary thereunto. In that connection, there appears in the journal of the board’s proceedings this entry: “The board took up the consideration of applications for tax deed on lands on which the county is now the holder of certificate of tax sales. After giving *134 the matter due consideration, the board, pursuant to Chapter 92 of the Laws of 1927, ordered and directed that the county clerk apply to the county for the issuance to the county of tax deeds on such property. The Custer Abstract Company having submitted in writing its offer to furnish all record inforination and a written report on the title to all real property on which there are delinquent taxes as shown by the records in the county treasurer’s office, * * * for the sum of $5 for each report, as outlined in said offer, after giving the offer due consideration the same was accepted on the terms contained in said offer. Further consideration of the above matter followed and it was decided to allow the county clerk one special deputy at $133.33 per month and one special deputy to receive $112.50 per month, to assist on this particular work.”

Thereafter and in pursuance thereof, the Custer Abstract Company furnished to the county clerk, as to each of many of such pieces of real estate, a report containing all information required by law and necessary in the making of application to the county treasurer for a deed thereto and the giving of notice thereof, as provided in section 2209, Revised Codes, 1921, and the making of the affidavit provided for in section 2212, Revised Codes, 1921, and the county clerk used such information in the matter of the procurement of the deeds for which he had been directed by the Board of County Commissioners to make application. As to each of such pieces of real estate, the information consisted of the name of the owner; the name of the occupant, if occupied; the name of the mortgagee, if the records in the office of the county clerk showed an unreleased mortgage, and the name of the assignee of mortgage, if there was, of record, an assignment of such a mortgage.

September 26, 1927, the Custer Abstract Company filed with the county clerk a claim in the sum of $3,525, against Custer County, for 705 such reports, and, October 5, 1927, the Board of County Commissioners allowed the claim and *135 the county clerk drew and delivered to the abstract company a county warrant, for that amount, in payment of the claim; and, October 25, 1927, the abstract company filed with the county clerk a claim in the sum of $1,465, against the county, for 293 more reports.

November 5, 1927, plaintiffs, as resident taxpayers of Custer County, instituted this suit against the county and the members of the Board of County Commissioners, to enjoin them from allowing for payment the claim filed October 25, 1927, or any other such claim of the abstract company. In their complaint they allege the facts we have narrated and allege further that the allowance and payment of the claim which was allowed and paid were illegal, for the reason that the Board of County Commissioners had no authority to accept the offer of the Custer Abstract Company; that, unless enjoined therefrom, the board will allow the claim of the abstract company filed October 25, 1927, which is an illegal claim, and, in that event, it will be paid; that the abstract company is continuing to do work under its proposal, accepted by the board, and is continuing to furnish such reports and it will have other claims therefor to file, all of which will be illegal and allowance of which would be without authority of law; that if appeal from allowance of each of such claims, filed or to be filed, should be taken, from month to month, a multiplicity of suits would result. It is prayed that the board be enjoined permanently from allowing any claim of the abstract company for furnishing such reports and particularly from allowing the claim filed October 25, 1927, and that an order, directed to the members of the board, issue, requiring them to appear upon a day certain and show cause why they should not be enjoined from so doing, pending the litigation, and that meantime a restraining order issue.

An undertaking was filed and the order to show cause issued and was served. It was accompanied by a restraining order.

*136 On the return day, defendants appeared and filed a return and answer. In it are admitted the offer of the abstract company alleged in the complaint and the entry in the journal of the board’s proceedings which is set forth in the complaint; also, the filing of the abstract company’s claim against the county for 705 reports and allowance and payment thereof and the filing of its claim for 293 more reports and that the abstract company is continuing to furnish such reports and will have more claims therefor to file. It is denied that the acceptance by the board of the abstract company’s offer was without authority of law and that the allowance and payment of the abstract company’s claim which was allowed and paid were illegal. It is alleged that the land bid in and purchased by the county at tax sale, for delinquent taxes, and subject to tax deeds, for which the county held certificates of sale, comprised more than 1,500 tracts or lots, consisting of more than 162,000 acres, and that the delinquent taxes thereon amounted to more than $170,000, and the assessed valuation of the land was more than $1,000,000; that the Montana Tax Commission had required county commissioners to procure tax deeds to all lands upon which taxes had been delinquent for the required statutory time; that the board decided it was advisable and necessary to procure tax deeds to such land in Custer County and proceeded to do so; that, in order for the county to sell such land, it was necessary that the county procure merchantable title thereto and to do that it was necessary for the county to give legal notice of application for tax deeds to all owners, mortgagees or assignees of mortgages; that the information necessary thereto could be furnished, with any degree of certainty, only by an abstractor of titles and, to that end, the board requested the Custer Abstract Company to submit to the board its proposal for furnishing such information and it did so and the board accepted the proposal and thereupon the abstract company proceeded to furnish and did furnish the county clerk with a large number of reports, containing the required information *137

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 396, 83 Mont. 130, 1928 Mont. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-custer-county-mont-1928.