Baeverstad v. Reynolds

18 N.W.2d 20, 73 N.D. 603, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 76
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1945
DocketFile No. 6954
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 20 (Baeverstad v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baeverstad v. Reynolds, 18 N.W.2d 20, 73 N.D. 603, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 76 (N.D. 1945).

Opinions

*606 Burr, J.

Prior to 1931, O. J. Lord was the owner of the W-J of the NE|: of Section 28, twp. 158, range 66 in Towner County. The taxes levied for 1931 became delinquent and the land was sold to the county in December, 1932, and a tax sale certificate issued.

On or about September 1, 1932, the owner mortgaged the land to the Security-First National Bank of Los Angeles as trustees under the last will and testament of Charles Grandison Reynolds, and the mortgage was recorded October 5, 1932.

It is stipulated that subsequent taxes were levied against this property as follows:

1931 — $49.20
1932— 42.72
1933— 33.78
1934— 37.04
1935 — $38.68
1936— 28.26
1937— 34.30
1938— 32.66

and that the county auditor “in preparing the notice of expiration of the period of redemption . . . added to the face of those taxes the interest and penalty accrued to the time of the notice with the result that the taxes as therein computed were as follows:

*607 1931 $83.79; 1932 $58.13; 1933 $43.87; 1934 $45.80; 1935 $45.-43; 1936 $31.44; 1937 $35.85, making a total of $344.31.” There is some confusion in the stipulation as to the taxes levied' in 1938, so we do not consider them.

On January 10, 1939, the county auditor issued a notice of expiration of the time of redemption from tax sale, the notice stating: “There is given herewith the descriptions of such parcels of real estate, and set opposite each description is the amount which will be required upon the date of the expiration of the period of redemption to redeem such real estate from such tax sale exclusive of the cost of serving this notice personally upon the owner and the person in possession thereof.”

This was served personally upon the plaintiff in this case as the occupant of the land in question, and on Vine Lord, the administrator of the estate of O. J. Lord. A notice similar in character was published in January, 1939, and set forth a description of the land involved here, the name of the title owner, and the amount required to redeem, as follows:

Oando Township
Township 158 — Range 66
Title Sec. Amount
Owner or reqd. to
Block Redeem
O. J. Lord, WÍ NE| 28 344.31

This notice varied in many respects from the notice served upon the administrator and then on the occupant of the land and also added thereto the statement that the amount set opposite the description of the tract sold, as the amount that would be required to redeem from the tax sale, included “the amount for which the said land was sold, interest and penalty thereon, subsequent delinquent taxes prior to those of the year 1988, and the penalties and interest thereon.”

It is stipulated as follows: “That exhibit 3 is a certified copy of the original notice of the expiration of the period of redemption in connection with the tax deed proceedings upon which the tax deed exhibit 2 was issued and that this is the only notice served in connection with the tax deed proceedings; that service was made as shown *608 on the back of the certified copy exhibit 3, and in addition thereto service was made by registered mail on the defendant Frederic P. Reynolds and upon the Security First .National Bank of Los Angeles, who is the original trustee in the mortgage upon which Mr. Reynolds obtained a sheriff’s deed, which will later be offered in evidence; and exhibits 3A and 3B are receipts signed by the Bank of Mr. Reynolds for copies of the Notice of expiration of the period of redemption, and the service as made as shown on the exhibits plus service by registered mail as stipulated constitutes the entire service that was made, and that in addition thereto the notice of expiration of the period of redemption was published in the Cando Herald on January 26-1939 as shown by exhibit 4 now offered.”

The mortgage was foreclosed February 7, 1940, and certificate of sale issued to the defendant.

The county' presented its tax sale certificate to the auditor, demanding a deed, and on October 1, 1940, the auditor issued a tax deed reciting that the deed was made by him as county auditor to Towner County, a municipal corporation; that the land had been sold to the county at tax sale for the sum of $52.55 and a tax sale certificate was issued to the county, that the time fixed by law for redeeming from the tax sale had expired, that no redemption had been made, and that the taxes with interest and penalty and cost now amounted to $346.62.

December 5, 1940, the county sold this land to the plaintiff herein, giving a deed which recited that it was made “between the County of Towner, North Dakota, party of the first part, acting by and through the Chairman of its Board of County Commissioners and its County Auditor, and H. B. Baeverstad, Cando, N. D., party of the second part.”

It recited that the property had been offered for sale November 19, 1940, “and no bid was received for same and said second party became the purchaser of the whole thereof for the sum of Six Hundred and no/100 Dollars.” It is stipulated plaintiff “is in possession of the land and using it for whatever purposes it is usable for.”

February 13, 1941, the sheriff’s deed to said property was issued to the defendant.

In July, 1941, the plaintiff commenced this action to quiet title to *609 the land in himself. He alleged that the defendant’s claimed estates and interest therein were adverse to him and asked that the same be adjudged null and void.

The defendant, as the trustee of the last will .and testament of Reynolds, answered, setting forth that he was the purchaser at the foreclosure proceedings and had received the sheriff’s deed. The answer further alleges that the county took a tax deed to the land without giving the defendant an opportunity to redeem according to law, and that the notice of the expiration of the period of redemption “did not specify the proper or correct amount which was required to prevent the said lands from going to tax deed . . . the public officials . . . gave public notice which specified amounts greatly in excess of those amounts which were legally required to be paid to effect such redemption.” It further alleges that the sale made to the plaintiff herein “was in all things irregular and void.” ' He alleges the land was excessively assessed and taxed and asks the court to determine the proper amount of taxes which should have been legally charged as taxes. There are other allegations not necessary to set forth.

We are not concerned with the allegations that the land had been excessively assessed and taxed, nor with the demand that the court determine the proper amount of tax which should have been levied.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 20, 73 N.D. 603, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baeverstad-v-reynolds-nd-1945.