Board of County Commissioners v. Utah-Colorado Land & Livestock Co.

73 P.2d 987, 101 Colo. 372
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 15, 1937
DocketNo. 14,168.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 73 P.2d 987 (Board of County Commissioners v. Utah-Colorado Land & Livestock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of County Commissioners v. Utah-Colorado Land & Livestock Co., 73 P.2d 987, 101 Colo. 372 (Colo. 1937).

Opinions

IN 1935 defendant in error, to which we shall hereafter refer as plaintiff, acquired a number of tax sale *Page 374 certificates on real property situate in Moffat county by purchase and assignment from the county at a less amount than the face value thereof. After acquiring the certificates plaintiff made request for treasurer's deed, but before the deed issued the property covered by four of the certificates was redeemed by the owners. Plaintiff then demanded from the county treasurer the full amount paid for the redemption of the property, which demand was refused by the treasurer, whereupon plaintiff instituted this proceeding against the board of county commissioners and treasurer of Moffat county, who are the plaintiffs in error here and to whom we shall refer as defendants, to require payment to plaintiff of the full amount of redemption money.

By way of an affirmative defense defendants allege in their answer that plaintiff came before the regular meeting of the board of county commissioners and then and there offered and proposed to buy certain tax sale certificates at such discount as the plaintiff and the commissioners could agree upon, and that "pursuant to said offer of the plaintiff the board of county commissioners agreed to sell to the plaintiff, and to authorize the county treasurer to assign and deliver and the plaintiff agreed to buy, each and every one of the * * * certificates," (here follows a list of the certificates, with individual percentages of the face varying from 25 per cent to 75 per cent fixed as the purchase price), "and thereupon the county commissioners adopted a resolution * * * authorizing the county treasurer to assign said certificates for the percentages aforesaid, without however designating or naming the purchaser of the same, and the plaintiff immediately thereafter paid to the county treasurer the amounts required to purchase each of said certificates, calculated according to said respective percentages." Defendants further alleged, "That at the time of the aforesaid transaction and as a part thereof, it was agreed further by and between the plaintiff and the defendant the board of county commissioners that in event of the redemption of *Page 375 any of said tax certificates, so sold and assigned to the plaintiff, the plaintiff should and would be repaid only the amount of money it had paid for such tax certificates so redeemed, plus its proportionate interest accruing to the same at the time of redemption."

These allegations were denied by plaintiff's replication. Upon such issues the case was tried to the district court without a jury and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff.

[1] In their brief defendants assert that the "important issue" is whether the holder of a certificate acquired from the county for less than the face is entitled to the full sum paid on redemption, where such holder actively and directly "sought and engaged the county commissioners in a transaction whereby it acquired a number of certificates at preagreed discounts," and attempt to support this contention by the cases of Thompson v. Board ofCommissioners, 91 Colo. 214, 14 P.2d 194; Klein LandCo. v. Thompson, 99 Colo. 422, 63 P.2d 450; and Radetskyv. Palmer, 70 Colo. 146, 199 Pac. 490. It is extremely doubtful whether the quoted allegations of the answer, as a matter of law, raise the question suggested in defendants' brief, or any issue, of an illegal bulk sale or an attempted preference of a purchaser, but even if considered as so doing, the evidence in the case entirely eliminates it from the inhibition proscribed by the cases just cited. Generally, these cases are authority for the rule that the statutory power of the county commissioners, in fixing the purchase price for tax sale certificates held by the county, is limited to establishing a price at which each certificate shall be sold and that they may not legally make a bulk sale of certificates for a lump sum, nor to a particular purchaser. In Radetsky v. Palmer, supra, the resolution of the board designated Radetsky as the purchaser and the transaction was thereby held illegal. InThompson v. Board of Commissioners, supra, the agreement between the commissioners and the purchaser of the tax sale certificates disclosed unequivocally a contract for *Page 376 a bulk sale for a lump sum to a particular purchaser and so was condemned. Further, there, the particular purchaser, after the adoption of the resolution, forthwith and immediately purchased the certificates from the treasurer. The case of Klein Land Co. v. Thompson, supra, arose out of the same transaction as Thompson v. Boardof Commissioners, supra, and the rules therein announced on this subject were based upon the premise of the former case.

[2, 3] In the case at bar it appears from the testimony of defendants themselves that Mr. Winder, the vice-president of the plaintiff company, appeared before the board of county commissioners at regular session with a list of various outstanding tax sale certificates belonging to the county, which had been furnished to him by the treasurer, with the idea of acquiring at a discount a number of these certificates and ultimately tax title to the lands covered thereby. The plaintiff's representative stated what the company would be willing to pay, certificate by certificate, and in each instance the board, after discussion of the matter, determined the specific amount for which it would authorize the treasurer to make the assignment. In many instances the price fixed by the board was in excess of the amount suggested by the plaintiff. After conclusion of the negotiations the board directed the county attorney to prepare a resolution, which was in regular form with a separate assessment of the purchase price of each certificate and which did not name the purchaser or place any restrictions whatsoever upon the transaction. This resolution was transmitted to the county treasurer through the ordinary channels and, contrary to the allegations of the answer, the plaintiff company did not purchase from the county treasurer any of the certificates involved in the case at bar until at least two weeks, and in case of some others in the general transaction for two months, after the resolution had been adopted, during which intervening period anyone who was so minded could have purchased the certificates upon the same basis *Page 377 they were acquired by the plaintiff. There is not an iota of evidence to the effect that the plaintiff ever agreed to purchase, or did purchase, each and every one of the certificates described in the resolution nor that the board did more than fix a price at which the individual certificates might be assigned by the treasurer, as was within their unquestioned authority under chapter 142, section 247, '35 C. S. A. It is not intimated or suggested that any collusion existed between the board of county commissioners and the plaintiff or that duress or fraud was practiced by plaintiff. In fact, the testimony shows a definite desire on the part of the commissioners to secure as much as possible for the certificates, and a separate consideration of the factors involved in fixing the purchase price of each.

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 987, 101 Colo. 372, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-county-commissioners-v-utah-colorado-land-livestock-co-colo-1937.