Brink v. Dann

144 N.W. 734, 33 S.D. 81, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 284
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 144 N.W. 734 (Brink v. Dann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brink v. Dann, 144 N.W. 734, 33 S.D. 81, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 284 (S.D. 1913).

Opinion

WHITING, P. J.

Action to enjoin -issuance of tax deeds to county on certificates purporting to- be -issued upon b-icl-s made- by such -county. Plaintiff alleged, but -offered no -proof to sustain the allegation, that the assessments upon which the sales were made were excessive, unjust, unequal, -oppressive, and confiscatory when compared with the assessments of other .property. The 'court found -all the tax proceedings regular and refused the relief sought, which relief included the ascertainment of the just -tax. Many of the findings of the court are wholly unsupported by the evidence; ■bu-t the main facts are virtually undisputed, and- thereunder there are presented for our -consideration the following questions: (1) Is injunction a proper remedy under the facts pleaded? (2) Did appellant lose any right to relief by failure to pay into- court the amount of tax justfy -due? (3) Did -respondents have the right to introduce oral evidence, either to correct the assessor’s return, or to prove what should have appeared from such return-, -where no return was ever attached to the assessment roll ? (4) What is -the effect upon the validity of the assessment of the assessor’s failure [100]*100to make a' return, or of his making' a faulty return, and, if such lack of return or defect in return renders the assessment invalid, can appellant avail himself of such fact in .this action? (5) What ■is the effect upon the validity of the assessment of the assessor’s failure to give the name of the owner in describing real property ? (6) What .is the effect of the city board of equalization’s failure to meet? (7) Is the description of real property, as contained in the assessment books, fatally defective? (8) Are the tax sale certificates void' where they recite that the county was a competitive bidder at the sale? .(9) Is oral evidence admissible to- contradict the terms- of ©uoh tax sale certificates? (10) Under the evidence, does toe county appear to -have been a bidder at all; and if not, was there any sale? (11) Does the statute of limitations-, prescribing the period of time within which tax deeds may be taken out, apply as against respondent Hughes County? (12) Can the statute of limitations be pleaded by appellant when he seeks equitable relief? (13) In order to redeem from a certificate issued to and held' by a county, must appellant pay “subsequent taxes” as well as the tax represented by the sale ? (14) Should- appellant have been allowed to prove that respondent had compromised .taxes, with other taxpayers, and then been .permitted to redeem, by paying a like proportion of his tax? These questions will be considered in the order above stated.

[1] 1. The relief sought was proper under the facts pleaded. One certainly has the right to enjoin the issuance of a void deed and thus prevent clouds upon -the titles -to numerous tracts of land, where the assessments are not only void 'but also inequitable. Plaintiff alleged' the inequality and unjustness of the tax and. asked the court to ascertain, the just amount which he should pay in order to redeem h-is property from- the sales. The -allegations of the complaint were certainly sufficient as against an objection to the introduction of evidence thereunder.

[2.] 2. Under the .allegations of the complaint, the amount of tax, which plaintiff should be required to' pay, appeared to be uncertain and unknown; hence no tender w;as necessary. When, under the holding's of* toe trial court, there came a time during the trial when the amount that plaintiff should pay, in order to be entitled to proceed, -became certain, the court might properly [101]*101have required such payment -before proceeding. It refused to require same, and defendant -has not -appealed.

[3] 3- Oral evidence is admissible to prove the contents of a written return that has- been lost, but not admissible to supply a return or defects in -a return as made. The return- is an integral part of the assessment, and such- assessment must stand or fall as made and -returned.

[4.] 4. The courts uniformly hold that statutory provisions regulating assessments, which are enacted for the benefit or protection of the taxpayer, are mandatory, and that an assessor’s failure to comply therewith renders the asessment void. This court held in Richardson v. Howard, 23 S. D. 86, 120 N. W. 768, that an assessor’s failure to substantially comply with -the -statute in the form of oath us-ed was a “marked 'departure” from the provisions of the law and rendered the assessment void.

[5] In the case at 'bar, it appear© that there was no oath “attached” to the asessor’-s' return -for the- year 1900. There- was evidence that ¡an -oath was -written out and laid in the -assessment roll, but no -s-atisfa'ctoTy evidence as to its ¡contents and no proof ■that it remained in- the book. There was ¡certainly no- presumption that it remained there, ¡when it was not “attached” -as provided by statute. See ¡definition of “attach” as given by Webster. The evidence as to the oaths that had been torn out was very unsatisfactory, as it failed to- show that the oath -taken was- the one provided for -by the law then in force. There are involv-ed' ¡herein assessments for several years. In certain year-s the oath as returned was the identical oath condemned in -Richardson- v. Howard, supra; in other years the form of oath attached -to the- real estate return was the one which -should have been attached to the -personal property return and was therefore a more glaring 'departure from the requirements of the statute than- that found in the Richardson-case; in some years no oaths seem to have been attached to real property returns, but “real property” oaths were attached to the personal -property returns. With the possible exception of - assessments for 1901 and 1903, the assessments were invalid for want of proper ¡oaths.

The Supreme Court of North Dakota held in Eaton v. Bennett, 10 N. D. 346, 87 N. W. 188, and cited’ a vast number of cases from various states in support thereof, that: “The rule that’man[102]*102datory ■provisions of -the statute must be substantially observed by taxing officers, and ¡that the disregard or violation of such provisions is fatal to the tax and defeats the jurisdiction of the taxing officers, is well settled in this state and has become, therefore, practically a rale of property, and hence a rule which this court is bound to uphold until the same has been modified by constitutional legislation. The authorities cited will fully sustain the following propositions: First, that a valid assessment evidenced by an official return i-s essential to a valid tax, and that fatal defects in the record of an assessment -cannot be aided- by evidence aliunde; second-, -a tax 'deed based on a void -assessment is itself void and does not operate to -start running -the statute of limitations; third-, where the -statutes require an assessor to- authenticate his assessment roll bjr annexing thereto an affidavit in a prescribed form, it will be fatal to- omit such affidavit of authentication.’’

We are not unmindful of the 'decision's o-f the Supreme Court of Wisconsin. In Wis. Cent. Ry. Co. v. Lincoln Co., 67 Wis. 478, 30 N. W. 619, referring -to the decision of the same court in Infield v. Marinette Co., 62 Wis. 532, 22 N. W.

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144 N.W. 734, 33 S.D. 81, 1913 S.D. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brink-v-dann-sd-1913.