Brodie v. State

113 N.W. 2, 102 Minn. 202, 1907 Minn. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 27, 1907
DocketNos. 15,262—(180)
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 113 N.W. 2 (Brodie v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brodie v. State, 113 N.W. 2, 102 Minn. 202, 1907 Minn. LEXIS 418 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

JAGGARD, J.

Application to the district court of the county of Ramsey to register the title to lot 37, block 4, Lyton’s addition to St. Paul. The trial court found that the applicant was the owner of the lot and entitled to have the title registered, subject to the payment of the lien of the state for the taxes, penalties, interest, and costs for the years 1887, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1903, and 1904. The applicant appealed from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

She concedes that her title is subject to the lien of the state for the taxes for the year 1903 and subsequent years, and there is here no controversy as to such taxes; but as to the alleged lien of the state for the taxes for each of the years named prior to 1897 she claims tha't the lien of the state has been divested by a sale, of the lot to her assignors -upon judgments for subsequent taxes on the lot.

The taxes on the lot for all of the years stated prior to 1897 became delinquent, judgments were entered therefor, and the lot sold on each judgment and bid in by the state. There was no redemption from any of the sales, nor did the state ever assign its claim. None of the taxes for the years named were ever refunded, and on May 17, 1900, the lot was sold and bid in by the state, pursuant to Laws 1899, p. 410, c. 322, entitled “An act to enforce the payment of taxes which became delinquent in and prior to the year one thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven (1897).” No redemption has ever been made from this sale, nor has the state ever assigned its rights under the sale. The lot was also sold on May 5, 1899, pursuant to a judgment for the taxes of 1897, to applicant’s assignors. It was again sold to them on May 14, 1902, pursuant to a judgment for the taxes of 1900, and on May 12, 1903, pursuant to a judgment for the taxes of 1901. On June 6, 1904, notice was given of the expiration of the time for redemption from the tax sale of May 5, 1899, and on March 22, 1906, a like notice as to the sale of May 14, 1902, was given. No redemption was made from either of such sales. On July 23, 1905, such assignors sold and assigned all of their interest in and to the lot to the applicant, who, on March 22, 1906, procured from the owner of the patent title, if it had not been extinguished by the tax sale of May 5, 1899, a quitclaim deed of the lot. The deed has not been recorded.

It follows from the foregoing facts that if the notices of the expira[204]*204tion of the time of redemption, or either of them, are valid, the state has no lien on the lot for taxes for the years in question. If the right of redemption has been duly foreclosed, the case would come within the rule announced in State v. Camp, 79 Minn. 343, 82 N. W. 645, to the effect that a valid tax sale of land operates to clear the title thereto of all prior claims or titles, however acquired. The state, however, claims that' the notices are void because the amount to be paid on redemption was not correctly stated therein.

As to the first notice, the specific claim is that it failed to include in the amount required to redeem the amount of the certificates issued on the sale of the lot for the taxes for the years 1900 and 1901, respectively; in other words, the claim is that the taxes for 1900 and 1901 were paid by the applicant’s assignors by their purchase of the lot at the respective sales, and that the amount so paid should have been included in the notice. The sale in question was made to a private purchaser; that is, a purchaser other than the state. Hence the amount to be paid on a redemption from such sale is prescribed by G. S. 1894, § 1602, subsec. 3, as follows: (1) The amount paid by such purchaser with interest; (2) the amount, paid by him, with interest, of any subsequent delinquent taxes, penalties, costs, or interest, accruing subsequent to the sale; (3) the amount of all unpaid delinquent taxes, interest, costs, and penalties accruing subsequent to such sale. The amount which the landowner must pay in order to redeem must be included in the notice, and no more.

The question, then, to be determined, is whether the owner of land, desiring to redeem from a tax sale to a private purchaser, must pay, not only the items designated in the first and second subdivision, but also, by virtue of the second subdivision, the amount which would be required to redeem from a subsequent tax sale to the same purchaser. If he must pay this last-named amount, then he is deprived of his absolute right to redeem from the second sale at any time within three years from its date, given him by the statute (G. S. 1894, § 1602) and, further, whether he may have the full three years in which to redeem from the second sale, or whether the time shall be shortened, depends, upon the action of the purchaser in giving notice of the expiration of the time of redemption on the first sale. Any construction of the statute which would enable a purchaser to shorten the time of redemp[205]*205tion from the second sale by tacking it to the first one, by giving the notice on the first sale, would be an abridgment of the landowner’s statutory right of redemption, and prove a serious burden and injustice in many ways. For example, the second sale might be void, or the landowner might have the money to redeem from the first sale, but not enough to redeem from both at the same time. The statute ought not to be so construed, unless its plain and specific language leaves no other alternative.

We are of the opinion that the language of this statute does not require the construction contended for by the state, and, further, that such a construction would be contrary to its letter and spirit. The purchaser of land at a tax sale may protect his interest against subsequent taxes in two ways: Fie may pay them after they become delinquent, and not before, and tack the amount paid to his tax sale, or he may let the land go to sale for subsequent taxes and purchase it at the sale. The provision of the statute which limits his right to pay subsequent taxes to those which are delinquent was intended “to protect the landowner in his right to pay his taxes at any time before they become delinquent, without additional cost, and without the embarrassment of redeeming from a previous sale, and, vice versa, to redeem from the sale without paying such taxes.” Sprague v. Roverud, 34 Minn. 475, 26 N. W. 603. Such being the manifest intention of the statute, it would be a strained and unreasonable construction to hold that the owner of a tax certificate might omit to pay subsequent delinquent taxes, let the land be sold for such taxes, with accrued charges, purchase it at such sale, and, by giving notice of the expiration of the time of redemption on his first sale, compel a redemption from the second sale before the expiration of the time allowed therefor by law. It is clear, and we so hold, that if a private purchaser at a tax sale wishes to tack to it subsequent delinquent taxes, he must pay them in the usual way of paying such taxes; that is, before the land is sold therefor. Therefore the purchase of the land at a subsequent tax sale by such private purchaser is not a payment of the delinquent taxes within the meaning of the statute, and the landowner, in redeeming from the first sale, cannot be required to pay the amount due on the second tax certificate.

The case of Jenswold v. Minnesota Canal Co., 93 Minn. 382, 101 [206]*206N. W. 603, is in harmony with this conclusion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 N.W. 2, 102 Minn. 202, 1907 Minn. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brodie-v-state-minn-1907.