Brylinski v. Cooper

624 P.2d 522, 95 N.M. 580
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1981
Docket12866
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 624 P.2d 522 (Brylinski v. Cooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brylinski v. Cooper, 624 P.2d 522, 95 N.M. 580 (N.M. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

EASLEY, Chief Justice.

Brylinski filed suit to quiet title to a farm of approximately 490 acres. Her title to all but eighty acres was uncontested. Jones challenged 'Brylinski’s title to the eighty acres and sought to quiet title thereto. Brylinski and Jones filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The trial court entered judgment denying Brylinski’s motion and granting Jones’ motion for summary judgment by quieting title to the eighty acres in Jones. The trial court also ordered Jones to pay Brylinski the sum of $2,400 as refund of part of the purchase price paid by Brylinski’s mother to Jones’ mother under an agreement to purchase the eighty acres. Brylinski appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part. •

Three issues are presented in this appeal: (1) whether the description of the property contained in a tax deed by which Brylinski’s predecessor-in-interest obtained the property was sufficient to convey legal title; (2) whether the tax deed supplied color of title sufficient to support a claim based upon adverse possession; and (3) whether a contract for purchase and sale of the disputed property between the litigants’ predecessors-in-interest constituted the acknowledgement of a superior title, thus precluding application of the doctrine of adverse possession.

In 1937, the farm was owned by Clair Hawkins. Nonpayment of the 1937 taxes resulted in the issuance of a tax sale certificate and tax deed to the state. Brylinski’s mother, Vera Smith, purchased the property from the state tax commission in 1962 and later conveyed to Brylinski in 1970.

Jones is the ultimate successor-in-interest of Clair Hawkins by inheritance. Jones claims that the tax sale to Vera Smith was void as to the eighty acres by reason of an insufficient description of the property in the 1937 assessment which was carried forward into both the tax deed to the state and the deed from the state to Vera Smith.

The description of the relevant portion of the property which appeared in the 1937 assessment and the tax deeds to the state and Vera Smith is as follows:

NE V* N Vz NE Vi E Vz of SE V* Sec. 35 * * * (Emphasis added.)

The parties agree that this description was erroneous and that the property should have been described in the assessment and the tax deeds as follows:

NE Vi, N Vz NW Vi, and E Vz SE Vi of Section 35 * * * (Emphasis added.)

Vera Smith took possession of the farm, including the disputed eighty acres, in 1962, and remained in possession of the property until her death in 1978. Nevertheless, in 1968, Vera Smith entered into a contract to purchase the eighty acres from Alma K. Hoyt, Jones’ mother and predecessor-in-interest. Vera Smith paid $2,400 toward the $4,400 purchase price. The contract was never completed for reasons not relevant to the dispute at hand. Both parties and their predecessors have paid the taxes on the property since Vera Smith entered into possession of the farm in 1962.

1. Validity of the Tax Deed

The trial court granted Jones’ motion for summary judgment and issued an order quieting title to the eighty acres in Jones. Although no findings of fact or conclusions of law appear in the record, such a ruling was necessarily predicated upon a determination that the 1962 tax deed did not convey good title to Vera Smith. Thus the first question for review concerns the validity of the tax deed.

In determining the validity of a tax deed, the first concern is the validity of the assessment. Richards v. Renehan, 57 N.M. 76, 253 P.2d 1046 (1953). This is because “[t]he assessment of property for taxation is one of the essential steps leading up to a sale for taxes. If an assessment is void it follows inevitably that the sale based upon such assessment is likewise void.” Baltzley v. Lujan, 53 N.M. 502, 506, 212 P.2d 417, 419 (1949). The test of validity is whether the description is sufficient, aided by data furnished by it, to identify the property. Richards.

The only conclusion that can be drawn from the application of this test here is that the description in the tax rolls and tax deed was inadequate to identify the property. The substitution of “NE” for “NW” resulted in the identification of an entirely different parcel of property than that which was intended to have been assessed.

Brylinski argues that the description is ambiguous on its face because it is redundant and results in the identification of property considerably smaller than the 490 acres which is referred to in the deed from the county treasurer to the state. She contends that the ambiguity may be resolved by reference to the description of the property in the assessment rolls of prior and subsequent years.

We can find no support for her contention under existing New Mexico case law. In Trujillo v. Dimas, 61 N.M. 235, 297 P.2d 1060 (1956), this Court upheld the validity of a tax deed where the property “was correctly described on the tax rolls of the county for at least one of the [several] years for which the taxes were unpaid and delinquent, and for which the properties were sold on account of such delinquency.” Id. at 238, 297 P.2d at 1066. This case thus does not stand for the proposition that an inadequate description may be cured by reference to the description contained in the tax rolls for years other than the year(s) of the delinquency for which the property was sold. See also, Trujillo v. Montano, 64 N.M. 259, 327 P.2d 326 (1958).

Brylinski cites to other cases in which extrinsic evidence was allowed to cure the inadequacy of a description in a tax deed. Hughes v. Meem, 70 N.M. 122, 371 P.2d 235 (1962); Padilla v. Northcutt, 57 N.M. 521, 260 P.2d 709 (1953); Stevens v. Fincher, 52 N.M. 52, 191 P.2d 350 (1948). Significantly, however, in each of these cases the extrinsic evidence was referred to or identified in the deed description. As stated in Richards, supra, “the description must be sufficient, aided by data furnished by it, to identify the property.” (Emphasis added.) 57 N.M. at 80, 253 P.2d at 1048.

The extrinsic evidence Brylinski offers to aid the description of the property is not identified or furnished by either the tax deed or the tax roll for the year of the delinquency in taxes for which the property was sold, and therefore cannot be used in aid of the description.

We hold that the tax deed was invalid under our existing case law, due to the insufficiency of the description contained in the tax deed and the assessment.

2. Color of Title.

Brylinski also claimed that she had acquired the property by adverse possession.

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Bluebook (online)
624 P.2d 522, 95 N.M. 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brylinski-v-cooper-nm-1981.