Bumann v. Burleigh County

18 N.W.2d 10, 73 N.D. 655, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 82
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1945
DocketFile No. 6931
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 10 (Bumann v. Burleigh County) 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
Bumann v. Burleigh County, 18 N.W.2d 10, 73 N.D. 655, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 82 (N.D. 1945).

Opinions

Burr, J.

Louise Bumann, claiming to be the owner of the land, seeks to quiet title to the SE ¿ of Sec. 22, Twp. 142, B. 78, in Burleigh County, against the county claiming a tax deed thereto, and W. H. Brown claiming under a contract of sale made with the county.

Plaintiff’s chain of title is as' follows: One McCullough received the land from the United States government; he and his wife gave a mortgage thereon; the mortgage was assigned to George Schneider, Sr., in 1916 and recorded; Schneider gave a power of attorney to Messrs. Kelsch & Higgins to foreclose this mortgage and showed his address *657 as Sweetbriar, Morton County’; this was recorded in March, 1931; the mortgage was foreclosed and a sheriff’s certificate of sale issued in June, 1931, to Schneider, showing his address as Sweetbriar; this was recorded in June, 1931; Schneider died July 10, 1932,.and his estate was probated in Morton County; letters testamentary were issued to C. F. Kelseh as executor of the will; in 1935 0. F. Kelsch as executor received a sheriff’s deed on the foreclosure; in the settlement of the estate of Schneider, under the provisions of the will, the land was decreed to Elizabeth Keehn in March, 1936; in addition thereto the executor on April 3, 1936, executed and delivered to her a quitclaim deed to the land; and on January 16, 1942, Elizabeth Keehn, then residing in Canada, gave a quitclaim deed to the land to the plaintiff, her sister. Hence, unless this chain is broken by the tax deed, title should be quieted in her.

The land involved was sold in December, 1930, for non-payment of taxes and was bought by Burleigh County. A tax sale certificate was issued and no redemption was made. The Register of Deeds certified the Guaranty Security Company was the record owner of the land. On May 16, 1940, the county auditor issued notice of the expiration of the period of redemption. This was served on the Guaranty Security Company, and a notice was published in a newspaper. Thereafter the tax deed was issued to the county on October 1, 1940, and filed for. record on February 27, 1941. On December 1, 1941, the county having an offer of purchase, the auditor sent “a notice of tax sale” by registered mail to the Guaranty Security Company, showing the premises had “been, conditionally, sold for the delinquent taxes, interest. . . . That such sale will be held in abeyance . . . but . . . if no redemption is made during said . . . thirty days the said sale will be final” and that the payment of $415.14 would be required to effect a redemption. No redemption was made, and in January, 1942, the county and the appellant entered into this contract of sale. Thus, the title is either in the plaintiff, or in the county holding for W. H. Brown.

In her complaint, Louise Bumann made a direct attack on the tax deed and under the provisions of § 21, chap 286 of Sess Laws of 1941, being § 57-4510 of the Rev. Code of 1943, deposited with the court $415.00 for the benefit of Brown. She made this deposit voluntarily, *658 before any order to that effect was made by the Court. At the beginning of the trial, defendant Brown made a demand for a deposit and the Court made an order that the amount deposited be held by the Clerk.

The defendant county filed a separate answer as did the defendant Brown, and the Guaranty Company defaulted. The gist of these answers is the invalidity of plaintiff’s deed and the validity of this tax deed. The trial court found for the plaintiff and Brown appeals. So far as the deposit is concerned, we need not discuss the same except as to the portion, if any, that should be paid to Brown.

In its findings, the trial court, among other things, found that Elizabeth Keehn was “the absolute owner in fee simple . . . and is entitled to the possession thereof for the use and benefit of the plaintiff Louise Bumann, as against all of the above named defendants . . . .” But in Finding Number 8, the court found “That the quitclaim deed . . . executed and delivered by the plaintiff Elizabeth Keehn . . . to the plaintiff Louise Bumann . . . is in all things binding and valid between the parties thereto.” In addition, the court concluded the tax deed was “void for want of a substantial compliance with the requirement of the statute.” The conclusions determine also the disposition of the deposit.

There are but three controlling issues, despite the numerous and vigorously argued specifications of error: The right of the plaintiff to maintain the action; the validity of the tax deed; and the amount that should be paid to Brown out of the deposit if the judgment be reversed.

Appellant argues: “Plaintiff Louise Bumann has no title right to question tax deed proceedings.” He attacks the quitclaim deed plaintiff received, urging: “That the record shows said deed is void, against the defendant W. H. Brown, who was an innocent purchaser of the premises, before the issuing of her deed, under contract for deed, dated January 3, 1943, (2) . . . and has been in possession of the premises since that date, and that the County took title to said premises by tax deed . . . which tax deed was recorded on February 27, 1941, and took possession of said premises under said tax deed . . . .” A great deal of appellant’s brief is devoted to this proposition. Another- attack is that Elizabeth Keehn is the real party in interest — not *659 the plaintiff — -and that the conditions under which the deed was executed and delivered show that plaintiff was a mere agent of her sister to sell the land.

The theory of innocent purchaser is not involved in this case, even though appellant had his contract and went into possession before plaintiff got this unrecorded quitclaim deed. Brown’s right comes from a source entirely different from that of the plaintiff. He did not get any right from the same source. If he has an interest that ripens into a deed, it is “a new and complete title in the land, under an independent grant from the sovereign authority.” Baird v. Stubbins, 58 ND 351, 226 NW 529, 65 ALR 1009.

As we show in this ease cited, there is no privity between the record owner of real estate and the grantee in a tax deed. “A valid tax deed clothes the grantee with a new and complete title in the land, under an independent -grant from the sovereign authority” and he is not “a subsequent purchaser in good faith and for a valuable consideration” under our statutes, which make provision for the recording of deeds, as he does not derive his title from the same grantor as the plaintiff herein.

The record shows the foreclosure. Mrs. Keehn was the one to whom the property was decreed under the will; and she executed a deed to the plaintiff. Our statute (§ 5511, Comp. Laws 1913, being § 47 — 1001 of the Bev. Code of 1943) provides that “An estate in real property other than an estate at will or for a term not exceeding one year, can be transferred only by operation of law or by an instrument in writing, subscribed by the party disposing of the same . . . This section was § 622 of the Civil Code of 1877 and has remained unchanged. To be “subscribed” and delivered is sufficient to convey title. It need not be acknowledged. This quitclaim deed recites that by the indenture Keehn does “grant, bargain, sell, release and quit-claim” these premises to Louise Bumann. In the case of Croak v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 10, 73 N.D. 655, 1945 N.D. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bumann-v-burleigh-county-nd-1945.