Burns v. State

173 P. 55, 25 Wyo. 491, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 15
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1918
DocketNo. 883
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 173 P. 55 (Burns v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burns v. State, 173 P. 55, 25 Wyo. 491, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 15 (Wyo. 1918).

Opinions

Beard, Justice.

In this case the defendant in error, Allen, applied to the District Court of Fremont County for a writ of mandamus to he directed to the plaintiff in error as treasurer of said county requiring and commanding him to issue and deliver to said Allen a tax deed to a certain lot in the town of Riv-erton in said county. An alternative writ was issued and served, and plaintiff in error answered, to which answer a general demurrer was interposed. The demurrer was sustained and the treasurer electing to stand upon his answer, a peremptory writ was issued and judgment rendered against him for costs. He brings error.

Briefly stated, the facts alleged in the petition are that the lot was sold at tax sale July 1, 1911, for the taxes of 1910, 'and was purchased at said sale by one Huffield, who prior to July 1, 1914, assigned the certificate of purchase to Allen. That at the expiration of the period of redemption Allen was, and ever since has been, in the actual possession and occupancy of the lot, but during none of said time could L. D. Borden, in whose name the lot was taxed in the year 1910, be, upon diligent inquiry, found in said county. That after the expiration of the period of redemption aforesaid, he (Allen) duly published notice according to law that he would on November 1, 1914, make application to the treasurer for a tax deed to said lot. That on said date he submitted to the treasurer a copy of said notice with due proof of publication and tendered the fee for a deed and demanded the same. That the treasurer wrongfully refused to issue and deliver such deed to him.

The answer admitted the allegations of the petition with the exception of the allegation that the refusal to isspe the deed was wrongful; and alleged that he rightfully refused [497]*497to do so for the reason that on August 8, 1914, after the first publication of said notice, the said L. D. Borden, the owner of said lot, paid to him the full amount necessary to redeem said lot from said tax sale, which sum he received and accepted, and thereby said lot'was redeemed from said sale.

The only question in the case is whether in the circumstances the owner of the lot had the right to redeem from the sale after the expiration of three years from and after the date of the tax sale.

Prior to 1893, real estate sold for taxes could be redeemed at any time before the expiration of two years from and after the date of sale; and if not redeemed the treasurer was required immediately after the expiration of said two years to make out and deliver to the purchaser, upon the return of the certificate of purchase, a tax deed. (Secs. 3829 and 3831, Rev. Stat. 1887.). By Chapter 14, S. L. 1897, the time for redemption was extended to three years after the date of such sale. By Chapter 5, S. L. 1893, it was provided:

“Section 1. Hereafter no purchaser, or assignee of such purchaser, of any land, town or city lot, at any sale of lands, or lots, for taxes or special assessments due, either to the state, or any county or any incorporated town or city within the same, or at any sale for taxes or levies authorized by the laws of this state, shall be entitled to a deed for the lands or lots so purchased until the following conditions have been complied with, to-wit: Such purchaser, or assignee, shall serve, or cause to be served, a written or printed, or partly written and partly printed, notice of such purchase on every person in actual possession or occupancy of such land or lot, and also the person in whose name the same was taxed or-specially assessed, if upon diligent inquiry he can be found in the county, at least three months before the expiration of the time of redemption on such sale, in which notice he shall state when he purchased the land, or lot, in whose name taxed, the description of the land, or lot, he has purchased, for what year taxed or specially assessed, when the time of [498]*498redemption will expire and application for deed will be made. If no person is in actual possession or occupancy of such land, or lot, and the person in whose name the same was taxed or specially assessed, upon diligent inquiry, cannot be found in the county, then such person, or his assignee, shall publish such notice in some newspaper printed in such county, and if no newspaper is printed in the county, then in the nearest newspaper that is published in this state to the county seat of the county in which such land, or lot, is situated; which notice shall be inserted three times, the first time not more than five months and the last time not less than three months before the time of redemption shall expire.”

By Chapter 19, S. L. 1897, this section was amended by adding the following: “It shall ibe the further duty of such purchaser, or his assignee, to submit to the county treasurer proper proof, in cases where personal service is made, of the fact of such service, and of the contents of the notice thus served; and in cases where service by publication is made, a sworn statement by the publisher, manager or editor of the newspaper in which such publication is made, containing the time when the same was made, shall be attached to a copy of said notice; and until such proof is so furnished to the county treasurer, he shall refuse ,to issue a deed to the said purchaser, or his assignee. Whenever said purchaser or his assignee has fulfilled all of the requirements of this act and surrenders to the county treasurer the certificate of purchase, it shall be the duty of the county treasurer to issue to said purchaser, or his assignee, a tax deed in the manner and form prescribed by law.”

By Chapter 16, S. L. 1901, this section was further amended by inserting immediately after the words “refuse to issue a deed to said purchaser or his assignee,” the following: “provided that the purchaser or his assignee may at any time within two years after the expiration of the period of redemption serve or publish the notice provided for in this section, which notice shall set a date not less than three months nor more than five months after the date of said [499]*499notice, at which time the said purchaser or his assignee will make application for tax deed.” The above quoted sections of the statute are now Sections 2428, 2432 and 2433, Comp. Stat. 1910.

Prior to 1893, no notice of the expiration of the period of redemption was required by the statute and it expired at the end of the period of two (later three) years from and after the date of sale, or, if not then, certainly upon the delivery of the deed by the treasurer, which deed he was required to make out immediately upon the expiration of said tertn and deliver the same to the purchaser upon the return of the'certificate of purchase and the payment of.the fee for the deed. ' Nothing else was required to be done by the holder of the certificate to entitle him to a deed. But by the Act of 1893, no purchaser, or assignee of such purchaser, at any tax sale was thereafter entitled to a tax deed until he gave the notice prescribed in the act, which notice, if served personally, should be at least three months before the expiration of the tim.e of redemption; or if published the first publication should be not more than five months and the last not less than three months before the time of redemption would expire.

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Burns v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
173 P. 55, 25 Wyo. 491, 1918 Wyo. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burns-v-state-wyo-1918.