Chippewa River Land Co. v. J. L. Gates Land Co.

94 N.W. 37, 118 Wis. 345, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 3
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 N.W. 37 (Chippewa River Land Co. v. J. L. Gates Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chippewa River Land Co. v. J. L. Gates Land Co., 94 N.W. 37, 118 Wis. 345, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 3 (Wis. 1903).

Opinions

The following opinion was filed March 21, 1903:

Winslow, J.

The tax deeds under which the plaintiff claims title were issued prior to the defendant’s tax deeds, and, if they were properly indexed and recorded, it is admitted that the statute of limitations has run in their favor. The respondent claims, however, that there was no proof that they were indexed as required by sec. 759, R. S. 1878, and hence that they cannot be held to have ever been recorded. This is the first question to be considered. A tax deed must have been properly indexed, or it is not deemed to have been recorded; and, until it is so recorded, ejectment cannot be maintained thereon. Hewitt v. Week, 59 Wis. 444, 18 N. W. 417; Hiles v. Atlee, 80 Wis. 219, 49 N. W. 816. The proof on the subject consisted simply of the introduction of the original deeds, each of which had indorsed thereon a certificate substantially as follows:

“Register’s Office, Chippewa County.
“Received for record the 20th day of May, 1899, at 10:15 a. m., and recorded in Vol. 5 of Deeds, on page 252.
“W. J. DaltoN,
“Register.”

Is this certificate sufficient proof, in the absence of any proof to the contrary, that the tax deed upon which it is indorsed was indexed in the general index, as required by sec. 759, R. S. 1878? We think it is. The statute nowhere requires that the fact of indexing is to be certified or indorsed upon the deed, but it does require that the entry in the general index shall be made immediately upon the receipt of the instrument “in the order of time in which it was received, the day, hour and minute of reception, and the same shall be con[350]*350sidered as recorded at the time so noted.” Sec. 759, supra. Sec. 758 provides that it shall be the .duty of the register of deeds “to indorse upon each instrument or writing received by him for record, his certificate of the time when it was received, specifying the day, hour and minute of reception and the volume and page where the same is recorded, which shall be evidence of such facts.” Now, it is argued that under this provision the certificate upon the deed is only evidence of the time of reception of the deed, and of the fact that it has been recorded at length in a certain book. If it be granted that this is the proper meaning of the statute, still the result claimed does not follow. It is made the duty of the register to index the instrument immediately upon its receipt. This act is the very first act to be done, and must necessarily precede the recording at length of the instrument. It is a universal presumption that a public officer performs his duty as the statute requires; hence when it appears by due certificate that the register has received the instruments, and recorded the same at length in the records, it must necessarily be presumed that he has performed the duty which the statute imposes upon him preceding the recording at length, namely, the duty of making the proper entries in the general index. This is but a reasonable and fair presumption, and one which, we think, has been uniformly acted upon by trial courts without question. If, as matter of fact, the register of deeds has neglected his. duty, and made no entry in the general index, that fact can be easily shown by proof. Until the introduction of such proof, the presumption of due performance of official duty arising from the certificate showing the receipt and recording of the instrument at length must prevail. This conclusion disposes of the only objection made to the respondent’s title, and makes it necessary to consider the validity of the appellant’s tax deeds. The statute of limitations not having run upon these deeds at the time of [351]*351tbe commencement of the action, the record of the tax proceedings was introduced for the purpose of showing alleged defects therein, rendering the deeds invalid. These alleged defects will be considered.

1. Sec. 1130, R. S. 1878, requires the county treasurer on the first Monday in April in each year to make out a statement of all lands upon which the taxes remain unpaid, with añ accompanying notice of the sale thereof on the third Tuesday in May following, and cause such statement and notice to be published once in each week for four successive weeks prior to the day of sale, and copies thereof to be posted at least four weeks previous to the day of sale in at least four public places in the county Sec. 1141. R. S. 1878, requires the county treasurer, immediately after the sale, to deposit with the county clerk all affidavits, notices, and papers relating to the sale, together with a statement showing the lands sold, and to whom, ’ and for what amount. It appears that no original statement and notice such as is described in sec. 1130, supra,, was kept by the treasurer or filed in his office, and this is claimed to be fatal to the validity of the sale. It appears, however, that the treasurer in each case made out a notice substantially as follows:

“State of Wisconsin, County of Ohippewa-ss.:
“Notice is hereby given that so much of each tract or parcel of land in the annexed and following statement as may be necessary therefor, will, on the third Tuesday of May A. D. 189- being the-day of said month and the next succeeding days, be sold by me at public auction at the county treasurer’s office in the courthouse in the city of Chippewa Falls in said county of Chippewa for the payment of taxes, interest and charges due thereon for the year 189-. Said sale to commence at nine o’clock sharp in the forenoon.
“Dated at the Co. Treasurer’s office in the city of Chippewa Falls in said county of Chippewa, the - day of April, 189-
“ELeNby Goetz,
“Co. Treas.”

[352]*352It also appears that attached to this notice there was a list of the parcels of land to be sold, headed as follows, but not signed by the treasurer:

“Statement' of all lands in the county of Chippewa in the state of Wisconsin, except public lands held on contract and lands mortgaged to the state upon which the taxes for the year 189- have been returned as delinquent and which remain unpaid on the first Monday in April, A. D. 189- being the-— day of said month; that is to say [here follows a statement of the several parcels of land].”

It is claimed by the respondent that this statement and notice is in the nature of a public record, and that, while there is no statute specifically requiring an original to be kept on file in the county treasurer’s office, still it is manifestly essential that there should be such an original preserved and on file. We can hardly agree with this contention. The manifest object and purpose of the section is to give notice of the sale to the public and to property owners by public advertisement. To hold that, after the notice had been fully given in every respect as required by the law, the sale must be held invalid because the original of the notice had not been kept by the treasurer in his office, would be to sacrifice substance to shadow. The statute simply says that the treasurer shall "make out the statement and notice, “and cause such statement and notice to be published,” and “cause to be posted up copies of such statement and notice.” The natural meaning of this would seem to be that the original statement and notice is to be sent to the newspapers for publication.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 N.W. 37, 118 Wis. 345, 1903 Wisc. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chippewa-river-land-co-v-j-l-gates-land-co-wis-1903.