Clooten v. Wang

224 N.W. 198, 57 N.D. 793, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 327
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 224 N.W. 198 (Clooten v. Wang) 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
Clooten v. Wang, 224 N.W. 198, 57 N.D. 793, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 327 (N.D. 1929).

Opinion

Burr, J.

This is an action to determine adverse claims. In 1917 one Tilton was the owner of the land and in May of that year he and his wife made, executed and delivered a mortgage on this land to the Farmers and Merchants State Bank of Driscoll to secure the sum of $1,200 and interest. This mortgage was recorded the following Juno and thereafter assigned to J. A. Wang, one of the defendants, and the assignment was recorded July 1917.

At the same time Tilton gave another mortgage on said land to the same bank. This mortgage was recorded the following February, and there being default in the payment of the amount due, the mortgage was foreclosed in October 1924 and was sold to the bank for $559.23. *796 No redemption was made and so the bank became entitled to a sheriff’s deed on October 31, 1925, but no sheriff’s deed was ever issued. The bank became insolvent and the defendant Baird is the receiver in charge thereof.

December 13, 1921 taxes were due and at the tax sale the land was struck off to the county of Burleigh for $56.15 taxes, penalties, etc. Shortly after the tax sale the county auditor prepared for the said county a certificate of tax sale. This certificate was on the usual blank form prepared for such occasions, a quantity of the same being-bound together in one book. The certificate was filled out with the description of the property, the name of the purchaser, and the date, and is proper in all respects, except that through some oversight it was not signed by the county auditor, and never has been signed.

In December 1925 a notice of the expiration of the time to redeem from tax sale was issued and delivered to the sheriff for service. The record shows that by this time Tilton was dead, and Harry Clooten, one of the plaintiffs was a tenant in possession of the land under a lease agreement with the bank involved. The notice of expiration of time for redemption was served upon Olooten as being the one in possession of the land, and no redemption being made a tax deed was issued to the county. In May 1926 notice of public sale was given under the provisions of section 2202 of the Supp. to the Code, and thereafter the land sold by the county to one Dorothy Julius sister-in-law of Harry Clooten, for $500. The record indicates that Clooten furnished the purchase money. Thereafter Dorothy Julius conveyed the land to the plaintiff Harry Clooten.

Plaintiffs then commenced this action to determine adverse claims and ask that any claims which the defendants may set forth “be declared null and void and that the defendants and each of them be forever debarred and enjoined from further asserting the same,” etc. The defendant Wang prays judgment that his mortgage be declared a lien upon the land subject to any lien for taxes which the county of Burleigh may have against said land, and tenders and offers to pay whatever taxes there may be due under tbe sale. The receiver asks judgment to the effect that the bank is the owner of the land under its foreclosure sale and is entitled to a sheriff’s deed subject to any lien for taxes which the county of Burleigh may have upon the land, and *797 tenders and offers to pay the same. It is claimed in the answers that there were numerous irregularities in the question of listing, assessment and notice given prior to the time of the tax sale but we need not consider these objections.

The district court held defendants had no interest in the land, and quieted title in the plaintiffs. The defendants appeal, demanding a trial de novo.

The real issue in this case is the validity of the certificate of tax sale and the effect that any invalidity thereof may have upon the subsequent proceedings.

It is well established in this jurisdiction that “the law governing the issuance of tax deeds must be construed strictly.” Golden Valley County v. Miller, ante, 101, 220 N. W. 839; Trustee Loan Co. v. Botz, 37 N. D. 230, 164 N. W. 14. This is based on the principle set forth in Ward v. Carson River Wood Co. 13 Nev. 44, that, “where property is sold for taxes in a summary manner, without any legal proceedings in a court of justice, it is essential that all the requirements of the law be strictly complied with.” As said in 26 R. C. L. 397, “No distinction is drawn between mandatory and directory re-' quirements of law.”

In Beggs v. Paine, 15 N. D. 436, 109 N. Y. 322, relative to a tax deed, this court said:

“The statute by prescribing the form, has thereby made every fact recited in the form a matter of substance” even though the statute requires “only a substantial conformity thereto.”

Hence, though the statute says the certificate shall be substantially in the following form, nevertheless the signature cannot be omitted. In Stanton v. Davidson, 109 Minn. 510, 124 N. W. 244, this requirement of substantial compliance is held applicable to tax judgments, under a statute requiring such judgment to state substantially the facts required by the form therein prescribed; “that is the jurisdictional facts, not necessarily matters of procedure after jurisdiction was acquired.”

Philbrook v. Smith, 40 Minn. 100, 41 N. W. 545, holds the one claiming title under tax sale must show that all the provisions of law in respect to sale have been complied with.

*798 Section 2192 of the Compiled Laws, being the law in force at the time of the tax sale, says:

“The auditor shall execute to the purchaser of any piece or parcel of land a certificate which may include all lands sold to him and which must be substantially in the following form, etc.”

This form prescribed provides for signature and attestation as follows :

“In Witness Whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal this. - day of-a. d. 19 — .

“Auditor.”

In the case of Gibbs v. Dortch, 62 Miss. 671, the court held that the failure to sign certified list of lands was not fatal when the body of the certificate- said “I, F. M. Sheriff and Tax Collector.” In the body of the opinion (page 675 of 62 Miss.) the court says:

“A tax collector’s certificate to a list of lands sold to the state made under . . '. the act . . . which provides that such 'list shall be certified under his hand to be correct’ is not defective because the name of the collector is not subscribed thereto but appears only on the body thereof as 'I, F. M., Sheriff and Tax Collector of’ a certain named county 'do hereby certify’ ” etc.; but this was because “all the statutes require is a certified list of the lands struck off by the tax collector' to the state, etc. It must be certified by the tax collector, but whether his name appears in the beginning or at the end of the certified list is not material. ...”

We cannot assent to the holding that the printing of the name off the officer in the body of the instrument is such a signing of the certificate of sale as is contemplated by the statute. The form being' prescribed by statute there must be a substantial compliance therewith. In the case at bar said certificate of sale was not signed by the auditor in any manner or form and therefore the certificate of sale was a nullity. In Golden Valley County v.

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Related

Baird v. Clooten
236 N.W. 356 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
224 N.W. 198, 57 N.D. 793, 1929 N.D. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clooten-v-wang-nd-1929.