Coffin v. Maitland

20 N.W.2d 310, 146 Neb. 477, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 106
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1945
DocketNo. 31935
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 20 N.W.2d 310 (Coffin v. Maitland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coffin v. Maitland, 20 N.W.2d 310, 146 Neb. 477, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 106 (Neb. 1945).

Opinions

Chappell, J.

This is a proceeding by intervener, transferee of the former owner and holder of the record title, to redeem from a decree of foreclosure of a tax sale certificate and quiet title to certain lands in Loup County, Nebraska. Intervener’s right was based upon an alleged void service by publication upon the alleged defendant landowners, Olin J. Life, Elizabeth J. Life, his wife, and Martin L. Moore, now single, from whom he had obtained quitclaim deeds. The trial court found generally for plaintiff and against the intervener who appealed to this court. His brief assigns numerous alleged errors, many of which are directed to admissions of evidence. Since the case is an equity proceeding tried without a jury and heard de novo in this court we will not discuss such assignments. It is the rule that: “In a case tried to the court, the presumption obtains that the court, in arriving at a decision, will consider such evidence only as' is competent and relevant, and this court will not reverse a case so tried because other evidence was admitted.” Nelson v. Nelson, 133 Neb. 458, 275 N. W. 829.

For the purposes of this opinion we need only give con[479]*479sideration to intervener’s contentions that the decree is not ■sustained by the evidence and is contrary to law. In doing so we find that they cannot be sustained.

Decision of the case depends primarily upon whether Martin L. Moore, transferor, was the owner and holder of the record title to the land involved at the time of the foreclosure of the tax sale certificate; whether the notice for service by publication upon him complied with section 25-519, R. S. 1943; and whether at the time of such service he was in fact a nonresident of the state. If such propositions .are answered in the affirmative the judgment must be affirmed, otherwise it must be reversed.

Intervener in his brief and argument relies upon the rule: “The right to redeem is a favorite of equity, and will not be •allowed to be taken away, except upon a strict compliance with the steps necessary to divest it, and by due process of law.” Sedlak v. Duda, 144 Neb. 567, 13 N. W. 2d 892, 154 A. L. R. 490. Nevertheless, there are other, rules of law which preclude his right to redeem if the trial court had jurisdiction in the original tax foreclosure proceeding. In Connely v. Hesselberth, 132 Neb. 886, 273 N. W. 821, it was held: “Owners and others interested in realty, sold under decree foreclosing valid tax sale certificate, where foreclosure was commenced more than two years subsequent to issuance of tax sale certificate, are barred from the right of redemption on confirmation of such judicial sale” and “A decree foreclosing a tax sale certificate is not vulnerable to collateral attack for irregularities or defects in the foreclosure proceedings that do not go to the jurisdiction of the court.”

Bearing these rules in mind we have examined the record. It discloses that plaintiff filed the original tax foreclosure proceedings in the district court for Loup County on February 10, 1932, more than two years after he purchased the tax sale certificate at a valid, administrative tax sale by the county treasurer. An amended petition was later filed but it in no manner changed the allegations with reference to Martin L. Moore and ——— Moore, his wife. Both the peti[480]*480tion and the amended petition alleged in substance that Martin L. Moore and-Moore, his wife, were the owners and holders of the record title to the land at the time the action was filed.

In this connection by its decree in the proceeding at bar, the trial court found that Olin J. Life and Elizabeth J. Life, his wife, were not the owners of the land but strangers to the title at all times here involved and that Martin L. Moore was in fact the owner thereof. We are convinced that no other finding could have been made by the trial court under the record and the evidence appearing in the record which includes the abstract offered by intervener himself. For these reasons we do not deem it necessary to discuss at length the nature of the alleged interests of Olin J. Life and Elizabeth J. Life, his wife, or their alleged right of redemption which intervener claims as their successor by quitclaim deed. Suffice it to say, that if they ever had any right, title or interest in the property this record discloses that they were completely foreclosed by the original tax foreclosure proceedings, even though residents of the state at that time. The case, County of Douglas v. Feenan, ante p. 156, 18 N. W. 2d 740, recently decided by this court, is directly in point and conclusively decides that question. It follows that if they were strangers to the title or if they had any right, title or interest in the property which was validly foreclosed, as above suggested, then their quitclaim deed to the intervener granted him no right, title or interest upon which he could base a right to redeem.

In the original foreclosure proceeding Martin L. Moore and ——■— Moore, his wife, were served by publication upon motion of plaintiff supported by an affidavit in conformity with section 25-518, R. S. 1943, based solely upon the ground that they were nonresidents of the State of Nebraska. The trial court so found and ordered constructive service upon them.

Notice was thereafter published in a legal newspaper for the required number of consecutive weeks. In conformity with section 25-519, R. S. 1943, the publication of notice [481]*481contained a summary statement of the object and prayer of plaintiff’s petition, including a description of the property; specifically named the court wherein the petition had been filed; and notified the persons by name as the defendants thus intended to be served when they were required to answer plaintiff’s petition or otherwise judgment would be entered against them.

Intervener complains that the title of the case at the top of the notice did not contain the names of each defendant. It was worded: “IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF LOUP COUNTY, NEBRASKA H. J. Coffin Plaintiff -vs- H. E. Maitland, et al Defendants. NOTICE.” The title itself, it will be observed, did not contain the separate names of each other defendant but they, including Martin L. Moore and —--Moore, his wife, were otherwise specifically named, directly addressed and notified in the body of the notice as the only defendants intended to be served in every particular as required by statute.

In this connection it is stated in 42 Am. Jur., sec. 95, p. 83: “The form of the notice to be published, and what it shall contain, rest in the legislative discretion, subject to the restriction that it shall be of such a character that it will have a tendency, in a reasonable degree, to convey information to interested parties that the action affects their rights.” However, as stated in 50 C. J., sec. 196, p. 535: “Where the statute prescribes certain things which the published notice shall contain, they all must be considered essential, and the absence of any of them in the published notice is fatal to the jurisdiction; but the notice need contain nothing which is not required by statute.”

The following statement appears in Bowers, Process and Service, sec. 276, p. 406: “The courts are strongly inclined to ignore mere technical and unsubstantial defects in published process, and to hold the notice sufficient if it be of such a character that it will, to a reasonable degree, inform the parties defendant that the action affects their rights, and give them an opportunity to assert and defend those rights.” As early as McCormick v. Paddock,

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W.2d 310, 146 Neb. 477, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coffin-v-maitland-neb-1945.