Coos County v. Elrod

267 P. 530, 125 Or. 409, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 163
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 267 P. 530 (Coos County v. Elrod) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coos County v. Elrod, 267 P. 530, 125 Or. 409, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 163 (Or. 1928).

Opinion

BOSSMAN, J.

This is a suit to cancel a deed executed by the sheriff of Coos County in his representative capacity to the defendant I. A. Elrod. The property described in the deed was previously owned by one Myrtle Allen. She neglected to pay the 1909 and subsequent taxes amounting to $373.19. In 1916 the county instituted suit to forclose the certificate of tax delinquency and secured title. Having acquired ownership of the property the county offered it for *411 sale. Pursuant to law and the practices followed by the County Court, the latter placed upon this property what was known locally as an “upset price” of $200; that is, $200 was the minimum which the County Court authorized the sheriff to entertain as a bid at the public offering. When this property was offered at public sale, no buyer presented himself. Pour public offerings were made, the last taking place October 17, 1921; but the property still remained unsold.

The record is silent as to what occurred from this last public offering until approximately April 6, 1927. On this latter date one Jess Barton, who was engaged in the abstract of title business and also that of purchasing tax titles, applied to the defendant Neis Osmundson, a clerk in the office of the sheriff of Coos County, and expressed a desire to purchase this property from the county. The particular duty assigned to Osmundson by his superior was that of haying charge of the sale of property recovered by the county through foreclosures of delinquent tax certificates. Coos County had developed a practice of selling at private sale tax properties which had failed to secure a buyer at their public offerings. These properties were called “junk properties.” Prior to their offering, the County Court would place upon each an upset price; this upset price, as we have explained before, was the minimum amount which the court would consider as an offer for the property. When Barton applied to Osmundson to purchase this property, the latter advised Barton that the county was not the owner of this property and that the records showed that this property was marked “sold.” Barton replied that he had investigated and that the ownership of the property was in fact vested in the county. This apparently satisfied Osmundson, and Barton *412 thereupon paid the former $200. Osmundson following the routine procedure which he pursued in such instances, prepared a brief memorandum setting forth the legal description of the property, the minimum price fixed by the County Court, the price offered by Barton, and the name of the prospective buyer, and presented this memorandum to the county judge. The latter, likewise, followed his general practice, and without making inquiry, signed an order requiring the sheriff to execute a deed to the buyer; this the latter did. The county judge testified that whenever Osmundson presented such a memorandum, he assumed that it was presented in good faith, and that it correctly set forth the facts and the required information.

Barton did not take title in his own name, but had the deed show that the defendant, Elrod, was the buyer. "While the record indicates that the minimum or upset price of this land was $200 the uncontradicted evidence shows that its real value was not less than $6,000. Elrod, in whose name title was taken, had never been upon the property and knew nothing of it. "When a third party by the name of Fish sought to purchase the property from Elrod, the latter protested that he was not the owner and said he knew nothing of the property. "When Fish informed Elrod that the record showed him as owner, he asserted that evidently Fish was thinking of another Elrod who resided in Portland. Barton and Osmundson, together with one Cage, were the three stockholders and directors of a corporation entitled “The Bandon Realty Company,” which had been actively engaged for some years in the purchase of property at tax foreclosure sales. There is evidence in the record which indicates that in order to facilitate their *413 operations they maintained a deposit of funds with some individual in the sheriff’s office. Osmundson testified that this piece of property was not purchased for the company but for Elrod. But as we have seen before, Elrod testified that he was not the buyer, but that Barton was the buyer. Whatever may have been the arrangement between Osmundson, Elrod, Barton and the Bandon Realty Company concerning this piece of property, apparently no outsider was aware of the fact that Elrod held title only as trustee until he so stated as a witness.

How it occurred that the county records showed that this piece of property was marked “sold” and that the upset price was $200 is not disclosed by the evidence. It appears that many inquired of Osmundson concerning this property for the purpose of acquiring title; each was informed that the property had been sold. Among those who inquired was one Prank J. Pish, a logger and timber cruiser. Pish had been interested in an adjoining tract of timber land; he noticed that this tract of land contained a valuable stand of timber. He cruised it and then decided he would like to log it. He inquired of Osmundson concerning the ownership and testified concerning the results of his inquiries as follows: “I didn’t get no satisfaction, only an address in Seattle of the lady that owned it.” Pish then testified that he communicated with the Seattle owner with the following results :

“I got in communication with her and made an agreement to buy a quit-claim deed from her at a certain price and came back down here and went to Mr. Osmundson in the office and wanted to know about the taxes and he said, — I think he told me $400, but he couldn’t pay it because it was. advertised to be sold *414 the 28th, — well, the last tax sale, I have forgotten, the 20th of August or September.

“Q. What time was this when he told you this? A. It was in the last of March, along the latter part of March. So I says ‘What’s the matter with me taking a certificate out on that or paying it up and then paying the lady for it and getting a good deed to it?’ and he says ‘you can’t do it, there is no way to do it, it can’t be done, it is advertised to be sold,’ and he says ‘There is no chance at all,’ and I went home and I got to studying about it and I came back again on the 11th day of April, and I had other ideas in my head and there was something wrong about it, and I found out that I would have a right to pay those taxes, and at that time I asked about it and Mr. Osmundson looked at a little slip of paper and on that slip of paper it said ‘deeded to I. A. Elrod, address Coquille. ’

“Q. What date was this? You say the 11th of April? A. The 11th of April.”

We shall review the evidence no further; in our opinion it supports the conclusion that Osmundson was well aware of the fact that just before Elrod secured title, there were many inquiries concerning this property, and that several were anxious to acquire its ownership. Further, that those interested proceeded no further with their endeavors to acquire ownership when they were informed that the property had been sold. Further it appears that the county commissioners were unaware of the foregoing facts, and .that Osmundson did not communicate these facts to them when he presented the memorandum to the county judge.

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Bluebook (online)
267 P. 530, 125 Or. 409, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coos-county-v-elrod-or-1928.