Corning Town Co. v. Davis

44 Iowa 622
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 24, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 44 Iowa 622 (Corning Town Co. v. Davis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corning Town Co. v. Davis, 44 Iowa 622 (iowa 1876).

Opinions

Beck, J.

An opinion of this court was announced in December, 1872, affirming the judgments of the District Court. A rehearing was allowed upon a petition of defendant, and-thereupon a majority of the court, as then constituted, reached a conclusion differing from the first decision, and an opinion was filed reversing the decision of the court below. Thereupon plaintiffs filed their petition for a rehearing and the causes have been again argued and submitted.

The questions raised in the cases touching the sufficiency and regularity of the sale and proceedings prior thereto, upon [624]*624■which defendant’s tax deed is based, will be first considered, in view of the fact that a majority of the court hold the tax title is defeated by reason of efforts made by the land owners to redeem from the tax sale. The facts upon which this conclusion is based, briefly stated, are as follows:

After the tax sale the president of the Corning Town Company, one of the plaintiffs, and agent of the plaintiff in the other case, applied to the treasurer and clerk of the District Court of Adams county, the land being situated in that county, to pay all taxes due or delinquent upon the property of plaintiffs there assessed, and to redeem from all tax sales, that might. have been made, of such lands. A written list of the property of the parties, including the lands involved in this action, was given to these officers, and they were charged to make a careful examination of the books of the county, for the purpose of ascertaining delinquent taxes and tax sales. A sum of money deemed sufficient was paid to them for the purpose of paying taxes and redeeming from sales. An examination was made, certain taxes were paid, and a sum of money returned to the plaintiffs, with a report that no farther amount was due for taxes or was required to redeem the lands. The treasurer and clerk assured the plaintiffs that all taxes were paid and all sales redeemed from. But the officers did not discover the sale under which defendant’s deed, was made, until the time for redemption had expired, and prior thereto made no report to plaintiffs that such sale had been made. The amount of money they received from plaintiffs and repaid to him was sufficient to redeem from the tax sale under which defendant claims title. The plaintiffs relied upon the officers to make the examination of the records, and made no attempt to do so themselves. They also did not examine the papers received from the treasurer and clerk when they reported the condition of the taxes. The owners of the land had no information of the tax sales until after the time for redemption had expired.

II.. To the decision last announced, reversing the judgment of the court below, I, at the time, dissented, and presented my views of the law in an opinion, consisting largely of the first opinion filed in the cases, so far as it treats [625]*625of the point upon which our present decision turns. I am unable to present the conclusion of the majority of the court and arguments supporting it in language and manner more satisfactory to myself, than are employed in that dissenting opinion. I will, therefore, reproduce it here. The conclusions reached therein, as I have intimated, are concurred in by the majority of this court as now constituted:

“ The conclusion and arguments supporting it, set out in the first opinion filed in these causes and then approved by all of us, are now, to me, entirely satisfactory, and I think that opinion so fairly and clearly presents the grounds upon which, in my opinion, our decision should be based, that I present it here, with a few additional thoughts, as an expression of my views upon the question involving plaintiff’s equitable right to redeem from the tax sales. It is as follows:

‘ 2. As we have seen, the rights of the plaintiffs in the property in controversy, depend solely upon the effect to be given to their efforts to redeem from the sale.

i. tax sale: redeem: negligenoe of ofceer.The testimony clearly shows that in 1867, one year before the time for redemption expired, D. N. Smith, president of the Corning Town Company, and agent of Loomis, left with the clerk of the District Court money ■ „ . , . . amply sufficient to pay all the taxes upon this land, and redeem from all sales, and that he directed said clerk and the treasurer of said county to examine carefully the tax records, pay .all taxes, and redeem from all tax sales, if any had been made; that at that time he was not aware of the sale to defendant; that they examined the records, as they supposed, carefully, but failed to find any record of the sale to defendant; that they assured Smith, when the tax receipts were handed to him, that the land was cleared of every charge on account of taxes or tax sales, and. refunded to him a portion of the money advanced. Further, that the record of the sale to defendant was not discovered until the 6th day of October, 1868, when defendant demanded his deed. This effort of redemption failed because of a mistake upon the part' of the officers through whom the redemption had to be effected. In Noble et al. v. Bullis, 23 Iowa, 559, it was held that such [626]*626mistake entitled the owner of land to equitable relief. It is true that a very high degree of care upon the part of the owner might have discovered the fact that the redemption was incomplete. But such a degree of care would almost always prevent a mistake of fact, and if equity should interfere to relieve against a mistake only when such caution had been exercised, this branch of equitable jurisdiction would be of very rare occurrence. Surely, it is requiring too high a degree of diligence upon the part of the owner, to require him, at' his peril, to ascertain the fact of the existence of a tax sale, which those intrusted with the tax records, notwithstanding the skill acquired in their offices, and their knowledge of the tax books, were unable, after careful research, to discover.

“‘The rules of law are adapted to the conduct, not of the most alert, nor of the most inattentive, but to that of those of reasonable and ordinary care and diligence in the management of their affairs.

“ ‘ The redemption law is .to be liberally construed. The tax purchaser is not wronged if he receives the amount advanced together with the penalty which the law prescribes. It has even been held in one case that if the purchaser at a tax sale is indebted to the taxpayer for more than the amount of the tax, that this fact operates as an immediate redemption, and renders the deed inoperative. Garknie v. Blake, 27 Miss., 677. But we need not go to that length in order to hold these plaintiffs entitled to equitable relief. It seems to us that, having made this offer to redeem before the defendant became entitled to his deed, they still have the right to do so. This view is in strict accord with Noble et al. v. Bullis, supra. It is not in harmony with the principle recognized in Bolinger v. Henderson, 23 Iowa, 165, which, in so far as it conflicts with the views -here expressed, must be regarded as overruled.’

“ In my opinion, Noble et al. v. Bullis and Bolinger v. Henderson, supra, are in utter conflict. There is no accord in the principles upon which they are respectively based. The later case, therefore, in effect overrules the earlier one. The one first named must be regarded as authority now.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Iowa 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-town-co-v-davis-iowa-1876.