Coulter v. Ramberg

55 N.W.2d 516, 79 N.D. 208, 1952 N.D. LEXIS 113
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1952
DocketFile 7324
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 55 N.W.2d 516 (Coulter v. Ramberg) 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
Coulter v. Ramberg, 55 N.W.2d 516, 79 N.D. 208, 1952 N.D. LEXIS 113 (N.D. 1952).

Opinion

*211 Crimson, J.

The plaintiffs bring an action to quiet title in themselves to the Southeast Quarter of the Southwest Quarter of Section Twenty-nine and the Northeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section Thirty-two, all in Township One Hundred Fifty-six, North of Range Ninety-five West of the 5th. P. M. Their complaint follows the statutory form claiming ownership and demanding that the defendant be required to set forth all his adverse claims to said property and that the same be decreed null and void. The defendant admits he claims an interest in the land and sets up against the plaintiffs the ten year statute of limitations (Sec. 28-0122 NDRC 1943) and alleges laches on the part of the plaintiffs. Then the defendant makes a counterclaim in the form of statutory complaint to quiet title in him alleging that he is the owner of the property and that the claims of the plaintiffs are inferior to his rights. Plaintiffs reply alleging that defendant’s title is based upon a void tax deed from AYilliams County.

The action was tried to the court and judgment rendered quieting title in the plaintiffs. Defendant appeals and asks for a trial de novo.

The facts as they appear from the stipulation of counsel are that A. A. Brunsvold became the owner of the land in controversy, heretofore described, on August 2, 1925, by virtue of a sheriff’s deed issued on the foreclosure of a mortgage given by a prior owner of said premises. Then Brunsvold paid the taxes *212 up to 1930. For the 1930 taxes the land was sold to Williams County and several subsequent tax sale certificates were issued to Williams County. No redemption was made from these sales. Williams County in May 1939 commenced proceedings to mature its title to said land. Such proceedings were carried to a conclusion by the issuance of a tax deed to Williams County (Sec. 57-2809 NDRC 1943) on March 1, 1940. Thereupon Williams County went into possession of said land and leased it for cash rent. A. A. Brunsvold died intestate. The plaintiffs, his two daughters and two granddaughters are his heirs. On Nov. 8, 1940, Williams County advertised this land, appraised at $80.00 for sale at public auction, as provided by Sec. 6, Chapter 235 S.L. 1939. At that auction, held Nov. 19, 1940, there were no bidders for this land. Thereafter this defendant, Joel Ramberg, made application to purchase the land in question at the appraised price which application was approved by the county commissioners of Williams County. Notice of such proposed sale was mailed to the former owner and received by his administrator, E. S. Wardrope, who made no effort to repurchase the land. On January 6, 1942, the defendant, Joel Ramberg, having paid the purchase price, received a deed from Williams County for said premises in accordance with. Sec. 57-2816 NDRC 1943. He has since that time been in exclusive, adverse possession of said lands, cultivated and improved the same and paid all taxes levied against the same for the years 1942 through 1951 inclusive.

The plaintiffs- claim title through their ancestor,-A. A. Brunsvold by inheritance. They ask that the defendant set forth his claims and that it be determined whether his claim is superior to their own. Defendant shows that this title is based upon the deed from Williams County to defendant. Plaintiffs claim that that deed is void. The validity of that deéd "is,'therefore, the first matter for decision. If that is valid defendant has a title superior to that of the plaintiffs irrespective of the other defenses put forward by the defendant assailing plaintiffs’ title.

The plaintiffs attack tile proceedings leading rip to the county's tax deed. First they attack the tax sale Certificate which was issued to the county. The form of certificate used'was that' prescribed by Chapter 298 S.L. 1931 and the only form pre *213 scribed by that statute. It recited that Williams County became •the purchaser, “being the bidder who agreed to accept the lowest rate of interest thereon from the date of sale on the amount of such taxes, penalties and costs so paid by him, and that said rate of interest, which said purchaser so agreed to accept was 9 per cent per annum.”

. Plaintiffs claim this indicated that Williams County became a competitive bidder at the sale contrary to law. State ex rel. Atkins v. Lawler, 53 ND 278, 205 NW 880. Chapter 289 S.L. 1931, provided that' if any tract remained unsold for want of bidders it should be again offered before the sale closes and “If there is no other bidder he (county treasurer) shall bid for the same in name of the county and the same shall be struck off and become forfeited to the county in which such sale takes place . . . .” Said Chapter further provides that: “Whenever any real property shall be sold to the county, the county auditor shall make out a certificate of sale to the county in the same manner as if sale had been made to any other person which certificate shall be retained by the county treasurer . . . Thus the law provides only one form of certificate and says that when the land is sold to the county the auditor shall make out a certificate “in the same manner” as other certificates of sale. (Emphasis supplied.)' The fact that, the certificate shows 9 per cent, the highest rate allowed by law, Chapter 289 S.L. 1931, is in harmony with the view that there was no competitive bidding.

We hold the county auditor’s certificate of sale to Williams County is valid.

The plaintiffs object to the sufficiency of the proof that the notice of the expiration of the period of redemption was properly served upon the plaintiffs’ predecessor in title. The law provides that notice shall be sent by registered mail to the owner and lien holders of the property in question. Chapter 235 S.L. 1939 (Sec. (a)). There is stipulated in evidence a signed return receipt of A. A. Brunsvold, plaintiffs’ predecessor in title, and of Adrian E. Buttz, presumably a lien holder, dated May 31, 1939. A copy of the actual notice sent out, however, was not found in the files of the auditor. The presumption is that “official duty has been performed regularly.” Sub. Sec. 15, Sec. *214 31-1103 NDRC 1943. That presumption is supported by these return receipts dated at the time the notice should have been sent out and by the further fact that the receipt, which was in the form of a post card, had a notation on the front or address side thereof, “A. A. Brunsvold, 29-32-156-95,” indicating the description of the land in question. A similar notation was on the Buttz return receipt. No evidence is offered to dispute that presumption. Even if no copy of the notice was found that does not indicate that no notice was mailed. It will be presumed, therefore, that the notice of the expiration of the period of redemption was enclosed in the envelope for which the owner receipted.

In due time thereafter the auditor published a notice of the expiration of the period of redemption. Plaintiffs claim that notice states an amount in excess of that necessary to redeem and the wrong time within which redemption had to be made. That claim is based on the contention that Chapter 227 S.L. 1939 providing for the settlement of delinquent taxes by the payment of the original tax without any penalty or interest up to March 1, 1940 amends Section 3 of Chapter 235 S.L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 N.W.2d 516, 79 N.D. 208, 1952 N.D. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-v-ramberg-nd-1952.