Curtin v. Kingsbury

159 P. 830, 31 Cal. App. 57, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 344
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 6, 1916
DocketCiv. No. 1552.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 159 P. 830 (Curtin v. Kingsbury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtin v. Kingsbury, 159 P. 830, 31 Cal. App. 57, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 344 (Cal. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Mandate. It appears by the petition that, on November 19, 1901, the state of California issued its certificate of purchase to one J. Frank Miller for all of section 36, township 9 south, range 19 east, M. D. B. & M., in Madera County, for which he paid twenty per cent of the purchase price of $1.25 per acre, said land being “only fit for grazing purposes”; that there remained due to the state one dollar per acre, or $640, with interest at seven per cent per annum; that, in 1904, said Miller assigned said certificate of purchase to plaintiff Curtin and W. C. Hensley, who “entered into the possession of said land and became and were the sole owners thereof, subject only to the paramount title of the state. ’ ’ On February 21,1910, said Hensley died and thereupon petitioner R. C. Jay was appointed and now is administrator of his estate. On June 22, 1907, the land in controversy was sold to the state for nonpayment of taxes, followed by a deed to the state dated July 16, 1912. On June 13, 1913, petitioner Curtin applied for and received from the auditor of Madera County an estimate of the amount necessary to redeem said land from tax sale, and, on the same day, paid to the treasurer of said county the amount of said estimate, together with other delinquent taxes on the land, which “redemption was duly recorded, and it was noted upon the recorded certificate and the recorded tax deed that the land was redeemed”; on September 10, 1915, at the request of petitioners, the auditor and treasurer furnished them “a statement of all interest then due and unpaid on said” land, and petitioners paid to the treasurer the amount shown by said statement. It is then alleged that the certificate of sale issued to said Miller has been lost, and that the defendant refuses to accept from the treasurer of Madera County the amounts paid by petitioners and refuses to issue a new certificate of purchase in lieu of the lost one. It is alleged, upon information and belief, that there are no claims adverse to petitioners to said land. There is also an allegation “that no foreclosure for nonpayment of interest ever was had or attempted in the matter of the delinquency in payment of *59 interest as provided in the Political Code or at all; that the certificate of purchase remains uncanceled by any foreclosure.” The prayer is for an alternative writ of mandate directing defendant to receive the moneys tendered by petitioners and to issue a new certificate of purchase in lieu of the lost one.

The issue presented is raised by a general demurrer filed by respondent to the petition.

By an act approved May 14, 1915 (Stats. 1915, p. 605), which, for convenience, will hereinafter be referred to as chapter 389, it was provided that “the unsold portions of the sixteenth,, and thirty-sixth sections of school lands . . . shall be sold at public auction by the surveyor-general.” It is the contention of respondent that “under this method all applications to purchase school lands at a fixed statutory price are abolished. Nobody can apply to purchase lands of the character described in the act. Intending purchasers must attend the sale at the time and place stated in the notice of sale and there bid in open competition against any and all other persons who desire to acquire the land,” and respondent maintains that “this act conflicts with the provisions of section 3788 of the Political Code in toto, and with so much of section 3817 as affects school lands”; that “under the law as it stood when the sale was made the sole remedy of the delinquent purchaser was to repurchase the land within six months from that date”; that the delinquent purchaser had no vested right to redeem the property, his only right being a preference given him to repurchase within six months; and that this privilege was withdrawn by chapter 389, supra.

Petitioners’ reply to the above contention that “the state may diminish the penalties, extend the time for redemption or lessen the burden upon the delinquent taxpayer, but the state cannot increase the penalties, shorten the time for redemption, or add further penalties, burdens, and conditions of redemption, after the date of sale to the state,” and “none of the statutes relied upon by the defendant purport to be retroactive.”

The method prescribed by section 3817 of the Political Code in 1883 for the redemption of school lands sold for delinquent taxes applied only to purchasers who had paid “the full amount of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre.” (Stats. 1883, p. 23.) This section remained unchanged until *60 1895, when it was made to apply to purchasers “when the full amount of the purchase price of one dollar and twenty-five cents per acre has not been paid, except where the deed to the state, provided for in section three thousand seven hundred and eighty-five, has been filed with the surveyor-general.” (Stats. 1895, pp. 308-340.) By this act there were many changes made in the sections of the Political Code relating to the sale, redemption, and disposition of lands sold for delinquent taxes. School lands were made subject to the act and were referred to in sections 3785 and 3788 as well as in section 3817. By section 3785 it was provided that where the full price for the land has not been pa,id and where the tax deed to the state has been forwarded by the county recorder to the surveyor-general, “the state shall dispose of such lands in the manner provided in section three thousand seven hundred and eighty-eight.” Section 3788 provided that in such case “the said lands shall again become subject to entry and sale, in the same manner, and subject to the same conditions, as apply to other state lands of like character, except that the former possessors or owners of the land thus deeded to the state, their heirs or assigns, shall be preferred purchasers thereof for the period of six months after the deeds are filed with the surveyor-general.” It was required of the intending purchaser that as a condition to his purchase he should pay, in addition to the price of the land, all delinquent taxes, penalties, costs, and accrued costs prior to and subsequent to the date of sale to the state. The sections-of the Political Code as amended by the act of 1895 was the law of 1901, when the-purchase was made by plaintiffs’ assignor. By that act (sec. 3788, Pol. Code) the right given to the purchaser whose land had been sold to the state for delinquent taxes was not to redeem, as was the right given by the' act of 1883, but was a right to become a purchaser in preference to any other person if, when application was made, there was no other conflicting application. His rights were no greater than those of any other purchaser, except that he was a preferred purchaser for a limited period.

We have seen that the taxes became delinquent and the land was sold to the state in 1907 and a deed made to the state in 19.12, which was duly filed with the surveyor-general. Had no other statute intervened, plaintiffs’ right would have been that of a preferred purchaser and not of a redemptioner.

*61 Section 3817 was amended in 1897, 1901, and 1905, but not affecting that part of the section referring to school lands. In 1909 the legislature added to the section the following: “and an application has been filed therefor in that office.” This act was passed February 22, 1909, and took effect sixty days thereafter. (Stats. 1909, p.

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Bluebook (online)
159 P. 830, 31 Cal. App. 57, 1916 Cal. App. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtin-v-kingsbury-calctapp-1916.