Electrolytic Copper Co. v. Rambler Consol. Mines Corp.

243 P. 126, 34 Wyo. 304, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 40
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1926
Docket1272
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 243 P. 126 (Electrolytic Copper Co. v. Rambler Consol. Mines Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Electrolytic Copper Co. v. Rambler Consol. Mines Corp., 243 P. 126, 34 Wyo. 304, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 40 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

*309 Kimball, Justice.

This is a statutory action to recover the possession of real property. The judgment of the district court on a trial without a jury was for the plaintiff, and the interested defendant brings error. The parties will be called plaintiff and defendant as in the court below.

The property consists of ten lode mining claims, named Rambler, Rambler No. 2, Rambler No. 3, Rambler No. 4, Rambler No. 5, Isabella No. 1, Isabella No. 2, Isabella No. 3, Isabella No. 4, and Strangler. Their total area is something less than 200 acres in sections 4 and 5, twp. 14, and sections 32 and 33 in twp. 15, range 79. Before or during the year 1906 all the claims were patented, and the patents recorded in the office of the county clerk of Albany County. The title after patent until 1908 was in Rambler Mining and Smelting Co. In January, 1908, the claims were conveyed to Rambler Copper and Platinum Co., by a deed recorded in June of the same year. Title remained *310 in tbe last named company until May, 1919, when the claims were conveyed to the plaintiff.

The defendant relied on title obtained through a sale in 1914 for taxes for the year 1913. The decision of the ease depended on the validity of this tax title. The plaintiff claims that the tax sale was void for many reasons, several of which we deem it unnecessary to consider. We think the facts with reference to the assessment of the property warranted a finding by the trial court that the tax sale was void because the property was not described as required by the statute. Section 2775, Wyo. C. S. 1920, provides, among other things, that lands shall be assessed by township, range, section or part of a section, and where such part is not a legal sub-division, by "some other description sufficient to identify it. ’ ’ The same section provides also that the assessment roll shall specify the name of the individual or corporation to whom any property shall be taxable, which means the owner. Hecht v. Boughton, 2 Wyo. 385, 400.

In all the records of assessment and sale the property in question is listed as belonging to Rambler Mining and Smelting Company. On the assessment schedule, returned by the assessor, it is described as 360 acres of "real estate in Sec. 34, Twp. 15, Range 79;” on the combined assessment roll and tax list and on the record of sales, as "mining claims;” and in the notice of sales as "mining claim.” No part of the claims was in section 34; they did not embrace 360 acres, but only 200 acres; they had not belonged to the owner named for some five years, as clearly, shown at the time of assessment by the deed records of the county, and there was no evidence that Rambler Mining and Smelting Company did not own other real estate or other mining claims in the section mentioned in the assessment schedule. In reference to the error in the name of the owner, it is said in argument that the inference may be drawn from the record that the plaintiff is not only the successor in interest of the Rambler Mining *311 and Smelting Co., but that it succeeded to those rights by virtue of consolidation and change of name. Whether this inference might have been drawn by the trial judge, we need not say. The evidence certainly did not require such an inference, and if the facts that might have been inferred would have, called for a different judgment, we must assume that they were not established.

It seems, therefore, that the description “real estate,” or “mining claims,” or “mining claim,” was not only indefinite, but every stated fact as to location, ownership and acreage was erroneous. It is inferable from the evidence that the Rambler Copper and Platinum Company, which owned the property at the time of the tax sale, owned at that time several other mining claims in that locality. - In the circumstances, it was impossible for any one to say from the tax records that the ten claims in question were the ones taxed and sold. The defendant introduced evidence tending to prove that the claims in question were known in that locality as “Rambler mine,” “Rambler mines,” or “Rambler mining property.” As the property was not assessed by any of these descriptive terms, we cannot say that this evidence required a finding that 'the mining claims in question were sufficiently identified by the description in the tax proceedings.

The description of real property should, under the statute, be “sufficient to identify it.” The rule would probably be much the same in the absence of the statute. Cooley, Taxation (4th ed.) Secs. 1175, 1416. This is required as notice to the owner as well as to the public generally that the described property will be sold. The description should be sufficiently definite to enable the owner and prospective purchasers to identify the lands. Williams v. Bowers, 197 Mass. 565, 84 N. E. 317; Waterman v. Shrewsbury, 83 N. J. L. 286, 84 A. 204. The following are a few of many decisions that could be cited to shoAV the necessity of a description sufficient to identify the land, and that to meet that test more is required than is *312 found in this ease. Raymond’s Lessee v. Longworth, 14 How. 76, 14 L. ed. 333; Bird v. Benlisa, 142 U. S. 664, 125 Ct. 323; 35 L. ed. 1151; Sullenger v. Baecher, 55 Ind. App. 365, 101 N. E. 517; Moran v. Thomas, 19 So. Dak. 469, 104 N. W. 212; Scott v. Parry, 108 La. 11, 32 So. 188; Zink v. McManus, 121 N. Y. 259, 24 N. E. 467; Martin v. White, 53 Ore. 319, 100 P. 290; Smith v. Los Angeles, 158 Calif. 702, 112 Pac. 307.

Our attention is called to Section 2881, Wyo. C. S. 1920, providing that:

“No irregularity or informality in the advertisements, shall affect in any manner, the legality of the sale, or the title to any real property conveyed by the treasurer’s deed under this chapter, but in all cases the provisions of this chapter shall be deemed sufficient notice to the owners, of the sale of their property.”

This section was considered in Hecht v. Boughton, 2 Wyo. 383, 402, and Investment Co. v. Mallen, 25 Wyo. 373, 384, 170 Pac. 763. The statute, as shown by the discussion in those cases, was not intended to authorize tax sales without notice, but to cure certain defects in the notice of sale only. The statute presupposes that the property will be assessed as required by law. In Hecht v. Boughton, supra, when considering a notice of sale defective for failure to state the name of the owner, it was said that “though under this section the omission from the advertisement of the owner’s name might not prejudice the sale, all the proceedings prior to the advertisement must conform to the statute, and to the principle which it proceeds upon, in order that its provisions may work such notice.” Whether this statement' that “all the proceedings prior to the advertisement must conform to the statute ’ ’ is too broad, we need not inquire. It is at least clear that if, as in this case, neither the name of the owner nor a description of the lands is shown anywhere in the tax *313 proceedings, the notice necessary as the foundation of the tax lien is lacking, and the sale void.

Section 2894, C. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
243 P. 126, 34 Wyo. 304, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electrolytic-copper-co-v-rambler-consol-mines-corp-wyo-1926.