Fitzsimmons v. Rauch

1945 OK 163, 159 P.2d 264, 195 Okla. 529, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 22, 1945
DocketNo. 31264.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1945 OK 163 (Fitzsimmons v. Rauch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzsimmons v. Rauch, 1945 OK 163, 159 P.2d 264, 195 Okla. 529, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 415 (Okla. 1945).

Opinion

BAYLESS, J.

Mamie C. Fitzsimmons, claiming to be the owner, and George A. Fitzsimmons, her former husband, and W. Combs Hughes, claiming to be a mortgage holder on the property involved, instituted an action in the district court of Oklahoma county against L. M. Rauch, who had applied for a tax deed on the property, and Wm. F. Vahlberg, county treasurer, for an injunction against the issuance of said tax deed and for other relief, and appeal from a judgment adverse to them. The trial court denied the application for temporary injunction. The tax deed was issued. Thereafter the pleadings joined issue on the matter of canceling the tax deed.

The evidence in the case discloses that the city of Oklahoma City, acting under authority of the statutes then existing, created a paving district that included the lot in question in the year of 1911 and issued bonds to be paid by the special assessment levied against the lot. The special assessments against this lot were not paid, and Oklahoma City in the year of 1930, acting under authority of ch. 93, S.L. 1927, reassessed this lot along with other properties and again levied special assessments for the payment of the bonds so issued. The last of the special assessments under this reassessment were due in 1939. In 1939, at the annual sale the county treasurer offered this lot for sale and sold it for the 1939 installment, and the purchaser thereupon had indorsed thereon the delinquent installments for the prior years. Thereafter a notice, dated December 22, 1941, of intention to apply for a tax deed was served upon the plaintiffs, and thereafter a tax deed was issued by Vahlberg, county treasurer, to Rauch.

In seeking to cancel this deed the plaintiffs contended that the original paving district was illegally created and the assessment thereof did not constitute a charge or lien against this prop¿rty. They further contended that the *530 special assessment attempted to be created thereby, even if válid, had expired by reason of statute'of limitations and laches. They contended there was no authority under the Act of 1927 for reassessment and that said act was unconstitutional. They further contended that the notice of intention, to apply for a tax deed was not served in the manner required by law. All of these contentions were overruled by the trial court in rendering judgment for the defendants, and the plaintiffs re-present them on appeal.

The first contention presented by plaintiffs raises a question under 68 O.S. 1941 § 451, concerning the validity of the notice of intention to apply for the tax'deed that was served upon them in this case. They call attention to the fact that the notice was signed “L. M. Rauch by John H. Halley, his attorney,” whereas the language of the statute is “ ... he shall cause a written notice signed by Himself to be served upon the owner of the land . . .” Relying Upon Carl v. Stith, 153 Okla. 16, 4 P. 2d 738, and upon other cases that are not in point,''plaintiffs contended that the notice in this case is defective and invalid" because it was not 'signed by Rauch. In Carl v. Stith, supra, the notice was signed by the owner of the tax sale certificate and what we said therein ' was not ’ said for the purpose Of determining the issue we have before us. Upon ' consideration of the authorities cited we are unwilling to hold that ’ the language of the statute quoted above must be literally applied. The instances in which a person may authorize his signature to be signed to notices by agents,. attorneys in fact, or attorneys at law are so numerous that there is no occasion to set' them out; and the many instances in which modern courts 'bind persons in the position of Rauch by their signatures affixed by others on the basis of agency or the relationship of attorney and client are so numerous as to render unnecessary a literal application of the above language except in the gravest of circumstances. In this occasion Rauch is in court standing upon the signature affixed to this notice by his attorney, and we can conceive no prejudice 'that could arise to the plaintiffs by virtue of the particular signature in this instance and the manner in which .it was attached.

An attack is also made upon the service of the notice upon Mrs. Fitzsimmons and Hughes. The return of the deputy sheriff who served this notice is regular on its face. In the instance of Mrs. Fitzsimmons, she undertook to show by witnesses that while she and Mr. Fitzsimmons are divorced, they live in the same house, and that the service of this' notice upon her was made by offering the copy to Mr. Fitzsimmons, who refused it, whereupon it was dropped in. the door of her home.

The return of an officer showing the manner in which he served it imports verity but is subject to attack by evidence showing the contrary. The trial court chose to sustain the service in this case because of all the conditions' surrounding it,' and we - affirm the same, especially in view of the fact that Mrs. Fitzsimmons has not- undertaken to show any prejudice to- her, and the fact that she' instituted -this action indicates that the notice came to her attention and she- was able to- file the action for the protection of her rights before the deed ’ was issued. In • the instance of Mr. Hughes, he undertook to''show that, he is a widower and tljat at the time he was being, visited by his adult daughter, who is-married and. resides -away, from his homé, but who was present -on the--day the'notice was served'and.-received the same' from the sheriff. As stated before; the sheriff’s ■ return .'is regular on its face' and imports verity, and we are unwilling to hold that the trial court erred in sustaining the service of this notice.

The next contention presented involves the regularity and validity of-the proceedings of the city council by -which the paving district was created and the special assessment levied and the bonds issued in 1911. Plaintiffs undertook to show that these, proceedings were defective in that the resolution óf needs *531 sity, preliminary estimates, the assessments made by the appraisers, and other steps were omitted or invalidly done by tfíe city council. A portion of the records of those proceedings was introduced by the plaintiffs. On ^ cross-examination it was elicited from the witnesses that while the records now in possession of the city officials appeared to be incomplete, no thorough search had ever been made, and that the officials testifying had produced in court only what they had been requested to bring. In other words, this cross-examination cast so much doubt upon the plaintiffs’ contention that no such records had ever existed, and largely made it to appear that it was an instance of failing to call for or to have produced the right record, that the trial court was justified in rejecting their contention as being unproven. In addition to this, as Rauch points out, the other objections made to so-called defects or irregularities in the resolution of necessity and the ordinances later adopted are of a type that are waived by the property owners in the district affected unless the property owners object of protest within a specified time! As pointed'out in Roberts v. City of Sapulpa, 115 Okla. 243, 242 P. 553, and other Oklahoma cases, the resolution of necessity and the following' steps conferred jurisdiction even though they may be defective in detail. The trial court correctly overruled this contention.

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Bluebook (online)
1945 OK 163, 159 P.2d 264, 195 Okla. 529, 1945 Okla. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzsimmons-v-rauch-okla-1945.