Foster v. Marshall

1930 OK 73, 284 P. 882, 141 Okla. 246, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 55
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 11, 1930
Docket19277
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1930 OK 73 (Foster v. Marshall) 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
Foster v. Marshall, 1930 OK 73, 284 P. 882, 141 Okla. 246, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 55 (Okla. 1930).

Opinion

HALL, C.

This action was instituted by R. N. Marshall in the district court of Carter county to cancel a certain tax deed and quiet title to 90 acres of land which defendants W. O. Foster and W. A. Samples claimed under a tax deed. Three years prior to the commencement of the action, W. C. Foster had obtained a tax deed covering the premises and had transferred an interest therein by a regular conveyance to the defendant W. A. Samples.

The defendants answered, settting up the regularity of the tax deed and tax proceedings. At the trial, we think they established clearly, that, in obtaining the tax *247 deed, tlie provisions of the statutes were strictly pursued. The court, however, held the tax deed void upon certain constitutional grounds1, to wit, that the land was sold in part to satisfy an interest claim of 18 pen cent, per annum in favor of the tax certificate holder, and that this procedure and the statute upon Which it was founded is contrary to section 2 of art. 14 of the Constitution, which provision of the Constitution is a restriction upon the Legislature- and all persons to create or charge a greater rate of interest than ten per cent, per annum, which is tlie maximum contract rate which may be charged without offending this provision of the Constitution.

The theory of the trial court in this connection, and the argument of defendant in error, is to a considerable extent plausible, but it is sufficient to- say that this court in an early decision held to a contrary view, and we may consider that question as having been foreclosed.

Defendant in error also contends that, by reason of the fact -that, at the time the tax deed was executed he held a valid and unsatisfied mortgage thereon, duly recorded, he was entitled to notice of the application for a tax deed. To be more specific, tlie plaintiff contends that the failure of the tax certificate holder to give plaintiff some character of notice of his intention to apply for a tax deed, and the issuance of a tax deed without this notice to- him, the holder of a valid recorded mortgage, was such an omission and such a proceeding as to deprive him of his property without due process of law, and that his right in this regard is protected by both the state and tlie federal Constitutions.

The statute, section 9749, Comp. Stat. 1921, designating the requisite notice before the issuance of a tax deed to a holder of a tax certificate, does not expressly or impliedly provide for a notice to be served upon a mortgagee of the premises. However, if the failure to give notice to a mortgagee violates a constitutional provision, it is immaterial whether the statute- prescribes notice or does not prescribe notice. If the Constitution, by its terms, requires the service of notice, the omission to provide for it in the statutes is not material. Unfortunately, there is no decision squarely in point, and the conclusions which we must reach must be wholly by analogy.

It lias been definitely settled that a state law or a proceeding under a state law attempting to divest the owner of his land at a tax sale without some appropriate character of notice wou’d be in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the federal Constitution, in that it would! be depriving him of his property without due process of law. 26 R. C. L. 406. Castello v. McConnico, 168 U. S. 674, 18 S. Ct. 229, 42 L. Ed. 622.

Section 9749, Comp. Stat. 1921, is the statute which p-rovides the- method of extinguishment of title of the owner by the acquisition of a tax deed to the land by the tax certificate holder. The preliminary notice of sale, which the statutes prescribe to be given by the county" treasurer at a period more than two- years prior to the application for the tax deed, is a notice directed to the owner and interested persons that, unless the taxes are paid, the property will be sold and a tax certificate issued pursuant to the statutes. That notice does not purport to be a process or a notice to the owner that a tax deed will -be summarily or otherwise issued, or that his right of redemption will be cut off; but is a notice under which, by the terms of the statutes, all parties- know that only a tax sale certificate can he issued; and it rests upon good reasons, as well as upon the decisions of the courts, that tlie right of the parties interested to subsequent notice that after a specified time, the right of redemption will be-cut off, ves-ts- at the time of the sale, and that such right cannot be taken away by even a subsequent statute. Cole v. Lamm, 81 Minn. 463, 84 N. W. 329.

The case of Cole v. La mm was decided in. 1900, and in the second paragraph of the syllabus it was held:

“The purchaser of lands from the- state bid in for taxes under G. S. 1894, sees. 1654, 1660, is in all cases required to give 60 days’ notice after the three-year redemption period providedl by law expires, and upon proof of sncli notice the additional 60 days becomes a portion of the full redemption period to which the landowner is entitled, and of which he cannot be constitutionally deprived.”

In the body of the opinion, the court said:

“It seems quite clear that the several sales included in the tax judgment under Laws 1899, c. 322, were controlled by the redemption period provided for at the time when such sales were made, since the period of redemption existing at the time of tlie original sale became an assured right between the landowner and the state, which could not be taken from him; and lie might thereafter go his way relying upon the assurance of the law that he would not he deprived of the title to liis property until notice had been given, and the additional time to redeem had expired thereafter, * * * since such prior provision which conferred vested *248 rights upon the landowner at the time of the ■original sale is not affected by the section of chapter 322 repealing all acts inconsistent therewith, for such vested rights in the owner cannot be constitutionally taken away, even by legislative action. Desty, Tax’n, p. 138, and cases cited.”

. Said section 9749 provides for the notice to redeem, and in case of failure of redemption, a forfeiture of the property.

Speaking of the importance and requisites of notice or process,-the authors of Ruling Case Law, vol. 21, p. 1262, summarized the principle in the following language:

“It is a principle that lies; at the foundation of all jurisprudence in civilized countries that a person must have an opportunity of being heard before a court can deprive him of his rights. Any other doctrine would be antagonistic to our form of government, and to the provisions of our Constitution.”

Quasi judicial bodies or administrative officers have no greater right in this regard than courts. We understand that, in order to satisfy the requirements of the Constitution, it is not necessary that the notice must be the same in all cases, but the notice must be appropriate to the nature and character of the proceeding involved.

AVhat is due process of law has never yel 'been defined.

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Bluebook (online)
1930 OK 73, 284 P. 882, 141 Okla. 246, 1930 Okla. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-marshall-okla-1930.