Garmoe v. Sturgeon
This text of 21 N.W. 493 (Garmoe v. Sturgeon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The land in question is the southwest quarter of section eighteen, township eighty-six, range twenty-seven. The east half was sold October 2, 1876, for the taxes of 1873, 1874 and 1875, and the deed was executed October 9, 1879. The west half was sold October 6, 1879, for the taxes of 1878, and the deed was executed October 21, 1882. The land occupied by the railroad for right of way is in the northwest quarter of said southwest quarter, and the ad quod damnum, proceedings under which it claims were had in October, 1880, but plaintiff was not made a party to the proceedings. On the eleventh of July, 1879, plaintiff filed in the office of the treasurer a notice of the expiration of the period of redemption from the sale of 1876, together with the affidavit of the publisher of the Webster county Gazette, in which he swears that said notice was published in said paper three consecutive weeks, commencing on the twenty-eighth of June, 1879. Attached to this was plaintiff’s affidavit, in which he swore that he was then the holder of the certificate of purchase [149]*149referred to in tlie notice, and “that said notice was served by publication in the "Webster county Gazette, as above stated,” and this was the only evidence of the service of said notice on file in the treasurer’s office when the deed of October 9, 1879, was executed. On the twenty-first of July, 1882, he filed a notice of the expiration of the period of redemption from the sale of 1879, accompanied by the affidavit of the foreman of the Messenger, a newspaper published in Webster county, in which he swore that the notice had been published in said paper for three consecutive weeks, commencing on the seventh of July, 1882. Attached to this was plaintiff’s affidavit, in which he swore that he was the holder of the certificate referred to in the notice, and that the notice was served by publication in the Messenger for three consecutive weeks, the last of which was published on the twenty-first of July, 1882, and this was the only evidence of the service of said notice on file in the treasurer’s office when the deed of October 21, 1882, was executed.
Defendant’s position is that, as the treasurer is authorized to execute the deed only when “ an affidavit of the service of the notice and the particular mode thereof, duly signed and verified by the holder of the certificate of purchase, his agent or attorney, shall have been filed in his office,” (Code, § 894,) and as the affidavits of plaintiff which were on file when the deeds were executed were insufficient, when considered separate from those of the publishers of the newspapers, to show either the service of the notice or the particular mode thereof, the execution of the deeds was unauthorized, and hence the land is still subject to the right of redemption from the sales. It will be important to inquire as to the soundness of this position only in case it shall be found that the service of notice of the expiration of the periods for redemption from the sales was, under the facts of the case, an essential prerequisite to the execution or the deed.
[150]*150
[149]*149We have held in Fuller v. Armstrong, 53 Iowa, 683; Tuttle v. Griffin, 64 Id., 455; Chambers v. Haddock, Id., [150]*150556; and Meredith v. Phelps, ante, p. 118, that when the land is unoccupied, and is taxed as unknown, there is no person on whom the notice can be served, and that the authority of the treasurer to execute the deed in such case is not dependent on the service of the notice. We have also held that, as the deed is, by statute, made presumptive evidence of the regularity of all the proceedings anterior to its execution, on which it is based, when there is no evidence on the question, the presumption is that the facts were such as that the service of notice was not essential.
Reversed.
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21 N.W. 493, 65 Iowa 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garmoe-v-sturgeon-iowa-1884.