Gaston v. Caruth

1924 OK 805, 243 P. 192, 116 Okla. 146, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 728
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 30, 1924
Docket11742
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1924 OK 805 (Gaston v. Caruth) 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
Gaston v. Caruth, 1924 OK 805, 243 P. 192, 116 Okla. 146, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 728 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

In September, 1919, defendant in error, Caruth, sued plaintiff in error, Gaston, and others in the superior court of Pottawatomie county claiming title and to quiet title under a tax deed to lots 4 and 5 in block 8 in North Park addition to the city of Shawnee, Parties will be referred to as they thus appeared in the trial court. Defendant, Gaston, on several grounds attacked the validity of such deed, tendered the amount of taxes, penalty and costs, praying that said tax deed be canceled and title quieted in defendant. Prom judgment for plaintiff sustaining such tax deed, this appeal is prosecuted.

On June 18, 1919, the plaintiff, Caruth, paid the county treasurer the 1915 and the intervening unpaid taxes, penalty and costs, Thereupon, Mr. Alexander, then county treasurer, issued and delivered to plaintiff *147 a certificate of purchase for each of said lots, reciting that on the 6th day of November, 1916, said real estate was offered for sale for the unpaid 1915 taxes, stating the amount thereof; and further reciting that said lots were bid off for the amount of said 1915 taxes by the county on November 6, 1916. Mr. Hunter was then county treasurer. A deputy under Mr. Alexander on November 6, 1919, as shown by said certificates, signed the name of Mr. Hunter, the former treasurer, to the certificates. Thus it was sought to supply a certificate of purchase of said lots to the county nunc pro tunc. Mr. Alexander, by said certificates, also assigned to the plaintiff, Caruth, all of the interests of the county in said lots, duly acknowledging the same. Thereupon the plaintiff took steps to procure, and on August 20, 1919, demanded and received the tax deed on which this suit was based.

Defendant attacked said tax deed for that there was no sale of said lots to Pottawatomie county on November 6, 1916. On the trial, defendant called Mr. Alexander, the treasurer in 1919, when said certificates and tax deed were issued. Said witness produced the delinquent tax record in his office for the year 1916. It is understood that said record consists of a printed form conveniently arranged for filling in the data of each sale in blank columns under appropriate printed heads. With respect to the sale of the lots in controversy to the county in 1916, said record showed two certificates Nos. 2910 and 2911, and the proper legal numbers of said two lots. In the column headed “Name of Purchaser,” no name whatever was entered. The foregoing is, as nearly as we can' determine from the evidence, the condition of said delinquent tax sales record as made by Mr. Hunter, the treasurer in 1916, at or about the time said lots are supposed to have been bid off by the county. The evidence shows that the data in other columns of said record was supplied in 1919 by Mr. Alexander, or his deputy, showing the assignment of said certificates to Caruth, the amounts he paid, the issuance of such tax deed to Oaruth and the like. The return of the sale made to the county clerk by Mr. Hunter shows the same data.

Section 9736, Compiled Oklahoma Statutes 1921, provides that the county treasurer shall keep a tax sale record, upon which he shall enter, among other things, to whom the -real estate was sold. Section 9740 provides that the county treasurer, in case there are no other bidders offering the amount due, shall bid off any real estate offered, for the amount of taxes, etc., due and unpaid, in the name of the county, the county acquiring all the rights, both legal and equitable, that any other purchaser could acquire by reason of such purchase. Section 9743 is:

“Record of Purchase by County — Resale. Whenever the county treasurer of any county shall bid off any real estate in the name of his county, he shall make a note of such bid and purchase upon his sales record, and if any real estate so purchased by the county shall remain unredeemed for a period of two years from date of sale, and no person shall offer to purchase the same for the taxes, penalty and costs due thereon, the county treasurer shall proceed to advertise and sell such real estate at public auction, as herein provided.”

Section 9735 is:

“Return of Sale. On or before the last day of November, following the sale of real property, the treasurer shall file in the office of the county clerk of his county a return of his sale of land, retaining a copy in his office, showing the land sold, the name of the purchasers, and the sum paid by them, and also a copy of the notice of sale, with the certificate of advertisement verified by affidavits, and such certificate shall be evidence of the regularity of the proceedings.”

The statutes, prior to statehood, seem to have required that in case the county bid off the real estate and thus became the purchaser, that a certificate of purchase issued to the county should be assigned, in order to convey title to a third party. Weeks v. Merkle, 6 Okla. 714, 52 Pac. 929; Wilson v. Wood et al., 10 Okla. 279, 61 Pac. 1045. Present statutes, however, require the county treasurer to keep a tax sale record and to enter therein, among other things, the names of the purchasers at such sales, and in his return of sales to the county -clerk, to show the names. of the purchasers. If this he done, such county treasurer, or his successor, must issue a valid certificate of purchase to a third person, assigning the interest of the county in the real estate tiras purchased by the county, on receiving tne payments provided by the statute These records constitute for the county its muniment of title.

Such records thus required to be made and kept, we take it, are also intended to provide an official .record of the sale, and to give information to the public and to the party whose property has been sold, of such fact. These are the records of the fact of sale known to the treasurer and done by him, or under his direction. They are designed to afford evidence of such official act; and in order to be competent evidence to establish the fact recorded therein, it is essential that the entries be made" by the peri *148 son whose duty it was to do so. The entries in such records must be made promptly, or at least without such long delay as to impair their credibility, and by the person whose duty it was to make them, and in the mode required by law. 1 Greenleaf on Evidence (16th Ed.) sec. 485; 3 Jones on Evidence, sec. 509; Pace v. Wight (N. Mex.) 181 Pac. 430.

Now if the lots in controversy were sold to the county on November 6, 1916, it was the mandatory duty of Mr. Hunter, then county treasurer, to show the name of the purchaser in his record of sales and in such return. These records do not show that any one purchased said lots. Mr. Alexander, the treasurer in 1919, did not and could not supply this data in said records. Plaintiff sought to show by Mr. Alexander that it was the custom of the treasurer’s office in 1916 not to note the name of the purchaser in case the real estate was bid off by the county. However, his testimony fails even to show such custom. The fact that real estate was sold for delinquent taxes to the county, must necessarily be established by the records and cannot be proved by parol evidence of a custom or otherwise. Any other rule would lead to manifest injustice and afford opportunities for fraud. Pace v. Wight, supra; Black on Tax Titles (2nd Ed.) sec. 446, and eases cited.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 805, 243 P. 192, 116 Okla. 146, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaston-v-caruth-okla-1924.