Glacier County v. Frisbee

164 P.2d 171, 117 Mont. 578, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 89
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1945
Docket8481
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 164 P.2d 171 (Glacier County v. Frisbee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glacier County v. Frisbee, 164 P.2d 171, 117 Mont. 578, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 89 (Mo. 1945).

Opinions

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs Glacier county and Francis E. Manley, having prevailed in the district court in an action to quiet the title to certain land, Florence Samples Hall, the only answering defendant, has appealed from the decree so far as it relates to 160 acres of the land. Plaintiff Glacier county claims title through a tax deed dated December 15, 1927, purporting to divest appellant’s title, and plaintiff Manley through a contract of sale thereof by the county dated July 16, 1941.

Defendants’ answer constitutes in effect a general denial fol *580 lowed by affirmative defenses and cross-complaints to tbe effect: (1) that defendant is a member of the Blaekfeet Tribe of Indians and a ward of the government, and that this land is part of 320 acres allotted to her by trust patent in 1918 under which the United States agreed to hold the same for a trust period of 25 years and at the expiration thereof to “convey the same by patent to said Indian in fee, discharged of federal trust and free from all charge and encumbrance whatsoever”; that during the same year the United States issued her a patent in fee for the land without her application or consent and against her will; that the patent was void, the land not subject to tax, and the taxes and tax deed void; (2) that the tax deed was further void because of certain pleaded defects in the notice of application therefor and in the service of the notice.

Plaintiff demurred to the separate defenses and cross-complaints, but the demurrer was never disposed of and no reply was ever filed. This was because of proceedings under section 2214, Revised Codes, hereinafter discussed, resulting in an order requiring defendant to deposit $553.93 in court, her failure to do so, the consequent entry of her default, and the rendering of judgment upon plaintiff’s showing. Section 2214 provides that orders made under it may be reviewed on appeal from the judgment.

If the court’s order was for any reason erroneous, defendant’s default was improperly entered, the judgment and decree must be reversed, and the cause must be remanded so that defendant’s default can be vacated and further proceedings had.

Section 2214 provides in part: “* * * provided further that in any action now pending, or hereafter brought to set aside or annul an3^ tax. deed, or to quiet title, or to determine the rights of such purchaser, including the county, or his successors, to real property claimed to have been acquired by reason of tax proceedings or a tax sale, the purchaser or his successor upon filing an affidavit may obtain from the court an order directed to the person claiming to own the property, or to have any interest in or lien upon said property, or a right to redeem the *581 same, or claiming rights hostile to the tax title (which said person is herein, for convenience, called the true owner), commanding him to deposit in court, to the use of the tax purchaser or his successors, the amount of all taxes, interest and penalties which would have accrued if said property had been regularly and legally assessed and taxed as the property of said true owner and sold for delinquent taxes and was about to be redeemed by him, and the amount of all sums reasonably paid hereafter by said purchaser or his successors after three years from the date of said tax sale in preserving said property or in making improvements thereon while in possession thereof, as the total amount of said taxes, interest, penalties and improvements is alleged by the plaintiff and shall appear in said order, or to show cause on a date to be fixed in said order, not exceeding thirty days from the date thereof, why such payments should not be made. # * * Upon the hearing of the order to show cause the court shall have jurisdiction to determine said amount and to make an order that the same be paid into court within a given time, not exceeding thirty days after the making of said order. If such amount, when so determined, shall not be paid within the time fixed by said court, then said true owner shall be deemed to have waived any defects in the tax proceedings and any right of redemption, and thereupon, irrespective of any irregularities, defects or omissions or total failure to observe any of the provisions of the statutes of Montana regarding the assessment, levying of taxes, or sale of property for taxes, and the giving of notices, including notices of redemption, or concerning tax deeds, whether or not such omissions or failures make said proceedings void (other than that the taxes were not delinquent or have been paid), the title of such true owner shall not be quiet as against said purchaser or his successors, and a decree shall be entered in said action quieting the title of said purchaser or his successor as against said true owner. If such payment shall be made into court, and said true owner shall be successful in said action and said tax proceeding shall be held void, said sum shall be paid to the purchaser or his *582 successors. If said true owner shall not be successful in said action and the title of said purchaser or his successors shall be sustained, said money shall be returned to said true owner.

The proceedings under section 2214 were initiated by the affidavit of plaintiff Manley which recited that title to the property had been acquired by Glacier county through tax deed proceedings; that it was being acquired by him under contract of purchase from the county; that under the contract he paid Glacier county $94.50 on September 16, 1941, and $90.72 on October 2, 1942; that in addition on November 23, 1942, he paid the county the taxes legally assessed against the property for the year 1942, amounting to $8.71, and “that Plaintiff and Affiant has reasonably paid the sum of $360.00 after three years from the date of said tax sale in preserving said property and in making improvements thereon while in possession thereof, which said improvements consist of breaking, plowing, double discing, and harrowing a portion of said lands preparatory to seeding the same. ’ ’

The affidavit included no statement of either the amount of taxes, interest and penalties actually accrued or “the amount of all taxes, interest and penalties which would have accrued if said property had been regularly and legally assessed and taxed as the property of said true owner and sold for delinquent taxes and was about to be redeemed by him,” as required by section 2214.

Defendant filed a motion to quash the order to show cause issued upon the affidavit. This motion was apparently overruled as some three weeks later the defendant filed an answer to the same order in which she again set up the matters alleged in her affirmative defenses and cross-complaints, together with further objections to the sufficiency of the tax deed proceedings, and also resisted Manley’s claim of $360 for improvements and his contention that the land was improved thereby.

At the hearing upon the order to show cause it was established that defendant is a member of the Blackfeet Tribe and a ward *583

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Related

Erickson v. Knight
2005 MT 203N (Montana Supreme Court, 2005)
Bacher v. Patencio
232 F. Supp. 939 (S.D. California, 1964)
United States v. Frisbee
165 F. Supp. 883 (D. Montana, 1958)
United States v. Glacier County
74 F. Supp. 745 (D. Montana, 1947)
Milne v. Leiphart
174 P.2d 805 (Montana Supreme Court, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P.2d 171, 117 Mont. 578, 1945 Mont. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glacier-county-v-frisbee-mont-1945.