Glacier County v. Schlinski

300 P. 270, 90 Mont. 136, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 92
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1931
DocketNo. 6,774.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 300 P. 270 (Glacier County v. Schlinski) 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. Schlinski, 300 P. 270, 90 Mont. 136, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 92 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

*141 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

On August 10, 1929, Glacier county instituted suit against Ruth Hall Schlinski “and all other persons” claiming any interest in a certain tract of land described in the complaint, *142 adverse to the title of the county obtained by tax deed secured June 3, 1929. On August 26 Schlinski quitclaimed to Boris A. S. Aronow, who then filed an answer to the complaint in which he alleged title in himself and tender to the county of a sum in excess of the amount for which the tax deed was issued, with offer to pay any additional sum due the county, and alleged that the tax deed was void by reason of fatal defects in the tax sale and procedure on notice of application for deed. The affirmative matter in the answer was denied by reply.

On November 13, 1929, its treasurer issued to the county a correction deed, and this fact was brought into this suit by supplemental complaint. Defendant Aronow challenged the correction deed on the same grounds as those alleged against the original deed.

The evidence adduced at the trial was chiefly documentary, and contains no substantial conflict; thereon the court made findings in favor of plaintiff, declared that any irregularities in the proceedings resulting in the issuance of a tax certificate to the county were cured by the provisions of Chapter 31, Laws of 1929; that the amounts due the county at the time of application for deed were correct, all taxes mentioned were legally levied, assessed, and' equalized, and all were unpaid; that no redemption was made; that the correction deed related back to the original, and the county became the owner of the property on June 3, 1929; and that the allegations of Aronow’s answer and supplemental answer, except as to those of tender, “are not sustained by evidence or by competent evidence.” Decree quieting title in the county followed.

Aronow has appealed from the judgment, and has specified fifteen alleged errors; such of these as are necessary to a determination of the appeal will sufficiently appear hereafter.

The facts, in so far as necessary here, are substantially as follows: The lands described were patented to Ruth Hall Schlinski in December, 1921, and were taxable in 1922; taxes for that year were duly levied and assessed, but were not paid and were placed on the delinquent tax list. This list, with notice that, unless the taxes listed were paid on or before Jan *143 uary 13, 1923, the property described would be sold at public auction on that date, was duly published in the official newspaper, but no affidavit of publication, with copy thereof attached, was filed with the county clerk, as required by law. The property was not offered for sale on the day set, because of the passage of Chapter 1, Laws of 1923, declaring that “no property upon which taxes * * * have been levied * * * for the year 1922 shall be sold for such delinquent taxes until the first day of October, 1923.” (Section 1.) The sale was evidently postponed, but no notice of postponement, published as required by the Act, appears in the record. Notice of sale on October 1 was published in three issues of the official paper prior to the sale, and on October 1 the property described was offered for sale, and, no purchaser appearing, was offered again on the same day, and, no purchaser being found, was on that day struck off to the county as purchaser, and certificate of sale reciting sale to the county on October 1 was duly issued. Taxes were duly levied and assessed for each year from 1923 to 1928, both inclusive, and in each year the taxes were permitted to go delinquent.

In April, 1929, notice of application for tax deed, apprising Ruth Hall Schlinski, as owner, of the amount for which the property was sold in 1923, including fifty cents for the issuance of the certificate, and the amount of taxes, interest, and penalty due for each year thereafter, with the total amount due for the redemption of the property — $280.75—was served upon the owner at her then place of residence by registered mail. A copy of this notice was posted on an “allotment pin” on the land, and affidavit of posting, not filed until June 1, recites that fact without stating that the copy was posted “in a conspicuous place” on the land, and recites that the premises “are” unoccupied. A copy of the notice was also published in the official newspaper and affidavit of publication filed on June 1. No redemption was made, and the deed was issued on June 3, 1929.

On September 9 Aronow tendered to the county treasurer $295, with the offer to pay any additional sum necessary to *144 redeem the property, which tender was refused. At the time of trial, Aronow offered to pay into court any sum necessary to cover all taxes, interest, penalties, and charges due the county, to be held for the use and benefit of the county and to abide the decision of the court; by stipulation actual deposit was waived.

The primary questions raised by defendant’s specifications of error are as to whether or not the deeds mentioned are void by reason of fatal defects in the tax sale proceedings, or for like defects in the proceedings for securing the deed, and as to whether or not the curative Act of 1929 rendered the deeds valid. The only questions we need here determine are as to the effect of the attempted tax sale to the county on October 1, 1929, the recital of that fact in the certificate of sale and in each of the deeds, and as to whether or not the cited curative Act validated the deeds.

It is contended that Chapter 1, Laws of 1923, authorized the sale on the last-mentioned day, but this cannot be the law. While the relief measure of 1923 prohibited the sale of property “until October 1, 1923,” it did not authorize the treasurer to strike off property to the county on that day, but, on the contrary, declared that “all existing laws of the state relative to the place and manner of sale * * * shall apply and cover said tax sales made on said date.” The “existing laws” to be applied require the treasurer to designate the “time and place” (sec. 2185, Rev. Codes 1921), and provide the “manner” of conducting the sale as follows: “On the day fixed for sale, or on some subsequent day to which he may have postponed it, * * * the county treasurer * * * must commence the sale of the property advertised” etc. (Sec. 2189.) “But in case there is no purchaser # * * on the first day that the property is offered for sale, then when the property is offered thereafter for sale and there is no purchaser * # # the whole amount of the property assessed must be struck off to the county.” (Sec. 2191.)

Chapter 1, Laws of 1923, merely postponed the first day of the sale from “the day fixed for the sale” to October 1, on *145 which latter day the treasurer was required to comply with the provisions of section 2191, which provisions were redeclared by Chapter 46, Laws of 1923.

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Bluebook (online)
300 P. 270, 90 Mont. 136, 1931 Mont. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glacier-county-v-schlinski-mont-1931.