Graves v. Seifried

87 P. 674, 31 Utah 203, 1906 Utah LEXIS 27
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1906
DocketNo. 1731
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 87 P. 674 (Graves v. Seifried) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graves v. Seifried, 87 P. 674, 31 Utah 203, 1906 Utah LEXIS 27 (Utah 1906).

Opinion

STKAUP, J.

1. Tbe appellant, plaintiff below, brought this action on tbe 29th day of April, 1904, to foreclose a real estate mortgage dated March 1, 1892, and executed and delivered by tbe defendants Plora I. and Henry E. Seifried to the North American Savings, Loan & Building Company. Tbe mortgage was given to secure tbe payment of a promissory note of even date in tbe sum of $400, and payable “in three years [207]*207from date and before nine years from date, and at the time wben stock No. 4129 of tbe North American Savings, Loan & Building Company of St. Paul shall mature', and each and every share of said stock be of the value of $100.” There was a provision in the note that “after failure of three months to pay any installment of interest or monthly payments due on the stock, the whole note shall become dpe and payable.” In the mortgage it was provided that, in default of such payments, the principal sum “shall, at the election” of the mortgagee, become due and payable. It was further provided by the mortgage- that it was given “to secure a loan made on eight shares of stock in said North American Savings, Loan & Building Company, the monthly payments on which amounted to $4.80,” which the Seifrieds promised to pay until the stock became fully paid. It was further provided that if the Seifrieds should pay the sum of $400 and interest as evidenced by the promissory note, or should pay the' installments of interest due on the note and all fines and monthly payments due on the stock until it became fully paid and of the valúe of $100 per share, and should then surrender the stock to the company in payment of the note, then the mortgage was to be void, otherwise to remain in force.

In an action by the state of Minnesota on relation of the Attorney-General of that state, the plaintiff, on January 8, 1898,-was appointed receiver of the North American Savings, Loan & Building Company, and an adjudication had'that it then was, and for a long time prior thereto had been, insolvent; that it had ceased to do business, and was no longer a going concern, and was unable to carry out the purposes for which it was organized; and it was thereupon prohibited from doing business. Thereafter fhe plaintiff was appointed receiver of the company in and for the district of Utah. The sum alleged to be due on the note was $296.35, with interest due and payable since January 13, 1898. It was alleged that the defendants N. H. and S. L. Ives and Mary B. Crossley claimed an interest in the real estate, and they therefore were made parties defendant. The Seifrieds defaulted, the Iveses filed a disclaimer, and Crossley answered,' pleading the stat[208]*208ute of limitations, and asserting title to the l’eal estate by virtue of a tax deed. On the trial, after plaintiff had introduced the note and mortgage and rested, the defendants Orossley, over plaintiff’s objection, introduced in evidence the tax deed executed and delivered to her on the 16th day of May, 1902, by the county clerk and ex-officio county auditor of Weber county, conveying to her the real estate in question,, a lot situate in Ogden city, which theretofore', and on the 28th day of December, 1897, had been sold to- pay the stun of $12.57, general taxes and costs assessed and levied against the property for the year 1897, and assessed to Flora I. Seifried, in whose name the title to the property then stood.

The deed, among other things, recited the assessment and levy of taxes by the proper officers; that the; treasurer furnished each taxpayer, whose residence or place of business or post-office address was known, a notice of the amount of the tax assessed against him, when and where payable, and that such tax would become delinquent on the 15th day of November next thereafter; that the tax remained unpaid, and became delinquent;’ that the treasurer thereafter published in a newspaper printed and published in Weber county, state of Utah, and having a general circulation in that county, for the period required by law, a list of delinquent taxes showing the amount of taxes assessed against the land in question, and the party assessed therewith, for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1897. The deed further recited that the property assessed, levied upon, and advertised (fully described) was, by the treasurer, on -or after the third Monday in December, 1897, to wit, on the 28th day of December, 1897, offered for sale to pay the taxes, -with the costs and charges thereon, at public auction in front of the county courthouse in said county, and that M. H. Ives bid the amount of the taxes, and costs, assessed against the- property, amounting to $12.57, and that the land was thereupon sold to him, and a certificate of sale issued, which was thereafter assigned by him to the defendant Crossley; and that the real estate was sold subject to redemption, and that no redemption had been made. The deed was executed by the proper officer, [209]*209and properly acknowledged. In appellant’s printed abstract, where a copy of tbe deed- appears, the face of the deed shows that the property was assessed to Flora I. Seifried; in the transcript, where a typewritten copy of the deed appears, it shows Flora J. Sigfried; and in other portions of the transcript, where the deed is referred to, it shows Flora I. Siegfried. The defense also put in evidence the certificate of sale showing that the property was. assessed to Flora I. Seifried. The certificate appears to be regular on its face, and in compliance with the statute. There was also admitted in evidence the delinquent tax list as published, showing the property assessed to Flora I. Sigfried. Evidence was also given that the property was assessed to Flora I. Seifried, and that the tax notice was mailed to her. It was further shown that the defendant Crossley paid the taxes on the property for the years 1898 to 1904, both inclusive, amounting to something like $84. It was also1 shown that she was in the actual possession of the property. Upon findings made by the trial court, plaintiff’s action was held barred by the statute of limitations. It was also held that the- tax deed was valid, and that the defendant’s title thereunder was superior to plaintiff’s mortgage lien. To reverse this judgment, the plaintiff has prosecuted this appeal.

2. It is claimed (1) that the court erred in holding the action barred; (2) in admitting in evidence the tax deed; (3) in admitting in evidence the publication of the delinquent tax list; and (4) in holding the tax title good. Holding, as we do, that plaintiff’s action is barred by the statute of limitations, it is unnecessary to pass on the questions relating to the alleged irregularities of the tax ■ proceedings, or as tQ' whether the tax deed,was sufficient to operate as a conveyance of title, and, therefore, such questions are not decided by us.

Section 2855, Nevised Statutes 1898, provides that civil actions can be commenced only within the periods prescribed after the cause of action shall have accrued. Section 2875 provides that an action upon any contract, obligation, or lia[210]*210bility founded upon an instrument of writing shall be brought within six years. Section 3498 provides that there can be but one action on any debt or for the enforcement of any right secured by mortgage upon real estate, which action must be in accordance with the provision for foreclosure of mortgages.

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Bluebook (online)
87 P. 674, 31 Utah 203, 1906 Utah LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graves-v-seifried-utah-1906.