Jensen Livestock Co. v. Custer County

124 P.2d 1013, 113 Mont. 285, 140 A.L.R. 658, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 29
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1942
DocketNo. 8,300.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 124 P.2d 1013 (Jensen Livestock Co. v. Custer County) 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
Jensen Livestock Co. v. Custer County, 124 P.2d 1013, 113 Mont. 285, 140 A.L.R. 658, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 29 (Mo. 1942).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JOHNSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants appeal from a judgment rendered against them and in favor of the plaintiff Jensen Livestock Company im a quiet title action in which the complaint was in the usual form. The defendants, Custer county and its county commissioners, answered and filed a cross-complaint in which they showed the acquisition by the county of a tax deed to the property in question, setting forth a copy of the deed as an exhibit,, and detailing the proceedings leading up to its issuance. By amended reply and answer to the cross-complaint, plaintiff raised the two issues hereinafter discussed, and offered to pay the delinquent taxes.

The learned trial judge made findings of fact and conclusions, of law in plaintiff’s favor upon both issues and rendered a decree quieting plaintiff’s title, with the proviso that the delinquent taxes should be paid on or before a certain date, or in case-of appeal and affirmance within thirty days after remittitur.

It is agreed that the county holds whatever title the tax deed: *288 confers. The two defendants Andrew Odegaard and Bradshaw Band and Livestock Company filed answers which are not before us, but it is agreed that their rights depend entirely upon the validity of the county’s tax title.

The necessary fact statement is brief: William H. Jensen was the owner of the land in 1931, and in 1932 the plaintiff acquired the property by a deed from Jensen and his wife which was immediately recorded, and has never conveyed the property. The tax sale was held on July 21, 1931, and no purchaser appearing at the sale the property was struck off to the county on the same day. It had been assessed and offered for sale in four separate tracts and all four tracts, together with two others which have subsequently been redeemed, were included in one tax sale certificate in which is the following recital:

‘ ‘ That there was no purchaser in good faith for said property as provided by law on the day that the property was offered for sale as aforesaid, and no person or purchaser offered to take said property and pay such taxes, costs and charges, and that thereupon the undersigned county treasurer of Custer County struck off the whole amount of the property assessed as aforesaid, to Custer County, Montana, as the purchaser thereof and a duplicate certificate of sale issued pursuant to law.”

In 1939, when it was decided to apply for tax deeds upon delinquent property, four separate notices were served and four sets of notices and affidavits were filed in the county clerk’s -office and also in the county treasurer’s office, and one deed was taken upon plaintiff’s failure to redeem.

The notices and affidavits with regard to the four tracts are virtually identical. Each notice was directed to the plaintiff as owner and to other persons not parties here. The notices were prepared on printed forms on the reverse of which were affidavit forms to be executed by the county clerk stating the name and post office address of the owner, and showing that he had made service of notice upon the owner and other interested parties by registered mail, and had caused personal service to be made by the sheriff upon “the person occupying the prop *289 erty, ’ ’ and had caused notice to be served by publication on any interested person whose post office address was unknown. In each instance these affidavits stated that “the owner * ® * is Jensen Livestock Company” but in the portion of the affidavit form relating to personal service by the sheriff upon the occupant the word “occupying” was stricken and the word “owning” inserted, so that the statement is that affiant caused personal service to be made by the sheriff “upon Mrs. W. H. Jensen, the person owning the property.” Annexed to the notices and affidavits were the publisher’s affidavits of publication, and also the sheriff’s affidavits showing service upon “Mrs. W. H. Jensen who is the owner,” etc., the word “occupant” preceding the word “owner” in the printed form having been stricken out. The affidavits made no reference whatever to the occupancy or the occupants of the land.

These notices and affidavits were filed in the county clerk’s office on March 12, 1940, and executed duplicates were presented to the county treasurer and filed in his office on the same da.y, with applications by the county clerk for the issuance of a tax deed to the county; and the tax deed was issued on March 15, 1940, and filed for record in the county clerk’s office five days later. Annexed to each set of notices and affidavits as filed in the county clerk’s office, but not as presented to the county treasurer, was a postal registry return card indicating the receipt of some unidentified registered article by William H. Jensen, as agent of Jensen Livestock Company, to which it had apparently been addressed; but nowhere in the affidavit, or even in the testimony at the trial, is there anything to show that the registered article was the notice in question. William H. Jensen testified at the trial that he was an incorporator and officer of plaintiff corporation and answered affirmatively the question, “You have been the occupants of the land since then? ”

Only two questions are presented, both going to the validity of the tax deed. One involves the validity of the 1931 tax sales and the tax sale certificate; the other involves the sufficiency of *290 service and proof of service of the notice given of the application for the tax-deed.

The first question is whether the tax sale certificate is void because of its issuance to the county on the same day on which the property was offered at public tax sale. The contention is, not that the county became a competitive bidder at the sale, which of course it had no right to do (Rush v. Lewis and Clark County, 36 Mont. 566, 93 Pac. 943; Id., 37 Mont. 240, 95 Pac. 836), but only that it was necessary to wait until the next day after the sale before taking the tax sale certificate.

The question is the meaning of section 2191, Eevised Codes 1921, as amended by Chapter 46, Laws 1923, and by Chapter 31, Laws 1929 (now section 2191, Eevised Codes 1935). Prior to the 1929 amendment it provided “in case there is no purchaser in good faith for the same * * * 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 in good faith for the same, the whole amount of the property assessed must be struck off to the county as the purchaser,” etc.

As amended in 1929 and effective upon the sale of this property in 1931, this section provided “in case there is no purchaser in good faith for the same * * * on the first day that the property is offered for sale, then the whole amount of the propertj'- assessed must be struck off to the County as the purchaser,” etc.

In this respect the only change was the elimination of the words appearing above in italics.

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Bluebook (online)
124 P.2d 1013, 113 Mont. 285, 140 A.L.R. 658, 1942 Mont. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jensen-livestock-co-v-custer-county-mont-1942.