Johnson v. Miller

391 P.2d 437, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 201
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1964
Docket379
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 391 P.2d 437 (Johnson v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Miller, 391 P.2d 437, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 201 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

AREND, Justice.

Lars Larry Johnson as the plaintiff below brought this action in 1957 against the appellees and others as defendants below to quiet title to certain real property described in the complaint and on the official plat of the property as

"Lot 1 of the Resubdivided Lot 18-A and Lot 2 of the Resubdivided Lot 18-A, Simonson Homestead Subdivision, located in the SW ¼ of SW ¼ of Section 23, Township 13 North, Range 4 West, Seward Meridian, in the Anchorage Recording Precinct, Alaska.”

The parties are in agreement as to the following facts: The plaintiff acquired the lots by quitclaim deed from James K. Tail-man, who had purchased them at a tax sale conducted by the Anchorage Independent School District on October 14, 1954, and then received tax deeds to the lots from the school district. The defendant Miller, on the other hand, acquired his title to the lots from one Patricia Lee White and then mortgaged, and later conveyed, them to the defendant National Bank of Alaska. Miller was the last owner of record at the time of the tax sale. The correct record description of the property is as we have *438 shown it above, although the plaintiff claims that it can be and has been considerably shortened. In the delinquent tax roll and the newspaper publication thereof in connection with the tax sale, the two lots are described as follows, with variances from the record description shown in italics:

“Lot 1 of Resub of 18, Lot 2 of Re-sub of 1 18A, Simonsen Subdv.”

In the record appears the affidavit of the principal clerk of the Anchorage News, a daily newspaper, attesting that the delinquent tax roll was published in the Anchorage News “for a period of four insertions, commencing on the 13th day of April, 1954, and ending on the 4th day of May, 1954, both dates inclusive.”

The primary issue between the parties is the validity of the tax title. The defendants have consistently maintained in the court below and on appeal that the tax title is void because the tax sale was not held according to law. Specifically, the defendants contend that the description of the subject property in the delinquent tax roll and the published notice thereof was incorrect, misleading and not in compliance with Alaska law in that it misnamed the Simonson Homestead Subdivision as “Si-monsen Subdivision” and incorrectly described resubdivided lot 18A as resubdivid-ed lot 18 in one place and as resubdivided lot 1 18A in another place. Furthermore, the notice of the delinquent tax roll had not been published for the full statutory period.

After considerable procedural skirmishing below, the defendants, on September 17, 1962, moved for summary judgment. 1 On April 2, 1963, the trial court decided the issue on briefs filed by the parties and granted the defendants’ motion and in a partial summary judgment 2 declared null and void the claims of the plaintiff against the defendants and forever foreclosed the plaintiff from any interest or estate in the two lots described in the complaint.

The findings made by the court in support of its action are set forth in its memorandum decision as follows:

“The subdivision in which the land is said to be located in the published notice is listed as the ‘Simonsen Subdivision.’ The correct description of the subdivision should be ‘Simonsen [yic] Homestead Subdivision.’ This error combined with the defendant Bank’s uncontroverted affidavit showing that there is also a Simonson Estate Subdivision in the same area is seriously misleading. Added to this omission to describe accurately the subdivision in which the assessed property is located are a series of inaccuracies in the descriptions of the particular lots involved. [The court then sets forth the incorrect descriptions argued by the defendants.]
“The statute under which the property was ordered sold requires that prior to any order of sale that there be prepared a delinquent tax roll and that ‘ * * * such roll shall show therein the property assessed * * * ’. The
same section of the statute requires publication of notice of the assessment which must also ‘ * * * describe
each tract on the roll on which the tax has not been paid. * * * ’ 3
⅜ }jC ⅜ 5⅜ ⅜ ⅜
“The School District did not strictly comply with the statutory requirements and failure to do so affected substan *439 tial rights of the taxpayers. 4 See Dodson v. Thomason [217 Ark. 747], 233 SW 2d 395 and Stout v. Healey [216 Ark. 821], 228 SW2d 45. [Italicized in the original.]
“Furthermore, I find that the period of publication was not sufficient. See Early v. Dos [Doe] [sic] [16 How. 610], 57 U.S.Reports 610 [14 L.Ed. 1079]. [Italicized in the original.]”

From the foregoing findings and the partial summary judgment it is evident that the trial court agreed with the defendants’ theory of the case, set forth in their written memoranda in support of the motion for summary judgment, that the court which ordered the sale of Miller’s lots for delinquent taxes was without jurisdiction to do so because the school district had not complied with the statutory prerequisites for such a sale. This is further evidenced by the trial court’s approba-tive reference to the cases of Tintic Undine Mining Co. v. Ercanbrack 5 and Early v. Doe 6 in the memorandum decision.

In the Tintic case the Utah Supreme Court, in setting aside a tax sale, stated:

“It is elemental, and settled beyond argument in this jurisdiction, that tax sale proceedings and statutes are stric-tissimi juris. The sales are made exclusively under statutory authority. The seller is making a sale not coupled with - an interest, and derives his authority solely from the statute, and it is derived from no rule or principle of the common law. He can have no authority to sell except as he is made the agent of the law for that purpose, and, if the steps necessary to precede his action fail, he is not invested with legal right to make the sale; if one step fails, they all fail. The rule, therefore, is that all the preliminary requirements of the statute, made conditions to the exercise of the right and power to sell, and designating the various proceedings which culminate in the sale, must have been strictly complied with. The officers who execute this power should follow the steps outlined for its exercise with precision. It is a special jurisdiction and must be strictly pursued. As was said in Wis-ter v.

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Bluebook (online)
391 P.2d 437, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-miller-alaska-1964.