Laist v. Nichols

33 P.2d 866, 139 Cal. App. 202, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 546
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1934
DocketCiv. No. 1104
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 33 P.2d 866 (Laist v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laist v. Nichols, 33 P.2d 866, 139 Cal. App. 202, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 546 (Cal. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

HAINES, J., pro tem.

This action was brought by the appellant Theodore F. Laist to quiet, against the respondents W. IP. Nichols and Geneva Nichols, husband and wife, title to the property known as lots 2 and 15 of The Highlands in -San Diego County, as delineated on a map filed with the recorder thereof. The lots are located within what were the boundaries of the Linda Vista Irrigation District, which was dissolved by court decree in 1914. Appellant’s claim to the property is derived from a conveyance under date November 9, 1901, from Otto Laist, who is shown by the record to have then owned it. The conveyance was not recorded until April 30, 1929, but its effect is to constitute appellant the -owner, unless his title has been divested by sale and conveyance of the two lots to respondents’ predecessor in interest, one Gould, for nonpayment of the irrigation district assessment for 1911. The trial court found that appellant Laist was not the owner of the lots, but that respondents Nichols were and gave judgment quieting their [205]*205title against Laist, and from that judgment the present appeal is taken.

It was stipulated at the trial that the district was organized in 1901 and the transcript purports to so show. Respondents in their brief claim, and appellant denies, that the statement of this date is an inadvertence and intended to be 1891. We feel justified in taking judicial notice that' the district was actually organized on August 24, 1891 (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1875, subd. 3; Wood v. Kennedy, 117 Cal. App. 53, 60, 61 [3 Pac. (2d) 366]; Broyles v. Mahon, 72 Cal. App. 484 [237 Pac. 763]), and that it was organized under the provisions of the act of March 7, 1887 (Stats. 1887, p. 29), known as the Wright Act. That act having been superseded, however, in 1897 by the act of that year commonly known as the Bridgeford Act (Stats. 1897, p. 254), the proceedings for the assessment and sale of the property must, if valid, have been had under the latter act in pursuance of the provisions of section 109 thereof making it applicable to districts theretofore organized. There can be no question that this might properly have been done.

The amount 'of this 1911 assessment against lot 2 was $116.32 and that against lot 15 $113.49 and the lots were sold by the collector of the district to Gould on February 28, 1912, for $124.63 and $121.66, respectively, and two certificates of sale, one applicable to each lot, issued to him. These certificates described the district as organized under the 1887 act and existing under and by virtue of said act and the acts of the legislature of said state “amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto” and referred to the maker of the certificate, that is to the collector, as “having this day sold the land last hereinafter described under and as commanded by said acts”. The district having meanwhile been dissolved the county treasurer, acting under the 1911 amendment to section 47% of the Bridgeford Act (Stats. 1911, p. 516) in pursuance of the sale, issued a tax deed covering the two lots and containing the usual recitals, on May 21, 1923, to Gould, from whom whatever right to the property was so acquired by him passed by mesne conveyances to respondent W. H. Nichols. The deed to Nichols bore date December 27, 1926, and he paid therefor, through an escrow at the office of the Union Title Insurance Com[206]*206pany of San Diego $694.24, an amount fixed by adding -to 1he purchase price paid by Gould the statutory penalties and interest thereafter accrued.

Manifestly the result of the sales by the collector and the county treasurer’s deed with the conveyances that followed it was to divest the Laist title and vest title to. the property in respondent W. II. Nichols if the proceedings recited were regularly and properly taken. Appellant claims that they were not for the reasons, first, that the collector’s sale was had under the provisions of the repealed 1887 (Wright) Act, which had no application to a district that, according to his claim, was organized under the 1897 (Bridgeford) Act, and in any event authorized no sales under it after its repeal and, second, that after February 28, 1912, when the lots were sold to Gould by the collector, but before May 21, 1923, when the county treasurer issued his deed, the lots had been redeemed.

In taking judicial notice that the district was organized under the Wright Act we have disposed of the contention that the recitals in the certificates of sale were wrong in so reciting. We think that the criticism of the further recitals in the certificates of sale is overtechnical. While it is true that the Wright Act was superseded by the Bridge-ford Act, yet the saving provisions of section 109 of the latter act expressly provide for the continued life of districts organized under earlier statutes and their subjection to the provisions of the new act “so far as applicable”. The provision in section 110 of the Bridgeford Act for the repeal of the Wright Act and the subsequent acts supplemental thereto and amendatory thereof only undertakes to repeal them “so far as they may be inconsistent herewith”. We think that the Bridgeford Act may in respect of the application of its fiscal provisions to districts organized under the Wright Act be properly described as amendatory of and supplemental to that act and therefore that the recitals in the certificates need not be construed as meaning that the sales were had under repealed provisions.

The serious question in this case is whether the lots had not been redeemed in the same year that they were sold and long before the deed issued, in which case, of course, there would have been no authority for issuing the deed. After the respondents had put in their evidence, including [207]*207the county treasurer’s deed, appellant in rebuttal offered two receipts shown by stipulation to have been signed by the collector of the district.* Of these the first bore date March 14, 1912, and ivas in the words and figures following:

‘‘LINDA VISTA IRRIGATION DISTRICT ASSESSMENT RECEIPT, 1911.
“Linda Vista, County of San Diego, Cal., Mar. 14, 1912. Assessment Rate: $31.355 on each $100 valuation.
“Received of Otto Laist, Two Hundred Twenty-nine and 81 Dollars, in payment of the Assessment of said District levied in the year 1911 to pay the Judgments against said District upon the following described property:
“Description. Lot Acres Deal Estate
“The Highlands 2 16.86 371 “ “ 15 16.44 362
“Total value of all property after deductions .$733
“Assessment .$229.81
“Five per cent, added on the last Monday in December, 1911..
“Total. “Lloyd G. Pktees, Tax Collector.”

The second receipt bore date July 7, 1912, and read as follows:

“LINDA VISTA IRRIGATION DISTRICT REDEMPTION RECEIPT.
“Linda Vista, County of San Diego, Cal., July 7 1912.
“Received of T. F. Laist One Hundred Seventeen and 95 Dollars in redemption of the following described property, sold on the - day of February, 1912, for taxes of 1911 levied to pay outstanding indebtedness of said district.
“DESCRIPTION OF THE PROPERTY
“Lots 2 and 15 of the Highlands Sale Certificate No. 929-930.

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Bluebook (online)
33 P.2d 866, 139 Cal. App. 202, 1934 Cal. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laist-v-nichols-calctapp-1934.