Linn County v. Rozelle

162 P.2d 150, 177 Or. 245, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 153
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 162 P.2d 150 (Linn County v. Rozelle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Linn County v. Rozelle, 162 P.2d 150, 177 Or. 245, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 153 (Or. 1945).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a decree of the circuit court which holds that the plaintiff is the owner of the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 29, Township 13 South of Eange 1 East of Willamette Meridian, Linn County, Oregon, and enjoins the defendants (appellants) from interfering with that parcel of property.

The issue submitted by the appeal is the ownership of the above-described tract of land. The plaintiff’s claim to title is based upon a foreclosure of a certificate of delinquency for taxes assessed against the property in 1922. The defendants (appellants) attack the validity of the foreclosure suit just mentioned and claim that title to the disputed property is vested in the defendant, Ada Eozell. According to them, Ada Eozell, or her predecessors in interest,- gained title to the property through adverse possession. Only the defendant, Ada Eozell, makes claim to title.

The complaint avers: The taxes for the year 1922 assessed against the above-described tract were not paid; March 1, 1922, one A. A. White was the record owner of the tract; in 1928 a certificate of delinquency bearing No. 1708 was issued; later the plaintiff instituted a suit to foreclose the certificate; the publication of the summons was ordered by the court; the *249 summons was published for six successive weeks; February 4,1929, the circuit court, after adjudging the defendants in the foreclosure suit, including White, in default, entered a decree of foreclosure; February 23, 1929, the sheriff, acting pursuant to the decree, offered the property for sale; later the sheriff sold the tract to the plaintiff; and still later the sheriff issued to the plaintiff a deed of conveyance which was recorded September 3, 1929. Omitting details,' the above is the manner in which the plaintiff alleges it acquired title to the disputed parcel of property. The complaint avers that the defendants, in recent months, repeatedly and wilfully trespassed upon the property. Those averments are accompanied with others which state that the defendants destroyed fences erected by the plaintiff upon the property and took from the property “many truckloads of gravel, the exact number being unknown to plaintiff.” After alleging that the defendants threaten to repeat their trespasses, the complaint charges:

“Plaintiff’s remedy at law is inadequate in that such remedy would necessitate a multiplicity of actions, each of which would involve expense and time and effort of the courts greatly out of proportion to the damage caused to and sustained by plaintiff by each of the separate acts which defendants threaten to commit against plaintiff’s said property, and in that the damage caused by each of said acts would be trifling, but the total damage to plaintiff by the threatened repetition and continuing of such acts would be irreparable.”

The prayer asks for an order adjudicating the plaintiff to be the owner of the property and enjoining the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff’s ownership and possession.

*250 The answer denies the averments of the complaint. It alleges that the defendant, Ada Bozelle, whose true surname is averred to be Bozell, “is the owner in fee simple of the property described in said complaint” with the exception of the part north of the center of the channel of the South Santiam river. None of the defendants makes any claim to the part which lies north of the river, but all four, as already indicated, claim that the defendant, Ada Bozell, is the owner of the part which -lies south of the river. The answer avers:

“Said defendant, Ada Bozelle, is now, and has been in the possession of said real property above described, and the whole thereof for more than twenty years last past; and that said defendant and her predecessors in interest have been in the actual, open, continuous, notorious, hostile, exclusive, and adverse possession of said real property, and the whole thereof, for more than seventy years last past under a claim of ownership in fee simple of said real property, and the whole thereof. ’ ’

The remaining parts of the answer attack the validity of the plaintiff’s title. They allege: The property in dispute, together with other lands aggregating in all 153 acres, was entered upon the assessment roll for the year 1922 as a single tract at a valuation of $2,000; in 1928 the sheriff segregated the tract into four parcels and in so doing attempted to apportion the taxes originally levied against the entire tract to the four parcels; one of the parcels which he created included the north half of the northwest quarter, a part of which is the land in dispute; later the sheriff attempted to make another segregation — this time he combined the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter with *251 the land in dispute, thus forming the tract covered by certificate of delinquency No. 1708; August 31, 1928, the sheriff issued the aforementioned certificate of delinquency No. 1708 to Linn County in the sum of $70.68; certificate No. 1708 covered both the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter (the tract in dispute) and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter. Continuing, the answer avers:

“On the 4th day of February, 1929, a default and decree was entered in said proceeding declaring all the defendants therein to be in default and ordering said certificate of delinquency No. 1708 to be foreclosed and the real property therein described sold to satisfy such certificate of delinquency plus interest, penalties and costs of foreclosure.”

The answer then says that after the entry of the foreclosure decree

“the sheriff of Linn County, Oregon, again made a division of the real property described in said certificate of delinquency and on the 20th day of February, T929, allowed a redemption of the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said Section 29 for a sum of money arbitrarily determined by said sheriff.”

According to further averments, the sheriff, on February 23, 1929, “made a pretended sale” of the tract in dispute for the sum of $39.06 to the county to satisfy the certificate of delinquency, and still later executed to the county a deed which described the property and which was recorded in the deed records September 3, 1929. The remaining allegations aver that Ada RozeÜ was not a defendant in the tax foreclosure proceeding; costs in the sum of $3.20 were added to the amount stated in the certificate, although no cost bill was filed; the property was worth $10,000 and therefore the sum *252 received by the sheriff ($39.06) “is greatly disproportionate to the true value”; and for the reasons above delineated the foreclosure decree is void. Finally, the answer tenders into court the sum of $70.68 “to be paid to plaintiff in case the right of title of claimant shall fail in this suit.”

The reply, apart from admitting that the disputed tract was taxed, that in default of the payment of the tax the property was sold, and that later a deed was delivered to the county, denied all averments of the answer. It pleaded facts intended to show an estoppel and others indicating that the defendants permitted the short term statute of limitations to run before challenging the tax deed.

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Bluebook (online)
162 P.2d 150, 177 Or. 245, 1945 Ore. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linn-county-v-rozelle-or-1945.