McDonald v. Padilla

202 P.2d 970, 53 N.M. 116
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1948
DocketNo. 5055.
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 970 (McDonald v. Padilla) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Padilla, 202 P.2d 970, 53 N.M. 116 (N.M. 1948).

Opinion

COMPTON, Justice.

This is a statutory action, brought by plaintiff (appellee here) to quiet title to 205.26 acres of land, a part of the town of Atrisco Grant. The plaintiff claims under a tax deed from the state, and the defendants, each claiming some part of the land in suit, allege that the tax title under which appellee claims is void and sues by cross action to quiet the title to the land claimed by him in himself. If plaintiff’s tax deed is valid, as held by the trial court, then the cause should be affirmed, otherwise it should be reversed and rendered for defendants.

The question then is whether the plaintiff’s tax deed is valid. The facts are in substance as follows:

In 1920 the land in suit was a part of the common lands of the town of Atrisco Grant, a confirmed Mexican Pueblo grant. In that year these lands were assessed for taxes. Thereafter, on December 17, 1920, a suit was filed in the district court of Bernalillo County by the trustees of the Atrisco Grant, for the purposes stated in the complaint, which was in words and figures as follows:

“No. 12666
Board of Trustees In the District of the Town of Court of the Coun-Atrisco ty of Bernalillo v. State of New Mex-Stephen E. Roehl, ■ ico Assessor of Bernalillo County
Complaint
“Plaintiff in the above entitled cause complains of the defendant and shows to the court that the said defendant is the assessor of Bernalillo County and that he has assessed and placed upon the tax roll of 1920 the property of said plaintiff although by two decisions of this court it has been held that the said property is not subject to taxation. “Plaintiff therefore prays that by an order of this court the said defendant be required to strike out from said tax roll the assessment of the said property, and that his successor or successors in office be restrained and enjoined from making any like assessment in the future.
The Board of Trustees of the Town of Atrisco
(SEAL) By (Sgd.) David J. Metzgar, President.”

The complaint was endorsed as follows:

“No. 12666 '
Board of Trustees of Town of Atrisco v. Stephen E. Roehls Assessor Bernalillo Co.
Filed in my office this
Dec. 17, 1920
Nestor Montoya, Clerk
By Harry F. Lee (Written in, in ink, and initialed OBM and DM, Jr. (Sgd.) Deputy.
Filed by
George R. Craig, Dist. Atty.”

The following decree was entered:

“No. 126666
Board of Trustees' of the Town of Atrisco, v. Stephen E. Roehl, Assessor of Bernalillo County
In the District Court County of Bernalillo State of New Mexico

Upon reading and filing the complaint of said plaintiff, from which it appears that the defendant has assessed and placed upon the tax roll of 1920, the property of plaintiff which has, by two decisions of this court, been held exempt from taxation.

It is ordered and adjudged by the Court, as prayed in said complaint, that the defendant as such assessor as aforesaid, be, and he hereby is, required to cancel and erase the said assessment upon the tax roll of 1920; and it is further

Ordered and adjudged that the successor and successors of the said defendant in the said office of assessor be and hereby are restrained and enjoined from again assessing the said property which, as aforesaid, has been held to be exempt from, taxation.

(Sgd.) M. E. Hickey, District Judge.”

The records of Bernalillo County further show in connection with this cause the following docket entries:

“1920
Dec. 17 Filing Petition for Injunction
Dec. 17 Filing Final Order Rec. XI page 466
Dec. 17 Certified Copy to Assessor.”

No other documents are recorded or in the court file. No appeal was taken from this judgment.

In the years of 1935, 1936 and 1939, while the title of the lands described in the complaint was in the town of Atrisco, it was inadvertently assessed for those years to Phillip Hubbell and others of that name (all of whom were strangers to the title), upon the mistaken belief that the Hubbells owned the land and that it was not the property of the town of Atrisco. The defendants and the town of Atrisco had no notice of this assessment at any time prior to the issuance of the tax deeds to plaintiff.

The taxes so assessed were not paid and the land was sold to the state of New Mexico for delinquent taxes, based on those assessments. The plaintiff purchased the tax title from the state, upon which alone his claim rests. The individual claim of each defendant is based upon a deed from the town of Atrisco, executed after the property was assessed for 1939. From the date of the entry of the decree in 1920, herein copied, up to the year of 1946 the trustees of the town of Atrisco and the several assessors of Bernalillo County relied thereon as evidence that the property was exempt from taxation, and the latter refused to knowingly assess the common lands of the town of Atrisco; and only assessed the land in suit on the mistaken belief that it was owned by the Hubbells. There is nothing in the file or record of this case to indicate the basis in fact for the conclusion of the court that the property was exempt from taxation. There was no other record introduced in evidence pertaining to case No. 12,666.

The trial court concluded that the decree of 1920 is void for lack of “jurisdiction over the defendant Stephen E. Roehl, Assessor of Bernalillo County, or his successors in office.”

The finding upon which this conclusion is based is as follows:

“That it appears from the record in Cause No. 12,666, on the docket of the District Court of Bernalillo County, New Mexico, in which an order was entered signed by Judge M. E. Hickey, which order was received in evidence herein as defendants’ exhibit 2, that no summons was issued nor process served upon the defendant, and no appearance for the defendant was entered.”

The finding not attacked would be conclusive but for the fact that defendants’ exhibit 2 referred to in it, which was also made a part of the findings, does not support it. Construing them together, the most that we can make of it is that neither the judgment nor any of the proceedings in evidence disclose whether process was issued or served on the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
202 P.2d 970, 53 N.M. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-padilla-nm-1948.