Medland v. Linton

82 N.W. 866, 60 Neb. 249, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 139
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1900
DocketNo. 9,209
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 866 (Medland v. Linton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Medland v. Linton, 82 N.W. 866, 60 Neb. 249, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 139 (Neb. 1900).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

An action was begun in the district court of Douglas county by plaintiff, appellee, for the foreclosure of a tax lien upon certain property in the city of Omaha, described in the petition, for state, county and city taxes, including special assessments against the property, on account of the opening, extending and grading of a certain street in said city. Several defenses were interposed at the trial by appellants, all of which were directed to the alleged invalidity of the tax sale and the special assess-[254]*254merits referred to. A decree was rendered for tlie plaintiff for the principal sums paid at the tax sale and subsequently thereto, with interest and attorney fees, and the property was directed to be sold to satisfy the decree so rendered. From this decree defendants appeal. The several objections to the judgment of the trial court will be noted in their order.

It is first urged that the sale for taxes, being at private sale, was without authority and invalid, for the reason, as alleged, that the law had not been complied with, in that no report had been made to or filed with the county clerk, of lands sold at public auction, as required by section 112, article 1, chapter 77, of the revenue laws of the state. The section referred to requires that “the treasurer shall keep a sale book, showing the lands sold, the name of the purchaser, and the sums for which each tract was sold, and on or before the first Monday of December following the sale of real property he shall file in the office of the county clerk of his county a return thereof, as the same shall appear on the said sale book, and such certificate shall be evidence of the regularity of the proceedings.” Before lands and lots can be legally sold at private sale, under the provisions of the section quoted, the treasurer must file with the county clerk a return, showing the lands and lots sold at public auction, to whom sold, and for what sum; and any attempt to sell real property for taxes at private sale without compliance with the provisions of said section invalidates the sale so attempted to be made. The force and effect of the provisions quoted is no longer an open question in this state. The construction given was put upon it as early as 1880, when, in the case of State v. Helmer, 10 Nebr., 25, it was determined “that the county treasurer had no right or power to sell real estate for taxes at private sale until after his report of sales of real estate at public sale is made and filed in .the office of the county clerk.” The ruling just mentioned has been adhered to and reaffirmed in Adams v. Osgood, 42 Nebr., 451, and Johnson v. Finley, 54 Nebr., 733.

[255]*255In the case at bar it is disclosed by a stipulation of the parties, preserved in the record, that the only attempt at compliance by the county treasurer with the statutory requirements under consideration, was in talcing the records of his office showing the public sales of real property for taxes due that year into the office of the county clerk and, presenting such record to the county clerk, in his presence making a certificate thereon at the end of the record of sales to the effect that he thereby made a return, and that the list of property as shown on the record had been sold by him at public salé as required by law, and then signing his name to such certificate; after which, and on the same date, according to the stipulation, the said book or record containing said list of lands, with the certificate thereon, was taken back to the county treasurer’s office, and that no other or different return of public sales was made for the year mentioned. This, in our judgment, is neither in letter nor in spirit a compliance with the section of the statute referred to. It is, in fact, a mere subterfuge or evasion of the law, and is no return at all, and can not be countenanced as such. It would be much more reasonable and logical to construe the statute as directory only, and hold that a compliance therewith is not essential to the validity of the sale of real property at private tax sale, than to treat as a compliance with the law the acts of the county treasurer as they are disclosed by the stipulation in the record in this case. As has heretofore been noted, this question is already settléd by a construction of the section quoted, and a substantial compliance with its provisions is necessary in order that a private sale of lands for taxes may be valid. The law requires that this return, or report, shall be filed in the office of the county clerk. To file, in law, means “to leave a paper with an officer for action or preservation; and, to indorse a paper, as received into custody, and give it its place- among other papers — to file away.” Anderson, Law Dictionary. In modem usage, “filing a paper consists in placing it in the proper official’s custody [256]*256by the party charged with this duty, and the making of the proper indorsement by the officer.” Stone v. Crow, 2 S. Dak., 525, 528. “A paper is said to be filed when it is delivered to the proper officer and by him received to be kept on file. (Bouvier, Law Dictionary.) And the derivation and meaning of the word, as defined in the dictionaries, carries with it the idea of permanent preservation; becoming part of the permanent records of the public office where it is filed. (Rapalje & Lawrence, Law Dictionary; Century Dictionary.)” People v. Peck, 67 Hun [N. Y.], 560, 570; Gorham v. Summers, 25 Minn., 81; Pfirmann v. Henkel, 1 Bradw. [Ill.], 145. There being no proper return of lands sold at public auction, as by law required, the treasurer was without authority to dispose of the lot of land in controversy at private sale, and the tax sale thus made is, therefore, invalid. By the subsequent proceedings had thereunder, the plaintiff was not in a position to recover the penalty of twenty per cent interest and attorney’s fee, as are allowed in cases o' valid tax sales. Under the holdings of this court, a~ most, he is entitled to subrogation to the rights of the county, and to enforce a lien against the property upon which the taxes were paid for the principal sums paid, with interest thereon as provided by the statute.

In Stegeman v. Faulkner, 42 Nebr., 53, 54, it is held that “a purchaser at an invalid tax sale is not entitled to have taxed in his favor an attorney’s fee as part of the costs of the foreclosure of the lien to which he has by payment become subrogated.” In the opinion by Ryan, C., page , 56, it is said: “As the rights of the appellant to foreclose are measured by the rights of the county in the same respect, it logically follows that the provision as to attorney’s fees can not be held to apply to such a foreclosure as the plaintiff was entitled to in this action.”

In Dillon v. Merriam, 22 Nebr., 151, it is held that “where for want of authority of the treasurer to sell land for taxes, no title passes to the purchaser; he is merely subrogated to the rights of the county, and to the same [257]*257rate of interest that the county would, he entitled to recover.”- See, also, Adams v. Osgood, supra.

Section 105, article 1, chapter 77, of the revenue law provides that all unpaid taxes upon real property after delinquency occurs shall draw thereafter ten per cent interest. Section 86, chapter 12a, Compiled Statutes, 1893, being the then charter act for metropolitan cities, provides that delinquent city taxes shall draw interest at one per cent a month.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 866, 60 Neb. 249, 1900 Neb. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medland-v-linton-neb-1900.