Montgomery v. City of Des Moines
This text of 190 Iowa 705 (Montgomery v. City of Des Moines) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The argument for appellant is that the rule works an injustice, in that the holder of the tax deed obtains the benefit of improvements which have enhanced the value of the property since his bid was made thereon, and that there is no equitable reason why he should not bear his share of cost of the special [707]*707benefits thus conferred upon him. The argument has its force. If the question were open, we should deem it worthy of much consideration.
We do not overlook that, in appellants’ reply brief, they have withdrawn somewhat the concession made in their opening brief that there is no material difference between the present statute and the statute which was in force when the Harrington case was decided. In their reply brief, they set forth that they have discovered a material change in the statute, and that for such reason the cited ease does not control. The statute in force which was construed in the Harrington case contained the following provision:
“Said assessment * * * shall be a lien upon * * * the entire property on which such tax is levied, from the commencement of the work, and shall remain a lien until fully paid, and shall have precedence over all other liens except ordinary taxes.” Acts of the Twenty-fifth General Assembly; Chapter 7, Section 12.
The present statute, Section 816 of the 1913 Supplement, contains the following:
“ * * * Thereupon all special taxes for the cost thereof, or any part of said cost, which are to be assessed and levied against real property, or any railway or street railway, together with all interest and penalties on all of said assessments, shall become and remain a lien on such property from the date of the filing of said papers with the county auditor until paid, and shall have precedence over all other liens except ordinary taxes. ’ ’
So far as the question here involved is concerned, we see no material difference between the two statutes. We hold, therefore, that the point is clearly ruled by the Harrington case. The decree below is, therefore, — Affirmed.
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