Neff v. Gray

1932 OK 416, 11 P.2d 755, 157 Okla. 207, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 854
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 24, 1932
Docket20935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1932 OK 416 (Neff v. Gray) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neff v. Gray, 1932 OK 416, 11 P.2d 755, 157 Okla. 207, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 854 (Okla. 1932).

Opinion

KORNEGAY, J.

This was an action for a mandamus to compel the county treasurer of McIntosh county to issue tax resale deeds to the plaintiff, who bought the property at a resale tax sale and paid the money represented by her bids, which amounted to all the taxes due the county in each case. There were three separate tracts, on two of which the sale price was the amount of taxes due, and on the third tract the ■sale price was more than the taxes that were due. On the third tract there had been a sale for a former year, and it had been bought by an individual, and the tax certificates had been assigned to an intervener in the case.

The return to the alternative writ of mandamus was a general denial, but an admission of being the treasurer of McIntosh county, denying the regularity of the sale relied on by the plaintiff, the present plaintiff in error, and setting up the fact that the plaintiff at the time of the sale, and prior thereto, was the record owner of the property and charged with the duty of paying the delinquent taxes. It is further answered that there was a judgment obtained by L. E. Neff in the district court of McIntosh county on the 16th of April, 1926, reducing the valuation of lot A and the east half of the northwest quarter of section 18, township 12 north, range 15 east, from $@,000 to $600 for the year 1924, and it was claimed that a proceeding had been brought to set aside this judgment reducing the assessment, and that knowledge of the. judgment’s existence was only recently brought to the attention of the defendant treasurer, and upon such knowledge a suit had been started to set aside that judgment. It was further stated that by virtue of the judgment, if allowed to stand, McIntosh county would lose four-fifths of the actual taxes for the year 1924.

This return was signed by the county attorney of McIntosh county, Milam M. King, as attorney for the county treasurer, and also by the assistant county attorney.

R. S. Savery filed a plea of Intervention, setting up his rights under a tax sale for delinquent taxes for the year 1924, and certificate to E. Ray and assignment of the tax sale certificate, and adopted the response of the treasurer, the tract that he intervened for being the east half of the northwest quarter, and lot 2 of section 18, township . 12 north, range 15 east. He pleaded that he had caused notice to be served upon the record owner, Lucinda Gill, of ownership of this tax sale certificate, and of a demand on the treasurer to issue a deed under the tax sale certificate. He offered to pay the subsequent taxes, and prayed that the resale as to this land be vacated and held for nought and plaintiff take nothing by reason of the purchase, and for general relief for the intervener. This was filed by R. S. Savery, acting by Twyford & Smith and Leo G. Mann as attorneys.

The application to 'intervene was permitted to remain on file over objection of *208 the plaintiff, and the plaintiff filed a general denial to the matter set up in the plea of intervention. On the 24th of June, 1929, cause came on for trial before Judge Harve L. Melton, and the intervener was not represented at the trial, the plaintiff below, the present plaintiff in error, being represented by attorneys Neff and Freeman, and the county treasurer being represented by the county attorney. An explanation was made in opening statements as to the status of the respective pieces of property.

It appears therefrom, and the evidence adduced, that the piece of property embraced 'in the intervention was sold in 1925 for the taxes in 1,924, and that subsequent taxes not being paid, a resale resulted in 1929, out of which this litigation in part arose. The plaintiff, Lucinda Neff, was the highest bidder for each of the tracts involved, and having waited 80 days and the t^easurter refusing to '’execute the deeds, mandamus proceeding was started to compel the making of the deeds.

It appears that a suit had been instituted in the district court of McIntosh county by M. F. Wood against L. E. Neff and others to enforce a tax lien on the east half of the northeast quarter of section 8, township 8 north, range 13 east, and the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section '9, township 8 north, range 13 east, resulting in a judgment quieting title thereto in L. E. Neff, and establishing plaintiff’s lien for taxes and lowering the assessment for 1924 on the land sold for taxes in 1925, for which Savery held the tax sale certificate.

After considerable statement of position, the county treasurer was called to the stand by the attorney for the plaintiff, and it developed that in 1929, beginning on the 15th of April and ending on the 20th, he had conducted a resale of lands that had been exposed to sale and bought in by the county before, and that the only taxes advertised as being due were those that were coming to the county, and that the tax sale certificate outstanding 'in favor of the intervener was not included in the amount advertised as being due. It further developed that he had given notice in the Indian Journal for four Issues, and apparently the sale was regular. At page 30 of the record, the following testimony was had:

“Q. Now, I wish you would refer to your records and give us the amount that you sold each tract for. -A. What land do you have reference to? Q. I will read the description of the land to you now. The first piece, the east half of the northeast quarter of section eight, township eight north, range thirteen east? A. East half of of the northeast, eight-eight, thirteen, was advertised for the 1925, 1926, 1927, and the 1928 taxes. The taxes, costs, and penalties was $106.28 for the four years. Q. $106.28 for the four years, what did it bring? A. It was sold to Lucinda Neff for $106.28, the amount of taxes, penalties and costs. Q. Now, refer to the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of nine-eight-thirteen? A. That was sold for the 1925, ’26, ’27, and ’28 taxes in the amount of $80.25. Q. Who bid that in and what was the amount bid? A. Bid in by Lucinda Neff for $80.25. Q. Now, refer to lot two and east half of northwest quarter of eighteen-twelve-thirteen? A. That was advertised for the 1925 and the 1926 taxes in the amount of $144.61. Q. Who bought that In ? A. That was bought in by Lucinda Neff for $310. Q. Did Savery bid on that, or anyone for Savery? A. There was another bidder, I don’t know who he was bidding for, I don’t know who .he represented. Q. Was that amount of money, $310. actually paid into your office? A. It was. Q. Do you know who made this other bid against Lucinda Neff oni this property? A. My recollection it was Sand-ford Lackey.”

He was asked if he knew of any reason why deed should not be issued, and objection was made to this by the county attorney and sustained. He stated that the amount due on the certificate held by Savery was not included in the publication list.

Over objection of the plaintiff, the journal entry of judgment that was rendered by the district court, with reference to the reduction of the assessment for the year 1924, was Introduced, and a letter bearing date of February 6, 1929, enclosing a cashier’s check for $29.05 to pay the taxes for 1924, the writer stating that the assessment had been reduced to one-fifth, and the taxes had accordingly been reduced to one-fifth, which would make them $23.88, and he allowed $6 extra. The party writing wanted to know if the taxes for 1925 had been paid, and if not paid, stated he would pay them, and the draft was shown for the $29.85.

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1943 OK 329 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
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Bluebook (online)
1932 OK 416, 11 P.2d 755, 157 Okla. 207, 1932 Okla. LEXIS 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neff-v-gray-okla-1932.