O'Neil v. Tyler

53 N.W. 434, 3 N.D. 47, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 9
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 53 N.W. 434 (O'Neil v. Tyler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Neil v. Tyler, 53 N.W. 434, 3 N.D. 47, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 9 (N.D. 1892).

Opinions

Wallin, J.

This is a statutory action to quiet an adverse’title to real estate. The grounds of the action are not alleged in the complaint further than to state that plaintiff is the owner of lots 12 and 13 of block 9, in Keeney & Dewitt’s addition to the City of Fargo, in Cas's County; that defendant wrongfully claims an estate or title to the lots adversely to the plaintiff; that the action is brought to determine such adverse claim. The prayer of the complaint is, in effect, that defendant shall quitclaim his interest in the lots to the plaintiff, or set forth by answer the nature of his adverse claim, that it may be adjudged to bé void, and that defendant be restrained from asserting any claim to the lots. Defendant answered the complaint, denying each and every allegation thereof, and further set out title to the lots in himself by virtue of two certain tax deeds annexed to and made a part of the answer. One of the deeds is based upon a tax sale of the lots for taxes claimed to have been assessed against them by the taxing officials of the City of Fargo, in the year 1884, such tax deed being executed by the city treasurer pursuant to a tax sale made by him in 1885. The answer further alleges that, subsequent,.to such tax sale, defendant paid certain sums assessed against said lots by the city authorities as and for taxes. Referring to the other tax deed, the answer avers, in substance, that such deed was made and delivered to defendant by the county treasurer of [51]*51Cass County as the culmination of a tax sale of the lots made by the county treasurer t-o the defendant in October, 1887, for taxes claimed to have been assessed against the lots by the county officials of Cass County in the year 1886. The answer further states that after such sale defendant paid certain other sums as and for taxes upon the lots, which were claimed to have been assessed by the county authorities subsequent to the year 1886. Defendant further alleges that said deeds were not only regular in themselves, but were given pursuant to valid tax sales made for delinquent taxes; that the taxes for which the lots were sold were properly assessed, equalized, and levied by the proper officers of the city and county, respectively, at the proper time and in the proper manner. The affirmative matter contained in the answer was pleaded as a counterclaim, and plaintiff replied thereto, denying the whole thereof, except that the tax sales and deeds were made and delivered, and the sums alleged were paid by defendant as subsequent taxes; also that plaintiff neither paid nor tendered any of the taxes before instituting the action. The trial was had before the court, and, after findings were filed in plaintiff’s favor, judgment was entéred adjudging the plaintiff to be the owner of the lots, annulling the tax deeds as void, and for costs. It will suffice here to say that the trial court, for various reasons, set out in the findings, held that the alleged taxes for which the lots were sold were never lawfully assessed or levied against the lots, and for that reason the sales were illegal, and that, no taxes being lawfully assessed or levied, none need be paid or tendered preliminary to the action. A bill of exceptions was settled, and the evidence comes up with the record.

In deciding the case we shall not refer in detail to all the objections urged by plaintiff’s counsel against the validity of the tax sales and tax deeds through and by which defendant claims to be the owner of the land. We are unanimously of the opinion that the tax sales were illegal sales, and that the deeds given in pursuance of such sales are invalid, and hence convey no title to the defendant. The facts upon which this conclusion rests arc [52]*52undisputed, and are common to both the city and county sales. It appears by defendant’s answer, and is admitted by the plairitiff’s reply, and was conceded at the trial, that the lots were -struck off to the defendant at both of the tax sales in question, one at a time, for a sum bid for each as a’separate parcel. The uncontroverted .testimony, consisting of the assessor’s returns and tax lists, discloses the fact that in assessing the lots for the years in ques-. tion both lots (n and 12) were grouped together as an entirety, and were valued in the. aggregate at one lump sum. The taxes were apportioned against the property upon such lump valuation. It appears affirmatively that no valuation was placed upon either lot separately, nor was a tax apportioned against either lot as a separate parcel of land. .The evidence shows that the two lots constituted plaintiff’s homestead; his house resting upon both lots. Conceding, without deciding the point, that -the manner of occupying-the property justified an aggregate valuation-such as was made, it .would follow that the sale must correspond to the valuation and .the apportionment of the tax. It is well settled that, where distinct parcels of real estate are properly grouped as an entirety for valuation, and one tax is laid against the total value, the tax sale,- if made, must correspond to the previous grouping and valuation of.the property. No tax collector possesses the legal authority to arbitrarily divide the sum apportioned as a tax against such aggregate valuation, and sell a separate parcel for the whole tax, or any pail of the tax! There being no tax against either lot as. a: separate parcel, there could lawfully be no separate tax sale of either lot. This rule is firmly established by the authorities. Black, Tax Titles, § 123; Kregelo v. Flint, 25 Kan. 695; Wyman v. Baer, 46 Mich. 418; 9 N. W. Rep. 455; Allen v. Morse, 72 Me. 502; Willey v. Scoville, 9 Ohio 43; Welty, Assessm. § no, and notes la, 2; Cooley, Tax’n, pp. 493, 494, and- notes; Moulton v. Doran, 10 Minn. 67, (Gil. 49;) 2. Desty, Tax’n, 871, and notes.

The tax deeds being invalid for an illegality which relates only to the sales, and which does not go to the ground work of the tax, defendant contends very properly that he has a right to show [53]*53that the taxes for which the sales were made were in all respects legal and valid taxes. But, the illegality of the deeds being shown, their evidential character is lost, and they cannot be used even as prima facie evidence of the regularity of the proceedings upon which the validity of the taxes - depends. If the taxes are valid, their validity must be made to appear by common-law proof. Each essential step in the process of laying the tax must be established by competent testimony. The burden is upon the purchaser. Black, Tax Titles, § § 246, 247, 249. See numerous cases cited in note 1 to § 246, Id.

We will first consider the validity of the alleged tax'of 1884, for which the city treasurer sold the property in 188$; At that time the amended charter of the City of Fargo, adopted in March, 1881, was in force. Among other provisions of the charter were the following: “Sec. 5. The pPwers hereby granted shall be exercised by the mayor and council of the City of Fargo as hereinafter set forth.” “Sec. 8. The council of said City of Fargo shall consist of eight citizens of said city, being two from each ward, who shall be qualified electors of their respective wards, under the organic act of this territory, one of whom shall be elected president of the council at their first regular meeting after each annual election provided in §9 of this act.” “Sec. 13. All ordinances of the city shall- be passed pursuant to such rules and regulations as the mayor and council may prescribe; provided, that upon the passage of all ordinances the yeas and nays shall be entered upon the record of the city council,” etc. “Sec. 38.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W. 434, 3 N.D. 47, 1892 N.D. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-tyler-nd-1892.