Otto & Harkson Realty Co. v. Josephine County

295 P.2d 875, 207 Or. 199, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 310
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 295 P.2d 875 (Otto & Harkson Realty Co. v. Josephine County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Otto & Harkson Realty Co. v. Josephine County, 295 P.2d 875, 207 Or. 199, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 310 (Or. 1956).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a decree in favor of the defendants which the circuit court *201 entered after it had sustained a demurrer to the complaint and the plaintiff had declined to plead further. The defendants are Josephine County and the sheriff of that county. The demurrer presented charges that the complaint did not state a cause of suit and that the proceeding was not commenced within the time allowed by law.

The complaint, filed September 4, 1952, challenged the validity of a deed executed and delivered by the sheriff and tax collector of Josephine County September 20, 1942. The grantee of the deed was Josephine County. The deed had its origin in an omnibus tax foreclosure proceeding which Josephine County filed July 16,1941, for the foreclosure of its 1941 foreclosure list of tax delinquent properties. Among the properties entered upon the foreclosure list, and which were described in the application for judgment and decree, was the parcel of real property which is the subject matter of this suit. September 20, 1941, a decree was entered in that proceeding which ordered the foreclosure of the tax liens against all of the properties described in the application for judgment and decree. September 20, 1942, the sheriff and tax collector of Josephine County executed and delivered a deed to Josephine County which described the property in question. That deed is the object of attack by this suit.

The following taken from the complaint states the basis of the plaintiff’s challenge of the deed:

“No proof of the publication of notice of the expiration of the period of redemption as required by Section 110-916, O.C.L.A. was attached to or made a part of said purported deed, and that no notice of the expiration of the period of redemption from said judgment and decree of foreclosure granted by Section 110-911 O.C.L.A. was in fact published *202 prior to the execution of the said purported tax deed, nor has any notice whatsoever of the expiration of the said period of redemption ever been published.”

The complaint charged;

“The said purported deed executed and delivered by the sheriff and tax collector o.f Josephine County, Oregon to Josephine County, Oregon is void and of no force and effect, and the period of redemption from said judgment and decree of foreclosure has never been terminated for the following reasons: * * *.”

At that point the complaint listed (1) failure to publish the notice required by § 110-916, OCLA, and (2) failure to attach to the deed proof of publication of the notice required by § 110-916 OCLA. The complaint alleged that August 26, 1952, the plaintiff tendered to the defendants the full amount of the unpaid taxes, interest and penalties. It also alleged that, concurrently with the tender, the plaintiff offered to redeem.

The trial judge, in sustaining the demurrer, prepared a memorandum opinion which displays thorough analysis and sound reasoning. Apart from two minor grammatical alterations which we are required to make in order to adapt it to our purposes, .we adopt the opinion as our own. It follows:

This is a collateral attack upon a tax deed executed to the defendant county pursuant to a judicial foreclosure of a delinquent tax. Plaintiff seeks to remove an alleged cloud from title to his former real property which it is claimed results from a void tax deed and to give plaintiff the right to redeem said property from such tax sale.
“Plaintiff does not challenge the validity of the *203 judgment and decree of foreclosure which culminated in the alleged void deed.
“Plaintiff contends that the tax deed issued to the defendant county is null and void because of the fact, conceded by the defendants, that defendant county failed to comply with the provisions of Section 110-916, in the following particulars:
“ (1) That the sheriff failed to publish the, or any, notice relative to the expiration of the redemption period;
“(2) That the sheriff failed to attach to the tax deed issued to the county the proof of the publication of such notice.
“The plaintiff contends that each of these requirements is prerequisite to the issuance of the tax deed and without which the sheriff had no jurisdiction to execute the deed to the county.
“The defendants admit that the above mentioned provisions were not complied with but contend that the same are not jurisdictional and that therefore the want thereof can not be challenged by a collateral attack and that plaintiff has not alleged, nor can it be shown, that plaintiff was actually mislead by such omission and irregularities or defects to plaintiff’s injury for which reason Section 110-926 OCLA applies. This section is as follows:
“‘No proceedings subsequent to a judgment or decree foreclosing a tax lien or liens shall be invalidated and no tax declared void or set aside for irregularities, omissions or defects except when the record owner of the land sold shall have been actually mislead by such irregularities, omissions or defects to his injury.’
“Defendants further urge that because the aforesaid omissions are not jurisdictional plaintiff is barred *204 by tbe statute of limitations set forth in Section 110-920 OCLA which in part is as follows:
“ ‘ * * * Every action, suit or proceeding, of whatever kind or nature, which may be commenced for the purpose of determining the validity of a sale of real property on foreclosure for delinquent taxes, or to quiet title against such sale, or to remove the cloud thereof, or to recover possession of the property, shall be commenced within TWO YEARS from the date of the judgment and decree of foreclosure and sale to the county, and not otherwise.’
“Neither counsel has submitted any Oregon case disclosing that the identical legal question involved in this case has been determined by the Oregon Supreme Court. Many cases from other jurisdictions where summary foreclosures by administrative officers prevail have been cited but in the language of Mallory v. Gruberman, 185 Or. 82, 89, 202 P2d 281: ‘cases construing statutes relating to sale by ministerial or administrative officers without court proceedings are of little assistance in solving the question here presented. ’
“In this same decision the court said:
‘“As far as we have been able to ascertain Oregon is the only state which grants the former owner a period in which to redeem property sold at foreclosure sale pursuant to court proceedings and which provides for the giving of notice of the expiration of the period of redemption.’
“Counsel have not submitted any decisions from states having a similar provision applicable to tax lien foreclosures.
“In the case of Cain v. Ehrler,

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Grant County v. Guyer
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
295 P.2d 875, 207 Or. 199, 1956 Ore. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/otto-harkson-realty-co-v-josephine-county-or-1956.