Parks v. Lyons

1938 OK 528, 83 P.2d 573, 183 Okla. 529, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 18, 1938
DocketNo. 27712.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 1938 OK 528 (Parks v. Lyons) 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
Parks v. Lyons, 1938 OK 528, 83 P.2d 573, 183 Okla. 529, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 337 (Okla. 1938).

Opinions

HURST, J.

This is an action to quiet title based on a certificate tax deed. The trial court held the tax deed void, and further held that the mortgage of defendant, Alphia French Lyons, is superior to plaintiff’s interest. Plaintiff appeals.

The first question to be determined is whether the tax deed upon which plaintiff’s title is based is void. Defendant urges several reasons why it is, but, without determining the merit of the other contentions, we believe the deed is void for the reason that the assignment of the tax sale certificate to plaintiff’s grantor did not comply with section 12747, O. S. 1931 (68 Okla. St. Ann. sec. 388), and was therefore void, and consequently the tax deed based thereon must likewise fail. The following facts are pertinent to this decision:

The land in question was sold for the 1926 taxes to one J. W. Parker in November, 1927, and a tax sale certificate was properly issued to him. The certificate shows an assignment thereof by Parker to one Ben G. Harned on December 29, 3933. The acknowledgment to the assignment recites “Given under my hand and notarial seal, this 29th day of December, A. D. 1934. Vera Lark, Notary Public. My commission expires Jan. 6, 1934.” In 1935, Harned served notice of application for tax deed and on September 25, 1935, the county treasurer executed the tax deed in question to him. On that day, Harned conveyed the property to plaintiff Parks by quitclaim deed.

Section 12747, supra, provides that a tax sale certificate is assignable “and said assignment must be acknowledged before some officer having power to take acknowledgment of deeds.” This statute is mandatory. Wilson v. Wood (1900) 10 Okla. 279, 61 P. 1045; Mattocks v. McLain Land & Investment Co. (1902) 11 Okla. 433, 68 P. 501; Eager v. Pugh (1926) 123 Okla. 207, 253 P. 41; and Wiggs v. Flatt (1931) 154 Okla. 94, 6 P.2d 690. It was held in Wilson v. Wood, supra, that “a tax certificate, and a valid assignment thereof, where the as-signee claims title under a tax deed, are es *531 sential and necessary to the validity of the deed, and to the authority of the taxing powers to divest the title of the former owner or those claiming through him.”

The- tax deed, upon which plaintiff’s title rests, is void because the commission of the notary public had expired approximately one year before she took the acknowledgment, and therefore the assignment was not acknowledged before an “officer having power to take acknowledgment of deeds” as required by section 12747, supra.

Plaintiff seeks to avoid this result by contending that it is apparent from the face of the instrument that the notary made a clerical error in dating her acknowledgment, and that it was in fact acknowledged on December 29, 1933, which is the date of the assignment itself. There is no direct evidence to support this contention. On the contrary, an examination of the affidavit of publication of notice for application for tax deed sworn to by Harned (the assignee of the tax sale certificate) and each of the notices of application for tax deed signed by Harned, and the tax deed itself, affirmatively discloses that Parker assigned the certificate to Harned on December 29, 1934. Furthermore, Harned testified that he purchased the tax sale certificate from one Scripture in 1935, and there is no evidence that he purchased the same from Parker on December 29, 1933. Under these circumstances, we cannot agree that the. date appearing in the acknowledgment of the certificate is a mere clerical error.

Plaintiff also contends that the recital by the notary public of the date upon which his commission expires is not required by our statute, is surplusage and should be disregarded. In this plaintiff is in error. Section 5907, O. S. 1931 (49 Okla. St. Ann. sec. 5), requires a notary public to add to his official signature the date of expiration of his commission as such notary public, and makes his failure to do so a misdemeanor.

Plaintiff next asserts that the trial court erred in quieting title in defendant Lyons against the claims and demands of plaintiff and persons claiming through him and his principals, and enjoining plaintiff and his assigns from claiming or asserting any right, title, or interest in and to said lands. The pleadings disclose that the land in question was encumbered by a first mortgage, executed in 1917 to Freeman B. Walton, and a second mortgage to Alphia French Lyons, executed in 1924. In making this contention, plaintiff construes the decree of the trial court to declare Lyons’ mortgage lien superior to Walton’s mortgage lien and the lien on the land for the taxes. Neither of these two liens was ’involved in this action, and of course the trial court, on the basis of the record in this case, could not have made any order adjudicating the superiority of Lyons’ lien as to these claims. We construe the decree of the trial court to mean, and it can only mean, that plaintiff’s tax deed is void and that Lyons had a valid mortgage on the land superior to any rights or claims arising out of the tax deed.

The next question for consideration is whether the court committed error in rendering judgment in favor of the defendant, Lyons, on her cross-petition without requiring her to pay the taxes, interest, penalty, and costs assessed against the land. This question requires a consideration of our statutes and decisions on the subject of tender.

Our statutes, sections 12668, 12761 and 12763, O. S. 1931 (68 Okla. St. Ann. secs. 360, 453, 455), have been in force since their enactment as a part of the same act in 1909. Sections 12668 and 12763 are reenactments of territorial statutes (sections 6041 and 6038, Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. S. 1903). They provide as follows:

“12668. Whenever any action or proceeding shall be commenced and maintained before any court or judge to prevent or to restrain the collection of any tax or part thereof or to recover any such tax previously paid, or to recover the possession or title of any property, real or personal, sold for taxes or to invalidate any deed or grant thereof for taxes or to restrain, prevent, recover or delay any payment of taxes, the true and just amount of taxes due upon such property or by such person if in dispute, must be ascertained and paid before the judgment prayed for, and if not in dispute must be paid in accordance with the provisions of this chapter.”
“12761. To defeat the deed, the person desiring to set the same aside and recover the land, or to resist the recovery of possession by the holder of the deed in addition to showing clearly the entire failure to do some one or all the things of which the tax deed is made presumptive evidence, must show that he or the person under whom he claims, had the right to redeem the land from tax sale at the time the deed was made, and must, when his action to set aside the tax deed is brought, or a defense to a recovery of possession is plead, tender in open court for the use of the holder of the tax deed, .all taxes, penalties, interests and costs, which the party seeking to redeem would be bound to pay if- he was then redeeming the land from tax sale, and on failure so to do, his action or defense, as *532 the case may be, shall be dismissed.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 528, 83 P.2d 573, 183 Okla. 529, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parks-v-lyons-okla-1938.