Pearson v. Robinson
This text of 44 Iowa 413 (Pearson v. Robinson) 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.
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I. By the ruling upon the demurrer and the legal conclusion made the basis of the decree, the court below determined that the right to redeem from a tax sale exists until the deed is executed, even if this should extend the time beyond three years from the date of sale. .
It is true, the legal title does not vest in the purchaser at a tax sale until he procures a deed. Nor does the legal title vest in the purchaser of real property at sheriff’s sale until the execution of a deed. It is claimed that, until a purchaser at a tax sale obtains a deed, he has a mere lien for the taxes advanced and penalties. In a qualified sense, this is true; but it does not follow that this lien may be displaced at any time, notwithstanding the limitation of the statute. The deed becomes conclusive of many things. At any time before the deed is executed, the owner may avail himself of many irregularities or omissions, which ho would be estopped by the execution of the deed from insisting upon. But, if the sale has in all respects been regularly conducted, and the preceding steps have been properly taken, so that the owner of the land is entitled simply to his right to redeem, he must exercise that right before the expiration of the time limited by statute, whether a deed has been executed or not. See Eldridge v. Kuehl, 27 Iowa, 160 (174); Spengin v. Forry, 37 Id., 242.
The only facts which are shown are that Bailey bid in for Robinson and for Parker, indicating that fact in his bids, and that Lawrence bid in his own name lands intended for, and which were afterward assigned to, the defendant Robinson.
We cannot see how the fact that Bailey bid for two parties can vitiate the sales, especially, as long as he indicated the fact that he was so bidding and made no concealment. Nor does the fact that Lawrence and Bailey both bid for Robinson render the sale to him fraudulent.
It is true the other bidders, if they had known that Lawrence was bidding for Robinson, might have concluded that he was trying to overreach them, and in a spirit of rivalry, to prevent him from accomplishing his purpose, they might have bid down the quantity. But the owner of the land has no legal ground of complaint that this species of rivalry was not created, notwithstanding the fact that it might have inured to his advantage, if it had existed.
We are of opinion that the court rightly held that the sale was not invalid on account of fraud.
[418]*418For the error in sustaining the demurrer, and holding that plaintiff might redeem after three years, the judgment is
Reversed,
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