Polk County v. Basham

12 N.W.2d 157, 234 Iowa 225, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 74
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1943
DocketNo. 46237.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 N.W.2d 157 (Polk County v. Basham) 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.

Bluebook
Polk County v. Basham, 12 N.W.2d 157, 234 Iowa 225, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 74 (iowa 1943).

Opinion

Mulroney, C. J.

Plaintiff, Polk County, Iowa, filed its petition alleging it was the absolute, owner of seventy-one lots in the city of Des Moines and that title was acquired by tax deeds issued to it after having purchased the lots at scavenger tax sales conducted by the county treasurer of Polk County, as provided by sections 7255 and 7255.1, Code of 1939. The petition set forth the legal descriptions of the lots, the years of general tax and special assessments for which said real estate was sold, and the dates of the tax sales. It further alleged that notices as required by law of the expiration of the rights of redemption from said tax sales had been served and filed, with the required affidavits, before the tax deeds were issued, and that all proceedings relative to the assessment and levying of the taxes, and the sale and issuance of the tax deeds were “in all respects valid, lawful and in strict, full and complete compliance with the laws of the State of Iowa relative thereto. ’ ’

The petition named a number of defendants and alleged that they claimed some interest in several lots, based on deeds, sheriff’s deeds, mortgages, and grants, and reservations of mineral rights. The defendants by way of answer alleged that the lots were sold for taxes that ceased to be liens in that the taxes had not been carried forward on the tax lists of Polk County prior to the sale of the property, and consequently the sales to the plaintiff were void and ineffectual to bar the interests of the defendants. The answer further stated that the lots in Lookout Heights were subject to certain building restrictions and to coal and mineral rights, which rights were owned by the defendants C. C. and J. E. Dorr.

Plaintiff by way of reply denied that the tax was not brought forward on the current tax list before sale and further pleaded that the legislature had barred this defense and legalized such tax sales (sections 7295.1 and 10398.2, Code of 1939) even *227 if there was a failure to carry forward tbe delinquent tax, as defendants allege. To this reply the defendants answered that sections 7295.1 and 10398.2 are unconstitutional in that they violate section 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and section 9, Article I of the Constitution of Iowa.

Upon the trial the plaintiff, over defendants’ objections, introduced its seventy-one tax deeds and the evidence of their being recorded, and rested. The objection made to the first deed offered, which stood for all the rest, was “that the said exhibit is not supported by any Notice of Intention to Take a Tax Deed; second, no affidavit of service of such notice; third, no showing that the laws of the State of Iowa relative to the issuance of tax deeds and the sale of real estate have been complied with, particularly Section 7193 of the 1935 Code of Iowa, or 7193 of the 1931 Code of Iowa; and further that there is no showing that Notice of Intention to Take a Tax Deed has been served upon all parties in possession or the persons in whose name the real estate was taxed at the time the notice was served.”

The plaintiff had purchased all of the real estate at the scavenger tax sale of May 6, 1935, except three parcels which were purchased at the tax sale of December 8, 1937, and one parcel purchased at the tax sale of January 11, 1937. The defendants’ evidence consisted largely of the testimony of their counsel, who stated that in 1935 he had checked the tax lists for 1932, 1933, and 1934; that he found a large amount of unpaid taxes going back as far as 1925 on some of the lots and that they had been carried forward on the 1932 and 1933 lists, but not on the 1934 tax list. He stated he checked the list several times and examined it just a few days before, the May 1935 scavenger sale and it showed no delinquent taxes carried forward on the lots in question and he checked the list again in June after the tax sale and found no delinquent taxes had been carried forward. He stated that the record as it now stands showed all the unpaid taxes for previous years had been carried forward but that they were not carried forward until November of 1935.

Defendants’ further lestimony consisted of the record in the county recorder’s office showing that on April 30, 1923, the Dorr Investment Company, Inc., had, by warranty deed, con- *228 Yeyed the coal and mineral rights under part of these lots to J. E. and C. C. Dorr and subsequent conveyances of these lots had been made subject to the reserved coal and mineral rights. The defendants also introduced that part of the recorder’s records showing the filing on March 20, 1941, of an instrument wherein the Northwest Improvement Company imposed building restrictions on certain lots in Lookout Heights and the record of deeds to some lot owners in Lookout Heights recorded in 1923 or 1924 showing building-restrictive covenants in each deed.

Upon this record the court found that the defendants had failed to prove the allegations in their answer and the plaintiff’s title to the real estate should be free and clear of all their claims or interest, including the claims of building restrictions and coal and mineral rights. Decree was entered accordingly quieting title in plaintiff in fee simple and cutting off any right or interest of defendants.

I. Did plaintiff establish prima facie evidence of title by merely introducing the tax deeds and showing the recording thereof ? We think it did. We said, in Brownell v. Storm Lake Bank, 63 Iowa 754, 757, 19 N. W. 788, 790:

“One asserting title under such [tax] deed has but to introduce it in evidence. And the law puts upon his adversary the burthen of showing its invalidity.”

And in Grove v. Benedict, 69 Iowa 346, 347, 28 N. W. 631, 632:

“The presumption is that the tax deed is valid.”

And in Shaffer v. Marshall, 206 Iowa 336, 337, 218 N. W. 292:

“It [tax deed] was, in and of itself, a complete and sufficient proof of title.”

And in Inter-Ocean Reinsurance Co. v. Morrison, 225 Iowa 1336, 1340, 283 N. W. 909, 911:

‘ ‘ The deeds were properly received in evidence and their reception established a prima facie case for appellee.”

In the foregoing cases and in Bennett v. Greenwalt, 226 Iowa 1113, 1127, 286 N. W. 722, 729, we discussed the applica *229 tion of the statutes relating to the effect of, and presumption arising from, a tax deed (sections 7284 to 7288, Code of 1989). In the last-cited case we stated that these statutes were designed # * ‡0 avoid the severity of the common law rule which requires proof of every material step antecedent to the execution of the tax deed, before permitting its admission in evidence.”

It is our conclusion that plaintiff’s deeds were properly admitted in evidence and constituted prima facie evidence of title in the plaintiff. Nor will it avail defendants to argue that the presumption is waived by the pleading, in that plaintiff’s petition alleged that the statutory proceedings relative to the issuance of the tax deeds were all followed. This was true in the Inter-Ocean ease and we held that the statutory presumption made the deed prima facie evidence of all the facts alleged in the petition.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.W.2d 157, 234 Iowa 225, 1943 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polk-county-v-basham-iowa-1943.