Richards v. State Tax Commission

69 P.2d 515, 92 Utah 503, 1937 Utah LEXIS 116
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1937
DocketNo. 5328.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 P.2d 515 (Richards v. State Tax Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richards v. State Tax Commission, 69 P.2d 515, 92 Utah 503, 1937 Utah LEXIS 116 (Utah 1937).

Opinion

MOFFAT, Justice.

This appeal is upon the judgment roll and involves a question of law arising out of the statutes relating to taxation as they existed on the 8th day of August, 1981, the date when plaintiff bought the property from Salt Lake county, Utah.

After the purchase of the property described, plaintiff brought an action in the usual form to quiet the title thereto. All parties defendant either disclaimed or defaulted except the State Tax Commission, and the individual members thereof. An answer was filed on their behalf. To the answer the plaintiff demurred. The demurrer was sustained. The appealing defendants elected to stand upon their an *505 swer. The answer, which was really in the nature of a counterclaim or cross-complaint, was dismissed. The court then, upon the evidence, made findings and quieted the title in plaintiff.

Appellant assigns three errors, but the assignments raise but one legal question and that is whether or not the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the answer. This question is premised upon the proposition as to whether or not, after the period of redemption has expired and after the holding of the May sale, the county is vested with title to the property, and has the right to sell at private or public sale to a third party, not a redemptioner, without exacting the full amount of all accrued taxes, penalties, costs of sale, and interest, and without the consent or approval of the State Tax Commission under the statutes then existing. The question must be answered in the affirmative.

Appellant has confused a redemption of property from a tax sale to the county and a sale by the county after title has vested in the county and the right of redemption has gone. The property, sold by the county to respondent, in the instant case was disposed of pursuant to section 6056, Laws of Utah 1917, as amended by Session Laws of Utah 1921, c 140, with an omission and transposition of a sentence and substituting the word “shall” for “may” relating to redemption, which has now become section 80-10-68, R. S. Utah 1933, and further amended by chapter 62, Laws Utah 1933. The section here applicable provides that when a county has received a tax deed for any real estate sold for delinquent taxes, the board of county commissioners shall, during the month of May in each year, after notice, offer for sale as specified in the notice, all real property not theretofore sold or redeemed. The county clerk is authorized to execute deeds in the name of the county for all property sold. Such deed vests in the purchaser all of the title in the real estate sold when the title of the owner or other interested person has been extinguished in pursuance of and in conformity with the law in such cases made and provided. *506 Hanson v. Burris, 86 Utah 424, 46 P. (2d) 400. If there is no purchaser at the May sale, the board of county commissioners shall then at any regular meeting sell such property as has not theretofore been sold at either public or private sale and shall apportion the proceeds from such sales in the same proportions as moneys arising from tax sale re-demptions.

In the instant case the county had received a tax deed for the property; the period of redemption had expired, the May sale had been held, and no offer had been received at that sale. No question is raised as to the propriety of the private sale or the time or manner thereof or the reasonableness of the price except as stated. That the amount received from such sales shall be apportioned to the various taxing units or tax funds in proportion to the amounts due to them whether the full amount or a lesser sum seems so clear as to require nothing more than the statement of the situation. It could never have been intended that the property sold for taxes to a county should perpetually remain there and off the tax rolls until the full amount of taxes, interest, costs, and penalties could be realized. We see nothing in favor of such construction and everything practical and theoretical against it.

The remaining question is: Must boards of county commissioners seek the consent or secure the approval of the State Tax Commission in order to make a valid sale of property deeded to the county in pursuance of a valid tax sale after the offering of the property at the May sale in event the property is sold for less than the full amount of the tax levied upon which the sale is based including all taxes subsequently accruing, penalties, costs, and interest?

The State Tax Commission is a recently created agency of the state by constitutional amendment. Its creation, and subject to further legislative provision, its powers and duties are found in section 11 of art. 13 of the Constitution of Utah, as amended. Pursuant to the constitutional provision, other powers have been conferred and other duties have been im *507 posed, and restrictions laid by the Legislature. Chapter 53, Laws of Utah 1931, and other statutes not necessary to be here referred to.

The only instance to which our attention has been called relating to tax sales or redemptions where the concurrence of the State Tax Commission and the board of county commissioners is required is found in section 6054, Comp. Laws Utah 1917, as amended to Laws Utah 1931, c. 53, § 1, p. 234. (This section was carried into R. S. Utah 1933 as section 80-10-61, and was amended by Laws Utah 1935, c. 87, § 1.)

The sections, for purposes of comparison, are as follows:

Comp. Laws Utah 1917, § 6054:

“In case property is sold to the county as purchaser pursuant to the provisions of law, and is subsequently assessed, no person must be permitted to redeem from such sale except upon payment also of the amount of such subsequent assessment, interest, penalty, and costs, unless, in the judgment of the county commissioners, the interest of the state and the county will be subserved by accepting a less sum than the amount due for taxes, interest, penalty, and costs.”

Laws Utah 1931, c. 53, § 6054:

“In case property is sold to the county as purchaser pursuant to the provisions of law, and is subsequently assessed, no person shall be permitted to redeem from such sale except upon payment also of the amount of such subsequent assessment, interest, penalty and costs, unless in cases involving $250.00 or less, in the judgment of the county commissioners and in all other cases in the joint judgment of the county commissioners and of the State tax commission, the interest of the state and the county will be subserved by accepting a less sum than the amount due for taxes, interest, penalty, and costs.”

R. S. Utah 1933, 80-10-61:

“In case property is sold to the county and is subsequently assessed, no person shall be permitted to redeem from such sale without paying also the amount of such subsequent assessment interest, penalty and costs; unless, in eases involving $250 or less, in the judgment of the county commissioners, and in all other cases in the joint judgment of the county commissioners and of the state tax commission, the interests of the state and the county will be subserved by accepting a less sum than the amount due for taxes, interest, penalty and costs.”

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Bluebook (online)
69 P.2d 515, 92 Utah 503, 1937 Utah LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richards-v-state-tax-commission-utah-1937.