Sanborn v. Lewis & Clark County

120 P.2d 567, 113 Mont. 1, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 120
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1941
DocketNo. 8,082.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 120 P.2d 567 (Sanborn v. Lewis & Clark County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanborn v. Lewis & Clark County, 120 P.2d 567, 113 Mont. 1, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 120 (Mo. 1941).

Opinions

This is an appeal from a judgment for the defendants in an action to quiet title to real estate. The complaint is in the usual short form, alleging ownership by plaintiff and unfounded claim of title by defendants, with prayer for adjudication quieting the title in plaintiff as against the defendants. There are three defendants, Lewis and Clark county, Alexander B. Johnstone and Mrs. Johnstone, his wife. There is no joinder of unknown defendants. Lewis and Clark county defaulted and Johnstone and his wife alone made answer. By such answer they denied the plaintiff's claim of title and admitted that the defendants, Lewis and Clark county and themselves, claim title or interest in the real property in question, and pray that the plaintiff take nothing by his complaint and that they recover costs, and for general relief.

Upon the trial of the case, which was before the court without a jury, the plaintiff offered proof of his title and to show unfounded claim of title by defendants plaintiff offered in evidence a tax deed of the premises running to Lewis and Clark county, together with an abstract of the tax title proceedings for the purpose of showing irregularities therein rendering the tax deed invalid. The interest in the property claimed by the defendant Johnstone and his wife was under a contract for the purchase of the property from Lewis and Clark county, this contract also being offered in evidence by the plaintiff. The only claim of title over which there is controversy is that resting on the tax deed.

The defendants objected to the evidence so offered in regard to the tax deed on the ground that the question of the validity of the tax title proceedings and the tax deed were not an issue *Page 5 in the case; that the offer of such evidence constituted an attempt at a collateral attack upon the tax deed, the contention being that the validity of a tax deed may not be questioned in an action to quiet title under a mere allegation that the holder of the tax deed, or those claiming under it, assert an unfounded claim of title; that a tax deed may be questioned only by direct attack for its removal as a cloud on the title and wherein the infirmities and defects and irregularities of the tax sale proceedings or tax deed application must be specifically pointed out, and that the procedure for such purpose should be under section 8733, Revised Codes, and not under section 9479, Revised Codes. The evidence was received without any objection as to its competency but over the objection that it was irrelevant and immaterial, relating to a question not at issue in the case.

There are two methods of applying for and obtaining a tax deed[1] in this state, one, the ordinary statutory method, (section 2209, Revised Codes) in which the tax purchaser makes application to the county treasurer for the deed, after giving notice of the application to the land owner and others interested in the title. In this method the proceeding is wholly ex parte, except in the giving of notice to give opportunity for redemption, and the courts have no part in the proceeding. The other method, (Secs. 2215.1-2215.8), an action may be brought in the district court to obtain the tax deed, the action being commenced and prosecuted in all respects the same as the ordinary civil action with judgment ordering the issuance of tax deed to the plaintiff. The holder of the tax sale certificate has the option of which method he will employ. In the instant case the application for the tax deed was made to the county treasurer under the ordinary statutory method and not by court action.

From the proof offered and received in respect to the tax deed upon the trial of the case the following defects and irregularities in the tax title proceedings appear and upon *Page 6 which the plaintiff rests his contention that the tax deed is invalid:

(1) The tax sale certificate, dated July 24, 1931, says that the tax sale was held on July 22d 1931, and the notice of application for tax deed, as well as the tax deed itself, says that the sale was held on January 22d 1931,

(2) The tax sale was for taxes delinquent for the year 1930 and the notice of application for tax deed which was dated November 1st, 1935, showed 1929 taxes delinquent and includes the amount thereof in the statement of the amount required to be paid in order to redeem, and 1935 delinquent taxes are likewise shown in the notice of tax deed application as part of the amount required to be paid in order to redeem.

(3) The notice of application for tax deed is dated November 1, 1935, and states that the deed will be applied for on December 31, 1935.

(4) The only proof of service of the notice of application for tax deed is an unsworn statement by the deputy county clerk and recorder that it was served on November 16, 1935, and the abstractor's report that the notice was mailed to Bruce W. Sanborn, c/o C.H. Campbell Sons of Great Falls, Montana, and a registry return receipt showing that the notice so mailed was received by George H. Campbell at Great Falls, Montana, on November 11, 1935. It was shown by oral testimony that Sanborn was a nonresident of the State and that C.H. Campbell Sons were his agents within the State.

The plaintiff, upon hearing on an order to show cause, was required to make a deposit of $1,213.41 to protect the purchaser for taxes paid and cost of improvements made upon the premises and expenditures for the protection of the property during the period of possession by the defendant as required by section 2214, Revised Codes. Question is raised as to the correctness of certain items included to make up this sum, the determination of which becomes material in the disposition of the deposit if the plaintiff prevails. *Page 7

The court found for the defendants and a decree was entered adjudging the defendant Alexander B. Johnstone to be the equitable owner in possession of the premises and entitled to possession thereof, and that the plaintiff and those claiming under him have no right, title nor interest in the property in question. The decree is based on the finding of the court that the defendant Lewis and Clark county has title under a tax deed valid on its face and which could not be attacked by showing defects and irregularities in the tax sale and tax title proceedings, and that the defendant Alexander B. Johnstone is in possession of the premises under a valid and subsisting contract for the purchase of the property from the county.

The questions determinative of this appeal are, first, whether the validity of the tax deed as dependent upon the irregularity of the tax title proceedings, may be inquired into in the action as brought to quiet title, and, second, if it may be, whether the defects and irregularities in the tax title proceedings are such as to render the tax deed invalid.

The distinction in the remedies as provided by the two[2] sections of the Revised Codes, 8733 and 9479, is pointed out in the case of Slette v. Review Pub. Co., 71 Mont. 518,230 P. 580, 581, where the court says that "Proceedings under this section [9479] are not aimed at a particular instrument, but at the pretensions of individuals claiming adversely," whereas under section 8733, as stated in Poulos v. Lyman Bros. Co., 63 Mont. 561,208 P. 598, 599, "It is directed to a particular instrument which is dangerous to plaintiff's rights, and the object of the action is to have the instrument canceled and the cloud cast by it removed."

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Bluebook (online)
120 P.2d 567, 113 Mont. 1, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanborn-v-lewis-clark-county-mont-1941.