Scott v. Babcock

3 Greene 133
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Greene 133 (Scott v. Babcock) 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
Scott v. Babcock, 3 Greene 133 (iowa 1851).

Opinions

Opinion by

Kinney, J.

This is an action of right, brought' by Babcock, to recover possessioon of lot six, in block ona in the city of Farmington. Plea, general issue ; jury trial, and verdict for plaintiff. A bill of exceptions was taken by the plaintiff, from which it appears that in order to establish his right to said lot, he introduced a patent from the United States to one Abel Gallard, which, embraced the lot in controversy. The plaintiff showed a conveyance from Gallard to Bateman, from Bateman and wife to Thomas J. Babcock, from Babcock to Benjamin and wife, and from said Benjamin and wife to plaintiff, by deed bearing date April 17, 1845. He then proved the defendant in possession ; and, having introduced testimony in relation to the rents and profits, rested.

The defendant then proceeded with his testimony, premising that he relied upon tax titles under two different sales and deeds. He first offered to introduce the assessment book for said county of Yan Burén, for the year 1843 ; said lot six constitutes a part of said assessment roll. The defendant proposed to follow this up with the after acts of the revenue officers of the county, so as to make out a tax title to the lot, under a sale for the taxes due thereon, for the year 1843. To the introduction of which plaintiff objected, until it was shown that certain .persons had been appointed in accordance with the requirements of the seventh section of an act to provide for assessing and collecting county and territorial revenue, approved February 13,1843, to act in conjunction with the assessor in equalizing assessments, and that they filed their report. His objection the court sustained, and the appraisement roll was not received or permitted to be read, as the defendant did not propose to [135]*135accompany the assessment with proof of such appointment, to which the defendant excepted. The defendant then offered to introduce a collector’s deed for said lot six, executed in accordance with a sale, made for the delinquent taxes due for the said year 1843, dated June 10,1848, unaccompanied by proof of any preliminary steps of assessment, warrant or collector’s'return of delinquent list, to which plaintiff objected and tbe court sustained tbe objection.

The defendant then offered to introduce a treasurer’s deed for said lot, dated June 27,1847, from which it appeared that at the May term, 1847, of the district court, the state of Iowa recovered judgment against said lot, among others, for the taxes, interest and cost due the state, for the year 1844. Upon an order of sale, the said lot was, on the 27th of May, struck off and sold to the defendant. To the introduction of this deed the plaintiff objected, on the ground that it should be preceded by evidence of tbe assessment of taxes for that year, and of the warrant of the treasurer, and of the return of the delinquent list, and also on the ground that the deed was not prima facia evidence of the regularity of the proceedings. These objections were overruled. Plaintiff then objected to the deed for the reason that upon the face thereof, it appeared to be void in this, that the report of the treasurer of the delinquent list, and the judgment of the court and order of sale, were made before the time limited and provided by law. That no return, judgment and order of sale could legally take place until one year from the time mentioned in said deed ; which objection the court sustained, and rejected the evidence offered by the defendant.

These rulings of the court are assigned for error. They present three questions for adjudication.

1. Was the testimony offered by the defendant unaccompanied by evidence showing the appointment of certain persons to act with the assessor in equalizing the assessment, and without evidence that they filed their report, properly rejected?

[136]*1362. Was proof of the assessment, warrant and collector’s return of the delinquent list, necessary to the introduction. of the deed as evidence ?

3. Was the second deed offered in evidence made for delinquent taxes due on said lot for the year 1844, void upon its face, and does it appear from the recitals therein contained, that the return, judgment and sale took place sooner than the time prescribed by the statute ?

The statute by which it is claimed that the testimony under the first proposition was properly rejected, after providing for the election of township assessors, enacts “ that immediately after the election and qualification of each assessor he shall commence assessing all the taxable property, subject to taxation, within his township or precinct, as the case may he, and shall deliver to the hoard of county commissioners, on or before the first Monday in July thereafter, a full and complete assessment roll, which roll shall set forth a precise description of land owned by each person therein named, which specification shall correspond with the plan or map of the original survey, and the number of acres specifically noted in a column by itself; and further, said lands and all town lots shall be valued at their true value in cash, with all the improvements thereon, by the present assessor, now elected in each county, with two other persons of good qualifications, to he appointed by the county commissioners of the proper county at their April term, one in each county commissioner’s district other than that in which the assessor lives.” “ Such appraisers when so appointed, it should he their duty to attend with said assessor on the second Monday in June, at the county seat of said county, then and there to make said valuation as nearly equal as may be, which valuation when examined and corrected by the hoard of county commissioners, shall he recorded in the clerk’s office of said board, and remain as a fixed value for five years.” K. S., p. 548, § 7. The court held that under this statute it was necessary to show [137]*137the appointment of tbe equalizing officers, to act with the assessor, as a necessary link in the chain of proceedings and without proof of this, the testimony offered could not be introduced. The statute requiring the appointment of such officers is as imperative as any other provision, and as indispensable a pre-requisite as the assessment itself. It is an essential stop in the progress of the proceedings, and proof that it had been observed was indispensable.

A sale of lands for delinquent taxes can only legally take place after all the requirements of the statute, from the first proceeding under it, up to the last, have been strictly performed. Nothing can be supplied by intendment- Those things which the statute requires to be done, must be done, or nothing passes by the sale. It is only upon condition of a compliance with the statute, that it authorizes a sale to be made, and hence if the conditions have 3iot been complied with, the sale is unauthorized and void. The first evidence that the defendant proposed to introduce was for the purpose of establishing a tax title for the delinquent year 1843, and for this purpose the assessment book was offered with a proposition to follow it up with the subsequent acts of the officers.

The statute was approved thirteenth February, 1813, and took effect after passage, except that portion which related to the election of township assessors, which took effect on the first day of April, 1S44. Hence the county assessors under the prior law were continued in office mitil the election of the township assessors. At the meeting of the board of county commissioners, at their April term next

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Bluebook (online)
3 Greene 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-babcock-iowa-1851.