Scottish American Mortgage Co. v. Minidoka County

272 P. 498, 47 Idaho 33, 65 A.L.R. 663, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 49
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1928
DocketNo. 4951.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 272 P. 498 (Scottish American Mortgage Co. v. Minidoka County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scottish American Mortgage Co. v. Minidoka County, 272 P. 498, 47 Idaho 33, 65 A.L.R. 663, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 49 (Idaho 1928).

Opinions

BRINCK, Commissioner.

Plaintiff brought suit for injunction and to quiet title to land. It had been the owner of a mortgage given by one Davidson and wife upon lands in *36 Minidoka county, to secure a note for $10,500, the mortgage being executed February 7, 1919, and recorded the following day. Prior to the beginning of this action, plaintiff foreclosed the mortgage, and purchased the property at the foreclosure sale, receiving a sheriff’s deed of the premises in October, 1923. It is alleged that on the second Monday of January, 1920, said Davidson was in the possession of, and claimed ownership of, migratory livestock, consisting of sheep of the approximate value of $15,000, and that during 1920 the Minidoka county assessor assessed the sheep to Davidson and entered the assessment on the personal property assessment-roll of said county; that Minidoka county was the home county of the migratory livestock, and was the county wherein said Davidson resided. It is further alleged that pursuant to said assessment, taxes for state, county, and general purposes were levied against the sheep in the sum of $279.40; that the assessor made no effort to enforce the lien of said taxes against the sheep themselves, and did not distrain or sell any of them, but permitted the same to be removed from said county, although during said year the sheep were within Minidoka county the greater portion of the time, and the taxes so levied could have been collected by distraint; that on December 5, 1920, the board of county commissioners, upon the report of the county assessor, ordered the tax upon the sheep to be, and the same was, extended against the mortgaged land upon the real property assessment-roll, without notice to plaintiff; and that plaintiff has paid and discharged all taxes levied against the land itself. It is further alleged that the defendant tax collector has given notice that she will execute a tax deed conveying the real estate involved to the county for the taxes so assessed upon said sheep.' Plaintiff prays that the tax collector be enjoined from issuing the tax deed, and that it be adjudged that the said personal property tax is not a lien upon the land, and that plaintiff’s title be quieted as against the lien of said tax. The trial court sustained a general demurrer to the complaint, and entered *37 judgment- of dismissal of the action, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

It is contended by appellant that migratory livestock taxes must be collected from the migratory livestock; that there is no authority of law to enter migratory livestock taxes upon the real property roll; that the lien of such migratory livestock tax, if any there were, was inferior to the lien of plaintiff’s mortgage; and that even if migratory livestock taxes can be extended upon the real property roll, all remedies 'by distraint and sale of the property assessed must have been previously exhausted.

The statutes involved are not entirely clear. It is provided (C. S., sec. 3097) that all real and personal property subject to assessment and taxation must be assessed with reference to its value on the second Monday of January in the year in which such taxes are levied; and that all taxes levied shall be a lien upon the property assessed, and a lien upon any other property of the owner thereof, such lien to attach as of the second Monday in January of such year, and to be discharged only by the payment, cancelation, or rebate of the taxes, as provided by law. Under this section, the amount of the taxes upon the sheep was clearly a lien upon the sheep themselves, and also a lien upon any other property of the owner, Davidson.

C. S., sec. 3098, repeats these provisions specifically as to taxes levied on personal property. Under that section, such taxes are a lien upon the real property of the owner, which shall only be discharged 'by the payment, cancelation, or rebate of the taxes, as provided by statute. Notwithstanding a lien is thus created, the procedure for collecting taxes is more particularly prescribed by statute.

C. S., secs. 3134 and 3135, provide for the making of a real property assessment-roll, upon which shall be extended against each tract of real property assessed the value thereof, and the value of each class of personal property whereon the tax is a lien on such real property, except migratory livestock; and under C. S., sec. 3147, that roll must, when completed, be accompanied by an affidavit of the *38 assessor that he has placed thereon all real property and all personal property whereon the tax is a lien on such real property, except migratory livestock.

Taxes which become delinquent upon the real property roll are collected by the issuance of a tax deed, under C. S., secs. 3256 to 3263, conveying the real property against which all of such taxes have been extended. C. S., see. 3263, provides that such deed conveys to the grantee the absolute title to the land described therein, free of all incumbrances except any lien for taxes which may have attached subsequently to the assessment. ’

A separate assessment-roll, known as the personal property assessment-roll, is provided by C. S., sees. 3264 to 3284, upon which shall be entered all personal property taxes which are not a lien on real property of sufficient value, in the judgment of the assessor, to insure the collection of the tax; and C. '3., sec. 3267 purported to make it the duty of the assessor to collect the tax on such personal property or to cause the taxpayer to secure the payment thereof, while C. S., sec. 3272 purported to provide that in the absence of such payment or security, the assessor must then and there distrain and sell so much of the property as might be necessary to pay the taxes, or forthwith bring suit with attachment in aid thereof for the taxes so due.

C. S., sees. 3285 to 3296, provide for the assessment of migratory livestock, and provide that the county in which it is first assessed in any year shall be considered the home county, and that taxes in that county must be either paid or the payment thereof secured before the stock may be removed from that county; that the provisions for collection, seizure, and sale, or suit, that have been made for collection of personal property entered upon the personal property assessment-roll, shall apply to migratory livestock; that migratory livestock shall be entered upon the personal property assessment-roll only, even though the taxes thereon be a lien on real property. It is further provided by C. S., sec. 3295, that all of the provisions of the chapter relating to computation of taxes and equalization of the assessment *39 of personal property entered upon the personal property assessment-roll, shall apply to the assessment and taxation of migratory livestock.

C. S., sec. 3304, provides that all taxes upon personal property entered upon the personal property assessment-roll, where the owners of such personal property are also the owners of real property in the county, which taxes have not been paid at the time of the annual meeting of the board of county commissioners as a board of equalization in December, and which said board finds to be a lien upon the real, property, shall be certified to the county auditor and tax collector, and thereupon must be entered upon the real property assessment-roll against the real property subject to such lien.

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Bluebook (online)
272 P. 498, 47 Idaho 33, 65 A.L.R. 663, 1928 Ida. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scottish-american-mortgage-co-v-minidoka-county-idaho-1928.