Shamblin v. Beasley

1998 OK 88, 967 P.2d 1200, 1998 WL 614611
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 28, 1999
Docket88965
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 1998 OK 88 (Shamblin v. Beasley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shamblin v. Beasley, 1998 OK 88, 967 P.2d 1200, 1998 WL 614611 (Okla. 1999).

Opinion

OPALA, Justice.

¶ 1 The three dispositive issues presented on certiorari are: (1) Does the evidentiary material in the record provide undisputed proof that the service of statutory pre-sale notice on the wife-owner by delivery to her husband satisfies the fundamental law’s due process standards? (2) Do the alleged irregularities in the publication notice invalidate the tax resale? and (3) Does the evidentiary material tendered by the lender at nisi prius raise a fact issue on the merits of the controversy which was not fit for disposition by summary process? We answer the first and the third questions in the affirmative and the second in the negative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

¶2 The spousal possessors, Allen and Helen Beasley [counterclaimants, former or spousal owners, or husband and wife], had failed to pay ad valorem taxes on their home *1204 stead, which was sold to the county at a delinquent tax sale. 1 Unredeemed from the lien of ad valorem tax for more than two years, these premises were acquired at a tax resale by the plaintiff below, James Shamblin [Shamblin, plaintiff or purchaser]. 2 Two months after the resale tax deed was executed, the purchaser brought a claim to quiet his title in the premises against the delinquent spousal owners still in possession and the mortgage lender, Port Duncan Realty Co., and for ejectment of the spousal defendants from the land. 3 By their separate counterclaims both the possessors and the mortgage company (the latter acting through its owner, Roger Laubach [lender]) mount an attack on the plaintiffs muniment of title — the resale tax deed — to bring about its judicial cancellation. The challenge rests on the county’s failure to comply with the statutory pre-sale notice requirements. 4 The trial court gave summary judgment to the purchaser and denied the three defendants’ joint quest for like relief. According to the trial court’s ruling (a) the pre-sale notice to each of the defendants is sufficient as a matter of law, (b) the county treasurer was required to do no more than give notice by publication and by certified mail, (c) even though the treasurer had in fact requested both, there is no statutory requirement either for a return receipt or for restricted delivery, (d) although *1205 the defendants maintained in their affidavits that they did not receive actual notice, the treasurer complied with all statutory requirements and (e) none of the defendants’ due process rights was violated. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.

A.

Tax Resale Purchaser’s Plea For Summary Judgment

¶3 The purchaser’s suit is based on his claim to a superior title acquired by resale tax deed, which operates in law to extinguish the spousal owners’ and the lender’s statutory opportunity for redeeming the land from ad valorem lien. There is no dispute that the husband signed both the receipt for the notice-bearing certified mail directed to his wife as well as for that which was addressed to him. 5 Nor is it challenged that the lender’s grandson executed the receipt for the notice-bearing certified mail sent to the mortgage company. 6 Purchaser maintains that the proceedings leading toward the county treasurer’s execution of the resale tax deed substantially comply with the statutory prerequisites and provide prima facie evidence of the transaction’s validity. The only issue, he urges, is whether the service effected (on the wife and on the lender) in the framework of the procedure employed complies with the notice requirements of due process. It is the purchaser’s position that the tax resale notice that was to be effected by certified mail directed to each of the spousal owners and to the lender, which called for restricted delivery and return receipt, passes muster under the constitutional mandate for “reasonable probability” that the defendant will receive actual notice. 7

B.

Former Owners’ Counterclaim and Their Summary Judgment Quest

¶4 The spousal defendants argue several affirmative defenses to defeat the purchaser’s suit. According to their joint answer, the wife’s due process rights were violated because (a) she failed to receive “actual notice” of the resale and (b) her notice of resale, given by certified mail, went to the husband, who neither delivered the critical letter to her nor informed her of the impending sale. 8 Both spouses claim the sale is fatally tainted by irregularities because the published notice (a) fails to inform them of the location of the sale, (b) states that the property was being sold under certain cited statutory provisions which had been renumbered in a subsequent official compilation and were no longer in force, (c) fails to include the date the property was sold to the county for delinquent taxes 9 and (d) improperly refers to the 1991, 1992 and 1993 tax rolls, rather than to the “last tax rolls in the treasurer’s office”. 10 Spousal defendants, who aver in their counterclaim that the resale tax deed is void for all the reasons stated in their answer, seek to have their own title quieted.

¶ 5 In support of their quest for relief by summary process, husband and wife submitted separate affidavits. According to that of the wife (a) her husband failed to deliver to her the notice of sale that was mailed by the county treasurer in an envelope addressed to her, (b) she did not receive “actual notice” that her home was to be sold for delinquent taxes on 10 June 1996, (c) her husband was not an authorized agent to sign the receipt for certified mail directed to her or to acknowledge her receipt of the notice from the county treasurer and (d) her husband did not *1206 tell her about the sale of her home for delinquent tax liability until after the sale had been completed. The husband’s affidavit states that (a) the certified letter addressed to him and that directed to his wife were both delivered to him at his jobsite (rather than at his residence), 11

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Bluebook (online)
1998 OK 88, 967 P.2d 1200, 1998 WL 614611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shamblin-v-beasley-okla-1999.