TARNOVERY v. Security State Bank of Killdeer

77 N.W.2d 828, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 131
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 3, 1956
Docket7571
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 N.W.2d 828 (TARNOVERY v. Security State Bank of Killdeer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
TARNOVERY v. Security State Bank of Killdeer, 77 N.W.2d 828, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 131 (N.D. 1956).

Opinion

JOHNSON, Judge.

This is an action to quiet title, commenced by the plaintiff on February 24, 1954, covering the following propei-ty:

The East Half of the Southeast Quarter (Ei/^SEi4) Section 34, and the Northwest Quarter of the South- 1 west Quarter (NWi4SW}4) and Lot 2 of Section 35, Township 148 North of Range 99 West of the 5th P.M.

The plaintiff acquired the property at public sale by contract for deed from McKenzie County, North Dakota, dated November 18, 1941. She paid the contract price in full and received county deed November 2, 1943. Her deed was recorded November 18, 1943. The contract appears valid on its face. McKenzie County acquired the property by auditor’s tax deed, dated October 1, 1940.

The defendants, James Warren and Fred Berger, answered the complaint. Fred Berger is the son of the first marriage of Elizabeth Warren, deceased. James Warren is a son of her second marriage. All the defendants except the two mentioned defaulted in the action.

The answering defendants assert that they have certain estates or interests in the real property involved in the action which they claim are prior and superior to those of the plaintiff. They further allege that Elizabeth Warren, their mother, now deceased, obtained title to the property involved on November 8, 1928; that she died intestate; that the proceedings of McKenzie County (apparently referring to the tax title proceedings) are insufficient in detail and that jurisdictional defects exist in the acquisition of title obtained by the county; that the plaintiff has been in possession of the premises “in recent years” without their permission or consent, or that of any other person authorized to grant the use and occupation thereof. The defendants pray judgment for the value of the use and occupation of the land; that the claim of the plaintiff be declared null and void and that she be perpetually restrained and enjoined from setting up or claiming any title to the premises and that the defendants be declared to be the owners and entitled to the possession.

The District Court determined that the plaintiff was the owner of the premises involved; that the tax title taken by McKenzie County, North Dakota, was in all things valid, or that in 'any event the plaintiff had made such reasonable use of the *830 premises under color of title for a period of ten years, accompanied by payment of all taxes, as to constitute adverse possession thereof. The defendants have appealed to this court and request a trial de novo.

The facts in this case are singularly free from dispute. From the evidence presented it would appear that the defendants were attempting to show that the plaintiff’s possession of the land was not sufficient to constitute adverse possession under the terms of Section 47-0603 NDRC 1943, which was in effect when the plaintiff took possession of the premises in 1941. The defendants attempted to show that the possession of the plaintiff was merely constructive. Grandin v. Gardiner, N.D., 63 N.W.2d 128, and authorities cited therein. The defendants also attempted to show that in the year 1940, when the tax title to the property was taken by McKenzie County, North Dakota, one Charles Becker, was in possession of the premises or occupying at least a part of them.

It is undisputed that if Charles Becker was in fact occupying the premises, either as a tenant or otherwise, he was not served with notice of expiration of the period of redemption. The main burden of the argument of the appellants, both orally and in their brief, is an attack upon the validity of the tax title in McKenzie County, North Dakota, based on the failure of the county to serve Charles Becker.

It is undisputed that Elizabeth Warren, now deceased, obtained a United States Patent to the real property on November 8, 1928. This patent was not recorded in the office of the register of deeds of McKenzie County, North Dakota, until December 22, 1952. So far as the records in that office were concerned, the land had no owner when McKenzie County acquired tax deed thereto.

The notice of the expiration of the period of redemption is dated May 10, 1940. The procedure applicable to acquisition of tax title by the county was, therefore, governed by the terms of Chapter 235 of the 1939 Session Laws. Under that statute, § 1(3) (a), it is required that the notice of expiration of the period of redemption, “shall be sent by registered mail to the owner and to the occupant or tenant in possession, if any * * * Under the terms of this statute a county does not acquire title to real property under tax. deed proceedings until the prescribed notice of expiration of period of redemption has been published and served upon all parties entitled to redeem in the manner prescribed by the statute. Failure to serve the tenant or occupant of the land invalidates the tax title. Anderson v. Roberts, 71 N.D. 345, 1 N.W.2d 338; Schott v. Enander, 73 N.D. 352, 15 N.W.2d 303; Bumann v. Burleigh County, 73 N.D. 655, 18 N.W.2d 10; Mayer v. Ranum, 75 N.D. 548, 30 N.W.2d 608.

Although the trial court found as a fact that at the time of the tax deed proceedings in 1940 there was no tenant on the land, and that the testimony of the county auditor showed he made a search of the record to determine whether or not there was a tenant on the land, and that after such search and inquiry he became convinced that there was no tenant or occupant on the land at the time the tax proceedings were taken and instituted in 1940, the evidence upon this point is somewhat in conflict and unsatisfactory. There are indications in the evidence that Charles Becker may have occupied at least a part of the premises involved in this action, off and on, during the year 1940. He had leased the land in 1929. He had put a “shack” on the land. During the years 1934 to 1939 he worked at a CCC camp located near this land. If he occupied this “shack” intermittently during the year 1940, the evidence also indicates that he may have grazed horses on the land.

When the plaintiff bought the land the shack was still there. She made a claim to it. In 1947 the shack was destroyed by *831 the flood waters of the Little Missouri River. The evidence-upon the occupancy, or possible occupancy, of the premises by Charles Becker, at the time of the tax deed proceeding’s is indefinite and inconclusive. If Charles Becker was an occupant of the premises within the meaning of Chapter 23S of the 1939 Session Laws, he should have been served with the notice of the expiration of the period of redemption. It, however, becomes unnecessary for us to determine whether the findings of the trial court in this connection are correct.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.W.2d 828, 1956 N.D. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tarnovery-v-security-state-bank-of-killdeer-nd-1956.