Tesdell v. Greenwalt

290 N.W. 676, 228 Iowa 227
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 5, 1940
DocketNo. 45057.
StatusPublished

This text of 290 N.W. 676 (Tesdell v. Greenwalt) 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
Tesdell v. Greenwalt, 290 N.W. 676, 228 Iowa 227 (iowa 1940).

Opinion

Bliss, J.

In December 1927 the city of Des Moines issued: its street improvement assessment certificate, No. 55725, for $269.52, in payment of paving; its water service connection certificates, Nos. 56074 and 56075, for $18.22 each; and its sewer stubs connection assessment certificate, No. 55915, for $33.26. All of these evidenced special assessments against Lot 39 in Arnolds Place, in the city of Des Moines, for public improvements directly benefiting this lot. Each certificate was payable i ten annual installments, evidenced by ten coupons attached to each certificate.

Neither the ordinary taxes for 1929 nor the assessment installments for that year, payable in 1930, were paid, and the *229 county treasurer included said lot in the notice of the annual tax sale for the nonpayment of both ordinary taxes and special assessments, to be held on December 2, 1930. The sale was held on the 2d, 3d, and 4th days of December 1930, and on the last date the treasurer offered said lot, but, through error, mistake, or inadvertence, the bid noted was for only the delinquent special assessments. The defendant Witmer placed upon the witness stand the deputy treasurer, who testified: “It was no doubt purely an error on the part of the treasurer, and it no doubt was the intention of the treasurer to sell for both the general and special taxes. After the certificate was made out it was discovered that it only referred to specials. The specials were sold at the regular sale and the regular tax was offered at the adjourned sale on December 22d. So far as I know it was offered and sold on December 4th for general as well as special taxes, but the tax certificate was made out to show only special taxes included in that sale.” George Harnagle was the purchaser and the amount bid and paid was $70.18. On December 4, 1930, the sale was adjourned by the treasurer to the 22d day of that month.

On December 10, 1930, the treasurer issued to Harnagle his certificate of purchase at tax sale, which recited that the sale was for said delinquent special assessment installments, giving the number of the installment, the number of the certificate and for what kind of improvement issued, with the amount of each installment and interest. This certificate was assigned by Harnagle to the Hawkeye Loan & Brokerage Company, and by the latter company assigned to the plaintiff on January 12, 1935. Tax deed on this certificate was issued to the plaintiff on November 15, 1938. This deed recites that the lot conveyed was subject to taxation for the year 1929, and that the taxes assessed thereon for that year were unpaid at the date of the sale, and that the property was sold for $70.18, “being the whole amount of taxes, interest and costs then due and remaining unpaid.”

Having discovered that some error or mistake, as above stated, had been made at the sale on December 4th, the treasurer *230 re-offered the property for the delinquent ordinary taxes at the adjourned sale on December 22, 1930, and the lot was sold therefor to George Harnagle, for $46.46, the full amount owing on said taxes. Certificate of the purchase was issued to him the same day and assigned to the Hawkeye Loan & Brokerage Company. Sufficient notice of the expiration of the period of redemption was duly and properly served, and affidavit of said service was duly filed. On December 18, 1934, the treasurer executed and delivered his tax deed conveying this property to the Hawkeye Loan & Brokerage Company, for the tax sale of December 22, 1930. On February 1, 1935, the Hawkeye Loan & Brokerage Company executed its quitclaim deed conveying this property to the plaintiff. Both tax deeds were properly executed, acknowledged and recorded. All ordinary taxes subsequent to the tax sale were paid by the plaintiff, but none of the installments of the special assessments, maturing after the tax sale, were paid! On December 17, 1935, the treasurer, at a public bidder, or scavenger tax sale, sold this lot for the unpaid installments of the special assessments for the years 1931, 1932, 1933, and 1934, amounting to $254.02, to Max Ruff-corn, for 65 cents. Certificate of purchase was issued to him on January 20, 1936, which he assigned on October 1, 1936, to G. G. Herrick, who thereafter assigned it to the defendant H. Pierce Witmer. The latter is also the owner of all of the special assessment certificates referred to herein. After Witmer had served upon plaintiff the 90-day notice of the expiration of the period of redemption from the tax sale of December 17, 1935, and of his intention to ask for a tax deed to this property, the plaintiff, on September 15, 1938, filed her petition herein. The litigated controversy is chiefly between the plaintiff and the defendant Witmer. The defendant Herrick disclaimed any interest in the property. Plaintiff in her petition alleges: That she is the absolute owner of the property by reason of the tax deeds and the quitclaim deed of the Hawkeye Loan & Brokerage Company; that the liens of the special assessment certificates of the defendant Witmer were extinguished by her tax deeds, particularly by the tax deed issued on the sale for *231 the ordinary taxes on December 22, 1930; that because the lien of these assessment installments was extinguished, the tax sale certificate of Witmer, based upon them is necessarily void; that under Code section 7290 the defendant had no standing to question the tax deeds. Plaintiff prayed for a decree establishing the validity of her deeds, confirming the extinguishment of the liens of the defendant’s special assessment certificates and tax sale certificate, and quieting plaintiff’s title as against the claims and liens of defendant, and enjoining the defendant county treasurer from issuing a tax deed on defendant Witmer’s tax sale certificate, and for general equitable relief. .The chief defense pleaded and relied upon by defendant Witmer was that there could be but one sale for the delinquent ordinary taxes and delinquent special assessments, and that, since at the sale on December 4th, the property was sold only for the delinquent specials, the regular ordinary taxes ceased to be a lien by reason of said omission, and since they were not liens there was no basis for the tax sale for their nonpayment on December 22, 1930, and the tax deed issued on said sale is invalid. Each side urges other grounds and reasons in support of its position, but in our judgment the determination of the case may be bottomed upon the tax deed issued on the tax sale of December 22d. If that deed is valid then the plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for. It is our conclusion that it is valid.

The trial court made a general finding that the equities of the case were with the defendants, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief demanded, and rendered judgment and decree dismissing plaintiff’s petition at her cost.

Under Code section 7254 the treasurer may continue the sale from day to day as long as there are bidders, or until the taxes are all paid. When this has been done and all the real estate advertised for the tax sale has been offered and a part remains unsold for want of bidders, the treasurer may adjourn the sale to a definite day. (Code section 7259.) It was under the authority of these sections and for some of the reasons stated therein that the treasurer adjourned the sale on the 4th day of December to the 22d of the month. No one

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Bluebook (online)
290 N.W. 676, 228 Iowa 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tesdell-v-greenwalt-iowa-1940.