Thurston v. Miller

10 R.I. 358
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 6, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 10 R.I. 358 (Thurston v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thurston v. Miller, 10 R.I. 358 (R.I. 1872).

Opinion

Braxton, C. J.

This is an action of ejectment, brought by *361 the plaintiff Tburston, to recover possession of a lot of land in tbe city of Providence, described in tbe declaration as Lot No. 69 on plat 32 of the plats made for tbe use of the assessors in said city, in their office on file, to which tbe plaintiff claims title. Miller, tbe defendant, has pleaded to tbe action not guilty, in which tbe plaintiff joins issue. Tbe jury trial was waived, and tbe case submitted to tbe court as well upon tbe facts as tbe law. Upon tbe trial, tbe plaintiff claimed title by deed from Benjamin Tripp, city treasurer of tbe city of Providence, and under a sale by him as collector of taxes of said city, for a tax assessed upon this estate which remained unpaid. He submitted tbe deed duly executed by said Tripp in bis said capacity, which recites tbe proceedings of tbe city and of tbe assessors in tbe assessment of tbe tax, that tbe estate was taxed to William Miller’s heirs, and also the- proceedings of tbe said Tripp in tbe sale of said premises.

Tbe validity of the assessment was not questioned. It was not denied that tbe estate was properly assessed to William Miller’s heirs, be being tbe owner of tbe estate at tbe time of bis decease, and tbe estate never having been divided among bis heirs. It appeared in evidence that William Miller, at bis decease, left eight children, his heirs, seven of whom were living at tbe time of this assessment, and one was deceased, leaving two infant children bis heirs. Of these heirs, tbe defendant in this action was one. Tbe objection to tbe plaintiff’s title was, that tbe collector had not complied with tbe statute provisions in relation to sales for taxes, which alone authorized him to make sale of tbe premises.

Tbe deed recites tbe proceedings of tbe collector; that be gave notice for three weeks in tbe “ Providence Daily Journal,” that tbe estate described in tbe deed would be sold at public auction at tbe office of Francis J. Sheldon, No. 36 North Main Street, in said city, on tbe 4th day of August, 1870, at ten o’clock A. M., or so much thereof as would pay said tax, interest, and costs and expenses, amounting to $33^/tr. That be caused notice of tbe levy, and time and place of sale, to issue to said William Miller’s heirs, upon whom said notice was duly served twenty-one days previous to said day of sale. That at said sale at public auction at tbe time and place, said Tburston, being tbe high *362 est bidder, purchased the estate for the said sum of thirty-three dollars and forty-nine cents, and he acknowledged the receipt of that amount from him. It was objected that the collector did not publish the notice of sale for three weeks in any newspaper. The collector was required by sec. 11, chap. 40, of the Revised Statutes, before selling, to advertise the sale for three weeks in some newspaper printed in the city of Providence. What the collector actually did was to cause the advertisement to be inserted in the “Providence Daily Journal” on Monday and Thursday of each week, for three successive weeks, giving notice of the intended sale, and it is objected that this is not sufficient, and in order to comply with the statute it should have been inserted in every issue of the paper.

Had the sale been advertised in every issue of a paper published only on . Monday and Thursday, it would have been beyond question all that was required, a publication for the period of three weeks. If published continuously on those days for three full weeks, is it less a compliance ? It cannot be said, under those circumstances, that notice was discontinued or withdrawn, and if it were a continued notice, the time was sufficient. The court in Maryland held such a notice a compliance with such a requirement. Johnson v. Dorsey, 7 Gill, 286.

In the case of Delogny v. Smith, 3 La. 417, the publication was not continued. It was discontinued for one month of the three, and not brought down to the day of sale. In the other case of Scales v. Alvis, 12 Ala. 617, the notice of sale on February 1st was advertised for one month and afterwards for two months, a notice of a sale on the 1st of- April, it being required to give three months’ notice, and neither notice having been continued three months.

The statute (Rev. Stat. chap. 40, § 15) requires the- collector, in all cases of sales of real estate, to make a return of all his proceedings under oath into the city clerk’s office, within ten days after the sale. It is objected that no return was made within the ten days. The collector did make a return of his proceeding in relation to the sale of this estate. It did not appear from the return itself when it was made, nor was there any indorsement of the clerk when it was received. Parol evidence was offered to show when it was in fact made, and although objected *363 to was received, since it did not prove anything which by the statute was required to be in writing, or contradict or vary anything in the writing. It appeared that the return was made within the ten days after the sale. This return did not,state all the proceedings of the collector. He omitted to state in his return that the sale was advertised in any newspaper, nor did it state that any notice was left at the last place of abode of the person to whom the estate was taxed.

There is another matter said to be omitted which appears substantially in the return, viz., the amount for which the estate was sold, and that it was sold to the highest bidder and sold to the plaintiff.

It is insisted that for these defects in the return, the sale is void, and that to render the deed valid, the return must not only be made within the ten days, but must be a return of all the proceedings of the collector down to the time of making the sale; and we have been referred to several cases in other states holding that without a return of all a collector’s proceedings within the time prescribed by their statutes the collector’s deed will be void. These cases are decided under their statutes, which vary essentially from the provisions which we are considering. These statutes require a return of the collector’s proceedings within thirty days, and the right to redeem by the owner is limited from that day. On the expiration of the time limited, the collector is to make a certificate of such estate as is unredeemed, and until all these things are done, he cannot make his deed. The first return is for the purpose of redemption, which must be from the collector, and cannot be after the execution of the deed. The redemption here is from the purchaser, and not from the collector. The deed maybe made at anytime after the sale| and before the time limited for the collector’s return.

We do not think it was necessary to the validity of the deed that these things should appear in the city clerk’s office before the execution of the deed, or that the neglect to make a full return afterwards was intended to relate back and defeat the deed already made. Though such return by the collector is by the statute made primé facie evidence of the matter returned, it is not the only evidence. The recitals in the deed are also primé facie evidence of the matter recited therein, as to his proceedings.

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Bluebook (online)
10 R.I. 358, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thurston-v-miller-ri-1872.