Towle v. Shelly

19 Neb. 632
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 19 Neb. 632 (Towle v. Shelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Towle v. Shelly, 19 Neb. 632 (Neb. 1886).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This action was brought in the district court of Richardson county for the purpose of foreclosing a tax lien on a certain lot in Falls City.

It is alleged in the petition that this lot was sold by the county treasurer of said county on the 7th day of November, 1877, for the taxes of the year 1876 and previous years, to Richardson county; that the said county after-wards sold and assigned to one B. M. Fox the certificate issued to said county evidencing such sale and purchase; that before the time allowed by law for the redemption of said lot from the*said tax sale, the legal notice was given, and upon the expiration of such time of redemption, a tax deed of said lot was duly executed upon said certificate by the county treasurer of said county to the said B. M. Fox, and delivered to him, but that said deed failed to convey title to said lot for the reason that “there was levied by the county commissioners of said Richardson county against said property, as taxes for the year 1876, and which formed a part of the taxes paid on said tax sale for which said pretended deed was issued, a county insane tax, amounting to seventy-five cents in the aggregate, which said county insane tax was wholly unauthorized by law;” that the said lot was thereafter, on three several occasions, sold for delinquent taxes due thereon, by the county treasurer to the said B. M. Fox, for the several sums of money in said petition set out and specified, and certificates of sale therefor duly executed and delivered by the county treasurer of said county to the said B. M. Fox; that afterwards the whole of the said certificates, including the one upon which the tax deed was issued, were by the said B. M. Fox sold, [634]*634and for a valuable consideration duly assigned to the plaintiff. Also, that for the taxes of the year 1880 the said lot was by said county treasurer duly sold to Florence L. Vaughan, and a certificate therefor duly executed and delivered to her; which said certificate was, for a valuable consideration, afterwards by the said Florence L. Vaughan duly sold, assigned, and delivered to the plaintiff.

It was claimed in and by said petition that the proportion of the several sums paid for said lot at said several tax sales, which was properly applicable to and due upon the south twenty-three feet of said lot, the' same being twenty-three-twenty-fifth parts of said several sums, together with interest thereon, remains unpaid and due to him, with a prayer that an account might be taken thereof, that the title of the said tax deed might be adjudged to have failed, and the amount found due upon such accounting, together with costs and attorney’s fees under the statute, be decreed to be a lien upon said south twenty-three feet of said lot, etc.

There was an answer by the defendant E. S. Towle, in which he alleges that he “ was the sole owner of the south twenty-three feet of said lot, and has been such sole owner since the 8th day of April, 1882; that he purchased said property, together with the two-story brick building situate thereon, at a public sale had by the assignee in bankruptcy of the bankrupt estate of Keim & Grable, the former owners thereof; that previous to the purchase aforesaid said lot 7, in block 71, in the city aforesaid, was partly owned by the plaintiff and the said Keim & Grable, and, with the exception of the year 1879, was assessed entirely to said Kiem & Grable for the purpose of taxation; that for the year 1879 the south twenty feet of said lot, which was owned entirely by the bankrupt estate of Keim & Grable, was assessed for taxes to the real owners, and was afterwards sold for taxes to the amount of $36.34, as charged in plaintiff’s petition, and which this defendant [635]*635admits is a charge on said land, less illegal taxes, and which defendant is ready and willing to pay, with reasonable interest, as the court may direct.”

The said defendant in and by his said answer alleged that as to all the other sales and purchases of said lot for taxes as set forth in said plaintiff's petition “they are illegal and void and constitute no claims or liens upon said property, for the reason that said plaintiff was in every instance, except as above related, charged with the duty of paying a part of the taxes assessed on said lot,” etc.

The plaintiff demurred to the said answer of defendant Towle by general demurrer, which said demurrer was sustained by the court, and the said defendant electing to stand upon his said answer, and failing to present other plea or answer to the said petition, the court found thereon for the plaintiff; that the said deed was null and void and that the same be set aside; that there is due the plaintiff, after all illegal taxes have been' deducted on said tax certificates, the sum of $626.12. The court also found that there was due the plaintiff as attorney’s fees the sum of $62.61; that the said sums be and constitute a first lien on the said south twenty-three feet of said lot, etc.

The said defendant brings the cause to this court on error. The only question presented by this record, although the same is presented in several ways, is whether the facts alleged in the answer of the defendant, to-wit, that he, the said defendant, “was the sole owner of the south twenty-three feet of said lot, and has been such sole owner since the 8th day of April, 1882; that he purchased said property together with the two-story brick building situate thereon at a public sale had by the assignee in bankruptcy of the bankrupt estate of Keim & Grable, the former owners thereof; that previous to the purchase aforesaid said lot * * * was partly owned by the plaintiff and the said Keim & Grable, and, with the exception of the year 1879, was assessed entirely to the said Kiem and Grable for the purpose of taxation,” amounts to a defense.

[636]*636There can be no doubt that when the defendant Towles purchased the south twenty-three feet of said lot “ together with the two-story brick building thereon” at bankruptcy sale, he bought it subject to the unpaid taxes due thereon,, and did not take said property discharged of the lien of said taxes, by reason of the certificate therefor having fallen into the hands of the owner of the north two feet strip of said lot.

In some of the states, in former times, in cases where it was sought by means of tax proceedings to divest- the title of the general owner, and acquire the title and possession of valuable acres for cents paid for taxes, and where it was considered not only permissible but commendable to construe every possible technicality against such tax title, it has been held that where an owner of an undivided interest in'a piece of real estate bought the interest of his co-tenant therein for delinquent taxes, he would be held to hold such title in trust for such co-tenant. This was the holding of the supreme court of Michigan in the cases of Page v. Webster, 8 Mich., 263, and Butler v. Porter, 13 Id., 292, and it is true that in the case of Cooley v. Waterman, 16 Id., 366, the doctrine of the two former cases was stretched to cover a case where two pieces of land owned in severalty by two owners, but wrongfully assessed together, were also sold together for the delinquent taxes of the whole and bid in by the owner of one parcel. I know of no other case where the rule has been carried to a case of ownership in severalty.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Neb. 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/towle-v-shelly-neb-1886.