Treese v. Ferguson

1925 OK 876, 251 P. 91, 120 Okla. 235, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 214
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 27, 1925
Docket13819
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1925 OK 876 (Treese v. Ferguson) 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
Treese v. Ferguson, 1925 OK 876, 251 P. 91, 120 Okla. 235, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 214 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

ESTES, C.

Parties appear in the same order as in the trial court. Plaintiffs sued defendants to cancel a resale tax deed, alleging that at and for several years prior to such, sale, they had been the fee-simple owners of the real estate. They alleged that the county treasurer had executed such deed to defendant Jo. 0. Ferguson on a purported resale on November 22, 1920. Judgment was for defendants, from which the plaintiffs appeal.

Plaintiffs contend that said deed was void on its face because it contained a conclusion as to the giving of notice, rather than a statement in detail of the ultimate facts constituting the notice, so that a court may determine its validity from the lace thereof. Certain recent decisions of this court, herein overruled, are relied upon. The sole recitation as to notice contained in the deed is: “The same were duly and legally advertised for sale at resale for the taxes, costs, penalties, and interests,” etc.

Section 9750-, C. O. S. 1921, is:

“The deed shall be signed and executed by the county treasurer in his official capacity, and acknowledged before some officer authorized to take acknowledgments of deeds; and when substantially thus executed and recorded, in the proper record of titles to real estate, shall vest in the purchaser a full right, title and interest in and to said lands. Such deed shall be presumptive evidence in all of the courts of the state, in all suits and controversies in relation to the rights of the purchaser, his heirs or assigns to the lands thereby conveyed of the following-facts : Eirst. That the real property deeded was subject to taxation for the year or years stated in the deed. Sepriv‘d. That the taxes were not paid at any time before the sale. Third. The real property deeded had not been redeemed from sale at the date of the deed. Fourth. That the property had been listed and assessed. Fifth. That the taxes were levied according to the law. Sixth. That the property -was sold for taxes as stated in the deed, and was duly advertised before behig sold, and tr defeat the deed it must be clearly pleatiea and clear'v proven that some one of the above-named six requisites was wholly omitted and not done and a showing that any one or all of them was irregularly done will not be sufficient to defeat the deed.”

In effect, said statute is simply a rule of evidence, providing presumptive evidence of six certain facts, one of which is that the property “was duly advertised before being sold.” It is specifically therein provided that one seeking to de'eat such deed must clearly plead and pyove that some one of the six requisites was wholly omitted and not done, thus placing the burden of proof on the one attacking such deed. Of course no one would contend that the owner’s property could be taken without notice. An act of the Legislature declaring such recitals to be con-elusive would be unconstitutional. Wilson v. Wood, 10 Okla. 279, 61 Pac. 1045. It -is quite customary and not ultra vires for tbe Legislature to prescribe rules of evidence. In Turman et al. v. Ingram, 83 Okla. 198, 202 Pac. 993, Mr. Justice Pitchford reviews the decisions of this court in this behalf. The opinion holds and demonstrates that the holding- of this court had ever been at that late date that such legal conclusion' as to notice in a tax deed does not render same void on its face. The tax deed in that case recited “that said lands had been legally advertised for sale and sold for said taxes”, a legal conclusion, substantially in the form of both statute and the deed in the instant case. The opinion concludes:

“From the foregoing authorities, we are-of the opinion that the treasurer’s deed to Brown was not void upon its face on the ground that the same fails to recite notice. The failure to give the notice is a matter of defense.”

In Adams et al. v. Callander, 93 Okla. 228, 220 Pac. 344, referring to the statute-first quoted herein, prescribing such conclusion as to notice, says:

“It will be observed that this section sets out what the deed shall contain, and when these facts are incorporated in the deed, the-deed is presumptive evidence that the statute has been complied with. A fortiori, if the deed does not contain these requirements, the deed is void upon its face and conveys no title.” Gafiney et al. v. First National Bank, 94 Okla. 177, 221 Pac. 49.

While the courts of Missouri, and perhaps a few others, in certain cases, have, under peeuliar statutes and conditions, held that a tax deed should recite the prerequisite-facts, leaving it to the proper tribunal to determine whether those facts show a sufficient compliance with the statute, it is pointed out in Black on Tax Titles (2nd Ed.) sec. 403, page 505. that the able and well-reasoned opinion in O’Grady v. Barnhisel, 23 Cal. 287, lays down the true doctrine. Declaring that the primary object of tax-sales was to provide revenue for the support of the government, and that the provision in question was a part of the machinery for such purpose, and referring to a situation-analogous to that obtaining in this state, that court said:

*237 “It had become proverbial that a tax title was no title at all, and a sale for taxes was as near a mockery as any proceeding having the appearance of legal sanction could be. The principal cause was the difficulty in proving the various steps essential to the validity of such a sale, and the intention was to change the rule of evidence upon that subject, and throw the burden of proof upon the party asserting the invalidity. The view contended for would entirely defeat this intention, for if the tacts are to be stated in the deed, the effect is precisely the same as to require them to be shown aliunde. The only difference is in the mode of proof, and the embarrassment is rather increased than diminished; for if any material fact be omitted, the deed is invalid and cannot be given in evidence. The purchaser is subjected to the double risk of an error in the previous proceedings, and a mistake in setting these proceedings forth in the deed, either of which would be fatal. These results are plainly in contravention of the purpose intended, and the language of the act is no less conclusive. The general provision is that the matter specified shall be stated, but in respect to the publication of the notice of sale, it is provided that the manner of publication shall be described. If it were intended that the same particularity should be observed in other respects, that intention would doubtless have been expressed, and the maxim, expressi unius est exclusio alterius, applies.”

In Pillow v. Roberts, 54 U. S. Sup. Ct. 472, 476 (Ark.), that high court, discussing a statute of Arkansas providing that a tax deed should be evidence of the regularity and legality of the sale, said:

“It is easy, by very ingenious and astute construction, to evade the force of almost any statute, where a court is so disposed. We might say that the exp¡>.”ession ‘deed so made by the collector’ means deeds made strictly according to the requirements of all the preceding sections of the revenue law, and decide that only deeds first proved to be completely regular and legal can be received in evidence: and thus, by qualifying the whole section by such an enlarged construction of these two words, and disregarding all the others evade the obvious meaning and intention of the law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 876, 251 P. 91, 120 Okla. 235, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treese-v-ferguson-okla-1925.