Vail v. Custer County

315 P.2d 993, 132 Mont. 205, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 31
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1957
Docket9362
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 315 P.2d 993 (Vail v. Custer County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vail v. Custer County, 315 P.2d 993, 132 Mont. 205, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 31 (Mo. 1957).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES:

This is an appeal by the Tongue River and Yellowstone River Irrigation District, defendant and cross-complainant in the court below and hereafter referred to as the District, from a judgment and decree of the district court of Custer County, in favor of the plaintiff and cross-defendant, Bruce Vail, hereafter referred to as the plaintiff, and in favor of the defendant and cross-defendant, Custer County, Montana, hereafter referred to as the county, in an action to quiet title to certain lots in Richland Addition, a platted townsite in Custer County adjacent to the City of Miles City, Montana.

The plat of Richland Addition was officially filed in Custer [207]*207County on December 30, 1911, dividing acreage into blocks and lots to form a suburban residential addition out of lands within the District. To one lot, plaintiff claims fee simple title by prescription. To all other lots, he grounds his title on tax deeds from Custer County. Actually plaintiff’s ownership is not questioned. Rather, the dispute is whether plaintiff holds title in fee simple or clouded by the lien of special assessments for water charges.

The District argues that the county is liable to it for failure to collect these special assessments at the time they were due. They were purportedly assessed to meet annual payments on principal and interest on the District’s bonds and annual maintenance and repair of its irrigation system. They cover the years 1921 through 1926. There is no dispute as to any assessment subsequent to these years. In passing, it is observed that the District’s bonds have long since been fully retired.

The district court sustained plaintiff making its own findings of fact and conclusions of law quieting plaintiff’s title in fee simple and denying all liability against Custer County.- Thereupon the District appealed.

We note in passing that when the present owner was asked why he objected to paying these old assessments, he answered: “They should have been collected years ag*o.” In effect, his reply could well serve as a summation of this opinion.

During each of the years beginning with 1921 and continuing through 1926, the commissioners of the District purported to assess all of Richland Addition,- — whether lots, blocks or acreage tracts and no matter by whom owned, in care of one R. H. Daniels, who appears in the title chain as the secretary and treasurer of the Holt Realty Company, grantor to the C. B. Towers Company, platter of Richland Addition. Except that the Holt Realty Company was a prior owner of some of the land later platted, just what possible connection R. H. Daniels might have had, if any, with the lots here involved does [208]*208not appear, but it is clear that R. H. Daniels was not the owner of these lots at any of the times here discussed.

The assessment appears in the District’s exhibit A3, 1 through 6, merely as “Richland Addition (lot owners not given) c/o R. H. Daniels Miles City.” Acreage is given by quarter section and total. The 1921 assessment adds “Fred R. Savage, F. Francis and H. C. Plimpton, Trustees,” but this does not appear thereafter. Some years, the total assessed is given by “sinking fund” (payment on principal), interest and “general fund”; other years not. The 1921 assessment gives the total as 125.23 acres, whereas the 1926 assessment gives the same total as 130.33. And as a source of additional uncertainty, immediately preceding the Richland Addition entry we find another reading: “Residence Park Add’n (Dickinson & Gillespie, St. Paul, R. H. Daniels local agent. (Owners at time of platting.) Lot owners not given”.

To repeat, these assessments were not broken down as to lots and blocks, nor as to the current ownership. No tax notices covering these assessments were ever sent to the property owners. The annual list covers about twelve columned pages. Each was certified by the president of the board of commissioners of the Irrigation District and sent to the county clerk, the proper officer to receive irrigation district assessment lists. But from 1921 through 1926 the purported assessments of Richland Addition were never entered in the county assessment books nor were any of these purported special assessments ever collected.

It would have been entirely possible to have made individual water assessments. During the same years, 1921 through 1926, state and county general taxes were levied in exact amounts on the various individual lots in Richland Addition and against the various individual owners by name. Whenever these general taxes were not paid, Custer County acquired tax title to the lots. Except lot 3 of block 26, for which plaintiff claims title by prescription, the lots so acquired by Custer County in Richland Addition include all lots now owned by plaintiff,— [209]*209namely: Lots 1, 2, 4, 11 and 14 in block 26 and lots 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 12, 14 and 16 in block 35. It is from these very tax deeds to these lots that plaintiff deraigns his title. Bnt as stated, these general tax proceedings did not include irrigation special assessments.

On January 19, 1922, prior to the above general tax proceedings under which, except for lot 3, plaintiff asserts fee simple title, Custer County issued a purported certificate of tax sale, No. 1568, to the District for all of Richland Addition. The certificate is based on the District’s 1921 assessment and the moneys claimed due under it. The total amount assessed is $311.95. Present owners and their predecessors have never redeemed from this sale. Nor has the District ever applied for a tax deed. However, under our holding, the assessment is totally ineffectual, for, as above stated, it covered the entire Richland Addition and it described the property struck off to the defendant Irrigation District as a whole and by forty acre tracts, as follows: SW% SW%, Sec. 26, T. 8 N., R. 47 E.M.M., 38.18 acres, SE*4 SW%, Sec. 26, T. 8 N., R. 47 E.M.M., 39.09 acres; NW% SWI4, Sec. 26, T. 8 N., R. 47 E.M.M., 9.78 acres; SE% SE%, Sec. 27, T. 8 N., R. 47 E.M.M., 38.18 acres, not by lot and block and not by individual ownership. Neither did the certificate state what portion of the aforesaid amount of $311.95 would be chargeable against individual lots within Richland Addition.

Some twenty years later, during 1949 and for the first time, the District procured a breakdown of its purported 1921 through 1926 special assessments, prepared for the Custer County treasurer by a Miles City abstractor and including the lots involved in this present litigation. The Custer County officials adopted this breakdown and attempted to collect the moneys then claimed due. The then owners of the lots now involved in this litgation refused to make payment.

Prior to September 21, 1940, plaintiff’s predecessors in interest entered into the actual possession of lot 3 in block 26 of Richland Addition, claiming this lot as their own. The dis[210]*210triet court found that since that date they and their successors have been continuously in actual, open, notorious, hostile and exclusive possession and occupancy of lot 3, and have paid all taxes and special assessments since that date levied thereon.

The District cites sixteen specifications of error, all of which go into the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and to its judgment and decree sustaining plaintiff’s fee simple title and denying liability on defendant Custer County. The material facts are not in dispute. It is merely a problem of how the law shall be applied to these facts.

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Vail v. Custer County
315 P.2d 993 (Montana Supreme Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
315 P.2d 993, 132 Mont. 205, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vail-v-custer-county-mont-1957.