Court Opinion

ID: 6604357
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:10:47.160962+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:03.550088
License: Public Domain

Cole, 0. J.
This is an action of ejectment, commenced September 7, 1883. Eor the purposes of the trial it was admitted that the plaintiff had the patent title and was entitled to recover unless the defendant was the owner of the land by virtue of a tax deed bearing date and recorded May 29, 1882, issued on the tax sale of 1879. No question was made but that the statute of limitations was well pleaded in the answer. The plaintiff objected to the admission of the tax deed in evidence on the ground that it was void upon its face because it was executed by the deputy clerk in his own name. The objection was overruled and the deed was received in evidence. The plaintiff then sought to impeach the tax deed by showing irregularities in the tax proceedings, but this evidence was excluded because the nine months’ limitation had run upon the deed before the' suit was commenced. The defendant had judgment.
The first question to be considered is, Was the tax deed properly executed by the deputy clerk in his own name?' *136We think the question must be answered in the affirmative.
The statute requires the county clerk to appoint a deputy in writing under his hand, and, in case of the absence or disability of the clerk, or of a vacancy in the office, such deputy is authorized to perform all the duties of the clerk during such absence or until the vacancy is filled. Sec. 706, R. S. The county clerk is the officer to execute tax deeds. Sec. 1176. As the deputy, in the absence or disability of the clerk, is clothed with all the statutory powers of that officer and required to perform his duties, there can be no doubt but he may execute the tax deed. But the question is, How must he execute it? It is claimed by the learned counsel for the defendant that the deputy, in the absence of the clerk, is ¡pro Tiac vice the incumbent of the office, and may execute the deed either by describing himself and signing it as deputy, without naming the clerk, or by reciting and writing the clerk’s name and adding by himself as deputy. In either form it is said it plainly appears that the deputy, in the exercise of a power vested in him by law, executed the deed, and that the clerk did not. This position, we think, is sound, and it is fully sustained by the authorities cited on the brief of counsel. In Huey v. Van Wie, 23 Wis., 613, the tax deed was executed by the deputy, who signed the clerk’s name and added his own name as deputy. The deed was held to be well executed. In the opinion. I say the power to make the deed is vested in the officer, and when the deputy acts he should do so in the name of his principal. I refer to the general rule that any ministerial duty may be performed by deputy, and add that the deputy should proceed in the name of his principal. This general remark is doubtless open to the just criticism passed upon it by counsel, that it was not necessary for the decision there made, and fails to make the proper distinction between an act performed by an agent on behalf of his principal and *137an act performed by a deputy who is authorized by law to do the act in question. . In the one case the agent derives his authority to act from his principal for whom he acts. In the other the deputy derives his authority from the law which clothes him with all the power of the clerk in the given case, or rather makes him the officer to perform that duty for the occasion. The distinction is well founded in reason and should not be overlooked. It follows from this view that the tax deed was properly executed by.the deputy, in his own name.
The next question is, Oould the tax deed be impeached by showing such irregularities in the tax proceedings as would avoid it, or was that inquiry foreclosed by the bar of the statute? We stated at the outset when the action was commenced, and when the tax deed was recorded. What limitation, under such circumstances, must apply? The defendant’s counsel says the nine months’ limitation; the counsel on the other side insists that it is the three years’ limitation. The whole question depends upon the effect given ch. 250, Laws of 1882, which amends sec. 1210d, E. S. That chapter enacts that sec. 1210c? shall read as follows: “Every action or proceeding for the recovery of lands heretofore sold, or which may hereafter be sold, for the nonpayment of taxes heretofore. levied, shall be commenced within nine months after the recording of the tax deed, and not thereafter: provided, that in the case of tax deeds issued prior to the 25th day of March, 1878, the action, if not then barred, must be brought within nine months from that day, and not thereafter.” Then follows a proviso and additional provisions, the portion quoted being but a literal repetition of the language of sec. 1210c?. Mow, the counsel for the plaintiff insists that it was not the object and intent of the legislature, in re-enacting sec. 1210c? in the manner they did, to alter the old law so as to make the nine months’ limitation apply to and cover cases which were *138not within the scope of that section prior to the re-enactment, but was merely to add to the section the new matters therein contained. So he says the words in the law of 1882, “lands heretofore sold” “ taxes' heretofore levied,” relate to a time prior to the taking effect of sec. 1210d, and not to the time prior to the taking effect of the act of 1882.
It seems to us that there is great force in that view of this legislation. This construction derives much support from the language of the proviso in sec. 1210$ which was re-enacted. That proviso is that in the case of tax deeds issued prior to March 25, 1878, the action, if not then barred, must be brought within nine -months “from that day, and not thereafter.” Of course, it would be perfectly stupid and absurd to provide in a law which took effect April 14, 1882, that an action to recover lands sold for taxes, where the tax deed was issued prior to March 25, 1878, must be brought within nine months from that day and not thereafter. For the nine months’ limitation would have expired more than three years and three months before the new law went into operation. This shows that we cannot give sec. 1210d, as re-enacted, a literal construction. Besides, by re-enacting the limitation in the act of 1882, if it is made to include all deeds based on sales for nonpayment of taxes levied prior to April 14, 1882, it would necessarily in many cases extend the limitation beyond three years. Consequently, we are inclined to hold that ch. 250 was intended to be a mere continuation of sec. 1210d, but did not enlarge the scope of that section so as to embrace cases not theretofore covered by it. Ordinarily the word “ heretofore,” where it occurs in any statute, is construed to mean any time previous to the day when such statute takes effect, and the word “ hereafter ” to mean the time after the statute containing the word takes effect. But to so construe these words in the law of 1882 would, vre think, be inconsistent with the manifest intent of the legislature in enacting it. Sec. 1210d was doubtless re*139enacted for the purpose of adding the remedial provision to it intended to apply only to cases theretofore embraced within the section. We are not unmindful of the rule of construction which has frequently been recognized by this court that where the later statute covers the whole subject of the earlier, and embraces new provisions which plainly show that it was intended as a substitute for the first, it will operate as a repeal by implication. But it is a question of legislative intent, which, in the case before us, is plain, as we have stated. We do not go into an examination of the cases upon this point as we do not intend to go counter to them. This case is peculiar, and may well stand upon the language used in the law of 1882.
The position that the taxes — fqr the nonpayment of which the sale was made in 1879 — were levied prior to November 1, 1878, seems to us so clearly untenable as not to require comment.
It follows from these views that evidence to impeach the validity of the tax deed should have been admitted.
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial ordered.