Court Opinion

ID: 7971699
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 00:55:45.143444+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:34:47.573666
License: Public Domain

LEWIS, X
Action to determine adverse claims. On a former appeal it was decided that the defendant was entitled to a second trial, under G. S. 1894, § 5845. There are two questions, only, calling for any notice on this appeal.
1. The plaintiff claims through a tax deed, and his title rests upon the validity of the notice of redemption from the tax sale. This notice is exactly like the one considered in the case of Mather v. Gurley, 75 Minn. 248, 77 N. W. 957, and there held to be invalid because it' did not state that the time to redeem would expire at the end of sixty days. Counsel for appellant have presented a very able argument in favor of the validity of the notice, and that it cannot be construed otherwise without doing violence to its language. This court has always applied the rule of strict construction in reference to redemption notices in tax proceedings, and although there is very strong ground for the position taken by appellant, and the decision referred to may seem to rest upon somewhat technical distinctions, such construction having been adopted by this court, and the decision having become a rule of property, it should stand as the settled law upon the subject.
2. Appellant claims that, having been in possession of the premises at the time judgment was entered in his favor on the previous trial, he is entitled to recover for improvements made by him, he being in possession under color of title. Without deciding what the effect of such a prior judgment might have been, were the improvements made after the entry of the judgment, the record does not disclose when such improvements were niade, with reference to the entry of the judgment, — whether before or after.
Order affirmed.