Court Opinion

ID: 6901192
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:55:07.155109+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:10.730095
License: Public Domain

Mr. Justice McBride
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The plaintiff was the owner of the demanded premises in 1895, when the assessment or attempted assessment was made. The description, while not very definite, was perhaps sufficient to escape the censure of being entirely void. We may concede, therefore, without deciding, for the purposes of this opinion, that the land was properly described and listed for the purpose of taxation. The tax sale in question and the proceedings under it took place before the enactment of the statute of 1901 (Laws 1901, p. 242), and are to be considered in view of the laws in relation to assessments and taxation as set forth in chapter 17, 2 Hill’s Ann. Laws, except as subsequent curative statutes may have affected the laws in force before 1901, and also in view of the statute of 1893 (Laws 1893, p. 28), authorizing the county judge to bid in property offered for sale for delinquent taxes. The defendant, claiming under the assignment of a certificate of sale made to the county, and not by the certificate or deed made to himself as a direct purchaser, has the burden cast upon himself of showing every requisite of a valid sale, or of bringing himself within the provisions of some valid curative statute. Ayers v. Lund, 49 Or. 303 (89 Pac. 806: 124 Am. St. Rep. 1046), and cases there cited. To have been a valid sale, there must have been proof of advertisement for the period required by law.
2. The only proof offered on this subject was the affidavit of M. F. Davis, who styled himself “Foreman of the Eastern Oregon Republican.” The law respecting publication of notices requires that the affidavit of publication shall be made by the printer, his foreman, or principal clerk. There is nothing to show that Davis was foreman of the printer, or, in fact, to show what department of the work he was foreman of.
3. In addition to this, the affidavit professes to be sworn to before M. F. Davis, notary public, but there is *81no notarial seal attached, and, under such circumstances, the affidavit is worthless. 29 Cyc. 1096, 1097; Tunis v. Withrow, 10 Iowa, 305 (77 Am. Dec. 117) ; Stephens v. Williams, 46 Iowa, 540; Pitts v. Seavey, 88 Iowa, 336 (55 N. W. 480).
4. If there was no valid advertisement, there could be no valid sale, and therefore no title ever passed, and it is not in the power of the legislature, under the pretense of a curative act, to take one person’s property and give it to another. The whole proceedings from the assessment to the final sale are more or less defective and irregular, the officers seeming to proceed upon the theory that all that was necessary in the premises was to come somewhere within gunshot range of the statutes; but it is not necessary to notice or point out these defects, those we have already mentioned being sufficient in our judgment to render the sale invalid and incapable of being made valid by any curative statute.
5. The facts disclosed in this very case furnish abundant justification for the strictness required by the courts in respect to tax sales. Here the plaintiff is a woman, who during all the period allowed by law for the redemption of her property was confined in an insane asylum without a guardian, and while so confined the defendant, who owned adjoining property, purchased the county’s certificate of sale, and now seeks to hold her property. In view of the probable occurrence of just such cases, a strict compliance with the tax laws ought to be required. The defense that no tender of taxes paid by plaintiff was made in this case comes too late. It was matter in abatement of this action. A failure to tender back taxes would not defeat plaintiff’s right to recover. It would only abate her action and require her to make the tender before she could begin her action again. Having plead matter in bar, the matter in abatement is deemed waived. Hopwood v. Patterson, 2 Or. 49; Oregon Central R. R. Co. v. Scoggin, 3 Or. 161.
*826. Exception was also taken to the instruction of the court in regard to the measure of damages. The court, after instructing the jury that defendant had failed to prove any title or right of possession of the demanded premises, and directing a verdict in favor of plaintiff, said:
“The only question for you to consider, in making up your verdict, is the amount of damages which plaintiff is entitled to for defendant’s withholding the said land during the six years prior to the commencement of this, action, which may be offset to the extent of the reasonable market value of -any permanent improvements, which may have been placed upon the land by the defendant, during the time he has had possession of it. (2) I instruct you that the plaintiff’s measure of damages for the withholding of said land by the defendant is the reasonable rental value thereof for the purpose for which said land is adapted during the time extending back six years immediately prior to the commencement of this action.”
The learned counsel for appellant contend that the true measure of. damages is the rental value of the land in the condition in which appellant found it, and not the value that it acquired by reason of the fencing placed upon it by him. The evidence shows that defendant had fenced it at a total cost of about $200; that with such fence its rental value was not to exceed $50 per vear, and without it the rental value was little or nothing. We may add that there is sufficient in the record to show that appellant's claim to the premises was bona fide and under color of title.
After careful review of the authorities, we are of the opinion that the rule adopted by the court below is the correct measure of damages in cases of this kind. We are not prepared to say that in cases where city lots have been built upon, and the rental value has arisen to a great extent from the actual occupation of the structure built rather than the land occupied, a different rule might not obtain, though this is doubtful. But in cases like the *83present one, where the improvements are merely to enable the occupant to enjoy the natural resources of the land, we think the great weight of authority is in favor of the view that plaintiff is entitled to recover the rental value of the land, as improved, deducting therefrom the value of the improvement. As this question in its present form has not been before this court previously, we will consider some of the authorities. The case of Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Henshaw, 89 Ala. 448 (7 South. 760), cited by appellant, is very instructive. This was an action to recover land and damages for withholding. The rental value, when defendant acquired the land, was $10 per year. He erected permanent improvements of the value of $100,000, and the rental value of the land was $15,000 annually. Defendant was allowed nothing for improvements, and the increased rental was charged against him. The Supreme Court held this error. They say: “How shall such rents be computed? Shall it be on the land before or after the improvements?” They then cite the equity case of Dozier v. Mitchell, 65 Ala. 511, in which a. bona fide purchaser was charged with the rents as thq property came into his hands, qnd not upon the increased value caused by his improvements, and continue: “The same rule is held also to apply to actions at law, according to what we deem to be the more just view, especially where no allowance has been made the defendant for the value of his improvements. In Jackson v. Loomis, 4 Cow. (N. Y.) 168 (15 Am. Dec. 347), a leading case on this subject, which was trespass for mesne profits, a bona fide purchaser was allowed the value of permanent improvements made to the extent of the rents and profits due the plaintiff; but it was said by Mr. Chief Justice Savage : ‘Most clearly the defendant should not be compelled to pay an enhanced rent in consequence of his own improvements.’ ” The opinion then .cites decisions of Indiana and Wisconsin to the same effect, and continues: “In Mississippi it is held that the defendant in posses*84sion is not to be charged with increased rent by reason of improvements made by him, and for which he has been allowed no compensation. Phillips v. Chamberlain,, 61 Miss. 740; Tatum v. McClellan, 56 Miss. 352. But a distinction seems to be made where the defendant has obtained compensation for such improvements, and the plaintiff recovers against him in ejectment. Miller v. Ingram, 56 Miss. 510. The Supreme Court of Texas, in Evetts v. Tendick, 44 Tex. 570, held the defendant liable for rents on the land in its improved condition, following' former decisions, but observed that the contrary rule was the more equitable. The more just rule, and the one sustained by a preponderance of authority, is believed to be that the bona fide occupant should not be charged with income from his own improvements, where he is so situated as not to be entitled to claim allowance for his expenditures in erecting them. * * That is this case, and we need not at present extend the principle any further.” The cases cited from Iowa, Indiana, and Wisconsin are under very elaborate “occupying claimants” acts, which do not obtain in this State, but we think the law, so fay as it applies to the statutes of our State, is fully and correctly stated in the opinion in Southern Cotton Oil Co. v. Henshaw, 89 Ala. 448 (7 South. 760). The American and English Encyclopedia of Law states the general rule as follows:
“When the occupant of land has made improvements upon it, and by so doing increased its annual value, it is a delicate question to decide what amount shall be charged him as mesne profits, since it would be unjust to demand of him profits which arose from his own improvements. The most satisfactory rule that has been evolved is that, when the occupant is allowed the prime cost of his improvements when made, he is to pay for the use and occupation of the land at its improved value.” 10 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.) 546.
In Sutherland, Damages, the rule is thus stated:
“The improvements should be estimated in favor of defendant at such amount as they add to the market *85value of the premises. The claim for them may be coextensive in time with the allowance of rents and profits which the improvements contributed to produce. In other words, their value is not to be limited to their worth in cash at the time of the trial, but by the benefit they have conferred upon the plaintiff, whether by adding to the worth of the land at the time of its recovery, or, retrospectively, by augmenting the amount he may recover as mesne profits.” 3 Sutherland, Dam. § 999.
Warville states the rule as follows:
“In fixing the amount of the rental value, the basis should be the condition of the land as improved by the defendant, if it has been so improved, where the defendant is entitled to the value of his improvements.” War-ville, Eject., § 540.
In Dungan v. Von Puhl, 8 Iowa 263, the court states the rule to be that, where the defendant is allowed the value for his improvements, he is liable for the increased rental value. The court says: “In the early settlement of the western country, the use and occupation of unimproved prairie or timber land would, as a general rule, be considered as of no value. The annual rents and profits of such land would be considered nothing. But if the land is inclosed, and put in a state suitable for cultivation and the raising of crops, not only is a value added to the land above the mere cost or value of the improvements put upon it, but the occupant may reasonably be charged a fair sum for the use and occupation of the land in its improved state, without having the right to complain that he is required to pay rent for improvements made by himself. He pays rent, not upon such improvements, but upon land worth more for the purpose for which he uses it by reason of its being brought' into a state fit for cultivation. The owner is entitled to rents and profits according to the value of the land for the purpose to which it is devoted by the occupant. The occupant is to pay what the use of the land is worth to him. In such a rule we think there will *86nothing be found inequitable. It does not require the occupant to pay" rent on improvements made by himself. But it does require him to pay rent according to the increased adaptation of the land for the purpose for which it is used, though such adaptation has been brought about by the occupant’s own labor. It is difficult to lay down a rule that will work alike fairly and equitably in all cases — of land, improved by inclosure, and by being rendered suitable for the raising of crops and of an unimproved lot in a town or city. All that we can say. is that the occupant is to be charged for the rents, whatever the use of the property has been worth to him,' whether it be prairie land or a vacant city lot. While he has the right to claim payment for the value of his improvements, he cannot complain of being held to pay as rents and profits to the owner all that the property has been worth to him, nor in being held to the rule that the value of such rents may be increased by the labor he has placed upon it.” The measure of damages stated by the court below is fully upheld by the authorities cited, and we think that the amount allowed by the jury was very moderate. Appellant was allowed the prime cost of an eight-year-old fence, and the plaintiff recovered $165 damages, which, taking all the evidence into consideration, was a very moderate verdict.
Seeing no errors in the proceedings below, the judgment is affirmed. ' • Affirmed.