Court Opinion

ID: 4936646
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:16:26.103078+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:15.312699
License: Public Domain

Emery, J.
The defendant’s claim of title rests solely on a tax sale and deed by the treasurer of the town of Byron for non-payment of á town tax assessed in 1885 to the then non-resident owner. The statutes (1883) E. S., ch. 6, §§ 188 and 189, were then in force. It *448was explicitly declared by the court in construing that statute in Ladd v. Dickey, 84 Maine, 190, at the bottom of page 194, that to show a valid sale “it should appear that he exposed for sale and sought offers for a fractional part of said premises sufficient to pay the tax and legal charges, and that he could obtain no bid therefor. It is not sufficient for him to say that it was necessary to sell the whole amount so assessed and advertised, no person offering to pay the tax and legal charges for a smaller fractional part of said real estate. It must appear that he tried to obtain an offer for the payment of the tax and legal charges for a fractional part of the premises without success.”
The treasurer sold the whole tract, but we nowhere find, either in the recitals in the tax deed, or in the treasurer’s return of his doings, or any where else, the evidence that the treasurer “sought offers for a fractional part”, or “tried to obtain an offer for the payment of the tax and legal charges for a fractional part of the premises without success.” The most the treasurer says is that “it became necessary to sell the whole amount of the real estate so assessed and advertised as no person would pay the taxes, interest and legal charges for a less amount of said real estate.” This is merely a statement of the treasurer’s opinion, viz: that he thought no person would pay the taxes, &c., for a less amount, and that, therefore, he thought it was necessary to sell the whole amount. The fact might have been different. Had he “sought offers for a fractional part” or “tried to obtain an offer” therefor, as the court said in Ladd v. Dickey, supra, was his duty, he might perhaps have been successful. Had he done so and without success, and so stated in his return, it would then have been apparent to the court that it was necessary to sell the whole tract. As it is, the necessity does not appear and we must therefore hold the sale, being of the whole tract, to be invalid.
The plaintiff shows a prima facie title by a chain of deeds from a former acknowledged owner. The only objection seriously made to his prima facie title is that, where it passed through the insolvency court, neither the seal of the court nor of the judge was affixed to the instrument of assignment by which the judge assigned and conveyed the insolvent’s property to the assignees in the case. The statute *449(1883) It. S., oh. 70, § 33, then in force did not require any seal. “An instrument under his hand” was all that was required- After considering all the objections suggested, Ave are satisfied the plaintiff has sufficient title to maintain this action.
By the terms of the report, if the court find the title is in the plaintiff, it is to determine whether the defendant has any right to be re-imbursed for taxes paid and interest on same. This is an action at law, a real action, in which no rents' and profits are claimed, and, as the case is ijoav presented, no right of re-imbursement is shown by the defendant. He is, and presumably has been, in possession taking the rents and profits if any. When he is asked to account for these, he may perhaps raise the question of allowance for taxes paid.

Judgment for the plaintiff for title and possession and for one dollar of damage.