Court Opinion

ID: 6642940
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:47:08.183197+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:18.701292
License: Public Domain

Maxwell, Ch. J.,
dissenting.
To that portion of the opinion of the majority of the court holding that the deed in question is void upon its face I cannot give my assent.
Section 56 of the revenue law, approved February 15, 1869, provides that “ on the first Monday of September in each year, between the hours’of 9 a.m and 4 p.m., the treasurer is directed to offer at public sale at the court-house, or place of holding courts in his county, or at the treasurer’s office, where by law the taxes are made payable, all lands upon which the taxes of the previous year still remain unpaid,” etc. Gen. Stat., 918.
Section 63 provides that “ after the tax sale shall have closed, and after the treasurer has made his return thereof to the county clerk, as provided in section 59, * * * if any real estate remain unsold for want of bidders therefor, the county treasurer is authorized and required to sell the same at private sale at his office,” etc.
Section 67 provides for the execution of a deed in case of the failure to redeem the land.
Section 68 provides that “ such conveyance shall be executed by the county treasurer under his. hand, and the execution thereof shall be attested by the county clerk with the county seal, and such deed shall be -prima fade evidence of the truth of all the facts therein recited, and no more, and such deed shall be, as far as^ practicable, in the following form ” [giving form].
*40The only objection made to this deed is tbe omission of the words “ at the door of the court-house.” Thes'e words are not, in my opinion, matter of substance. They are not words that must appear in the deed, showing a compliance with conditions precedent to the right to sell, and upon which the authority to sell depends, but merely designate the place of sale for the convenience of purchasers.
Section 104 provides that “ tax deeds shall be prima facie evidence—
“ First. That the land conveyed was subject to taxation, and had been assessed at the time and in the manner required by law.
“ Second. That the taxes were not paid at any time before the sale. • ‘ ■
“ Third. That the lands conveyed had not been redeemed from the sale at the date of the deed.
“ Fourth. That the land was advertised for sale in the manner required by law.
“ Fifth. That the land was sold for taxes, as stated in the deed.
“Sixth. That the grantee .in the deed was the purchaser, or his or her assignee.
“ Seventh. That the sale was conducted as required by law, and this shall apply as well to private as to public sales made by the treasurer for taxes,” etc.
The deed in question contains the following recital: “ And it appearing that said lands were legally liable for taxation, and had been duly assessed and properly charged on the tax book or duplicate for the year 1870, and that said lands had been legally advertised for sale for taxes, and were sold on the fourth day of September, 1871,” etc.
The deed also contains this recital:
“ Whereas, <7. Id. Ilungate did, on the sixth day of September, 1873, produce to the undersigned, Alex*41ancler Reed, treasurer of the county of Washington, in the state of Nebraska, a certificate of purchase in ■writing, bearing date the fourth day of September, 1871, signed by Alexander Reed, who at the last-mentioned date was treasurer of said county, from which it appears that said J. H. Hungate Hid, on the fourth day of September, purchase at public tax sale the tract,” etc.
Under our statute a tax deed, as near as practicable in the statutory form, is prima fade evidence not only of the regularity of the sale, but of all prior proceedings and of the title of the purchaser. The burden of proof which formerly rested upon the purchaser now devolves upon the party contesting the sale. At common law it was necessary that one who claimed to have obtained the property of another under proceedings based upon a neglect of public duty, should take upon himself the burden of showing that the law had been complied with by those who had the proceedings in charge. And this rule, unless changed by statute, is applied to a party claiming lands under a sale for taxes. Cooley on Taxation, 326.
And under this rule a strictness of proof has been required which in most eases it has been utterly impossible to produce. The only effect of these decisions has been tó offer a premium to land owners to neglect to pay their- taxes. But such decisions have no application to tax deeds in this state. Revenue laws are not now regarded as penal in their character, and therefore strictly construed. United States v. Hodson, 10 Wall., 395-406. United States v. Barrels of Spirits, 2 Abb. U. S., 305-314.
Cooley, in his valuable work on taxation, 206-7, uses the following language: “ Statutes relating to taxes are not penal statutes, nor are they in derogation of natural rights, although' taxes are regarded by *42many as burdens, and many look upon them even as money arbitrarily and unjustly extorted from them by government, and hence justify themselves and quiet their consciences in resorting to questionable means for the purpose of avoiding taxation. * * But there is not only a necessity for taxation, but it is eminently just and equitable that it should be as nearly equal as possible; hence it is the policy of the law to require all property not specially exempted to bear its proportion of the public burdens. * * In construing statutes relating to taxes therefore, we ought, where the language will so permit, so to construe them as to give effect to the obvious intention and meaning of the legislature, rather than to defeat that intention by a too strict adherence to the letter.”
This seems to be the most satisfactory mode of construing the revenue law. The legislature undoubtedly has power to prescribe the form of a tax deed, which must be substantially pursued.
In the case of Lain v. Cook, 15 Wis., 446, cited in the opinion of the majority of the court, the statutory form of deed required the insertion of the words “ as the fact is” in two places in the deed, “ one of which related to the land about to be conveyed, and the other to the non-redemption of the land.” The court say: “Neither these words nor any equivalent language is inserted in this deed, and for that reason we deem it defective.” * * “ The office or purpose of this language * * seems to be in the nature of a certificate or covenant on the part of the officer who executes the deed, that he has examined the records and found the facts to be as stated in the deed.”' Id., 448. The court hold the omission of the words a matter of substance.
In Harrington v. City of Worcester, 6 Allen, 576, the statute required the deed to “ state the cause of sale,” *43and also the particulars preparatory to the sale. In that case the deed stated a demand for the tax upon the person taxed, but did not state that payment was not made within fourteen days, as required by the statute. The court held that that provision of the statute was a condition precedent to the operation of the deed — in effect that the power to sell only became operative upon the failure to pay the tax within fourteen days after demand.
In the ease of Smith v. Hileman, 1 Scammon, 330, the court held that an administrator’s deed of real estate must set forth at large the order of the circuit court directing the sale. The court say : “ A special power granted by statute affecting the rights of individuals, and which divests the title to real estate, ought to be strictly pursued, and should so appear on the face of the proceedings.”
In'the cases cited it will be seen that the defects -were jurisdictional — -that it did not appear on the face of the deeds, that the power to sell existed or had become operative ; but in the case at bar the deed states all the facts necessary to authorize the treasurer to sell, and where jurisdiction is shown the same presumptions obtain in favor of a treasurer as other officers, viz.: that he has performed his duty in the manner required by law, and that the land in dispute was sold at the door of the court house, or in the treasurer’s office. See Cooley on Taxation, 329, 332. This being the case, the judgment of the district court should be reversed.