Court Opinion

ID: 4729173
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:54:19.145962+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:57.976557
License: Public Domain

Mount, J.
This action was brought to redeem certain-real estate from a tax sale. The trial court sustained a de*200murrer to the complaint, and dismissed the action. Plaintiffs appeal.
The facts shown by the complaint are as follows: On June 30, 1893, the father and mother of the minor Bernhart Brant Bartels deeded the property in controversy to one E. M. Carr, in trust for the minor. The trust deed authorized the trustee to sell the property and convey an absolute title in fee, to change the form of the property at any time, and to invest the proceeds, “it being the intention of the said parties of the first part to give full power to said trustee to deal with the said property as his own, and imposing full confidence in his honesty and discretion in relation to said trust.” This deed was duly recorded in King county, where the land is located. At the time the deed was made, taxes were due and unpaid for the years 1878 and 1893. Afterwards taxes were permitted to go delinquent for the years up to and including 1896. In May of 1898, the treasurer of King county issued a certificate of delinquency to one F. W. Comstock for these delinquent taxes. In March, 1901, Mr. Comstock brought an action in the superior court of King county to foreclose his certificate of delinquency. Personal service of summons and complaint in that action was made upon the trustee, in whose name the title stood. A judgment of foreclosure followed in due course, and the property was sold to Mr. Comstock, who afterwards deeded it to George W. Kim-ball. The minor, now nearly sixteen years of age, brings this action by his guardian and trustee. He alleged a tender of the amount of taxes, penalty, and interest due. No question is made upon the regularity of the tax foreclosure proceedings. The lower court sustained the demurrer, upon the ground that the minor, not having inherited the property, was not authorized by the statute to redeem it from tax foreclosure sale. This is the only question presented.
The statute relating to the subject is as follows:
“If the real property of any minor heir, or any insane person, be sold for nonpayment of taxes or assessments, the *201■same may be redeemed at any time after sale and before the expiration of one year after such disability has been removed upon the terms specified in this section,” etc. Laws 1899, p. :298; Pierce’s Code, § 8696.
Appellants argue that the word “heir,” as used .in the ■statute, was used inadvertently by the legislature, and should be excluded, so that the statute would apply to all minors; "that the statute, being remedial in its nature, should receive a liberal construction. We might readily agree to the last position, and also the first, if we were satisfied that the word '“heir” had been used inadvertently, but
“When the meaning of a statute is clear, and its provisions are susceptible of but one interpretation, that sense must be accepted as the law; its consequences, if evil, can only be avoided by change of the law itself, to be effected by the legislature and not by judicial construction.” Sutherland, Statutory Construction, § 288.
In order to determine whether the word “heir” was used inadvertently or not, it may be well to look to the history of this statute. In 1891, the legislature of this state passed an act relating to the assessment and collection of taxes, and "there provided: .
“Sec. 107. Minors, insane persons, idiots, or persons in •captivity, or in any country with which the United States are at war, having an estate in or lien on lands sold for taxes, may redeem the same within two years after such disability shall cease.” Laws 1891, p. 821.
At the next session of the legislature, in 1898, a new act relating to the same subject was passed, and prior acts were expressly repealed. Section 121, page 878, of this act provides:
“If the real property of any minor heir or insane person be sold for nonpayment of taxes or assessments the same may be redeemed at any time after sale and before the expiration of one year after such disability has been removed upon the terms specified in this section,” etc.
It will be noticed that, in 1891, certain classes of persons might redeem; viz., minors, insane persons, idiots, persons in *202captivity, or persons in a foreign country at war with the United States. These persons were required to redeem within two years after the disability should cease. The act of 1893 changed this provision, by limiting the time to within one year after the removal of the disability, and also making it apply only to minor heirs and insane persons, excluding idiots and persons in captivity and persons in a foreign country at war with the United States from the benefit of the provision. This section has since been amended or reenacted by the Laws of 1895, page 523; by the Laws of 1897, page 184; and, also, by the Laws of 1899, page 298. But the provision under consideration has not been changed in substance since its enactment in 1893. The change from minors, insane persons, idiots, and persons in captivity, to minor heirs and insane persons, is such a radical change that we cannot believe the legislative body made the change inadvertently. The fact that the word “heirs” was inserted after “minors” shows a clear intention to modify and limit the class of minors who might redeem from tax sale. There may be no good reason for permitting a minor to redeem property which he inherits, and refusing him the same right to property acquired by grant or purchase. The policy of the law rests entirely with the legislature. Courts, may not declare the policy ; they simply construe the law. As was said by this court in Knipe v. Austin, 13 Wash. 189, 43 Pac. 25, 44 Pac. 531, in construing an act relating to mortgages:
“It may be that cases of hardship will arise under this law; but courts have nothing to do with the policy or impolicy,, the justice or injustice of legislative enactments. The right to redeem at all is a right granted by the statute. Without a statutory enactment, the right would be cut off absolutely. It is a right that is purely ex gratia, and the legislature in conferring this right could confer it burdened with any conditions which it saw fit to impose.”
This language is particularly applicable to the case at bar.
We are of the opinion that the lower court properly con*203strued the statute in question, and the judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Crow, Dunbar., and Parker, JJ., concur.