23 Utah 597 | Utah | 1901
(after stating tbe facts). Upon an examination of tbe record we find that tbe evidence is sufficient to support tbe findings and decree. It is clear from tbe whole testimony that defendant and Day agreed to buy up tbe tax title, and take tbe deed in the name of tbe defendant, in order
1. The description in the notice of assessment and sale was inaccurate, uncertain, and indefinite, and rendered the sale void, as properly held by this court in Eastman v. Gurry, 15 Utah, 110, 49 Pac. 310, and Olsen v. Bagley, 10 Utah, 492, 37 Pac. 739. There was no agreement or promise that defendant should receive a deed from Day. Nothing more was to be done by Day except pay one-half of the note. There is no occasion for the application of the doctrine of specific performance, because there is no promise unperformed. Day’s
2. The appellant claims that the plaintiff is estopped from asserting title to the land he obtained from Day. This is claimed under the general rule that an obligation created by an estoppel by deeds binds the grantor and his privies in estate, in blood, and in law. The term “privity,” in this connection, denotes mutual or successive relationship to the same rights of property. 11 Am. and Eng. Enc. Law, 394. The estoppel claimed was not pleaded in the answer as a distinctive defense, but certain facts were alleged upon which the appellant bases his claim to an equitable estoppel. Assuming that an estoppel was properly pleaded, we are of the opinion that the facts shown do not bring this defense within the general rule above stated. No fraud, misrepresentation, or concealment is shown upon the part of Day; yet to create an estoppel the representations must be shown to be false, and that they were relied upon as true. The only fraud attempted, so far as the record shows, was upon the part of both Day and thq, defendant to defraud Mrs. Critchlow, an innocent party, out of her mortgage security. The tax title to be purchased was not the property of Day. What there.was of it belonged to a stranger, and was derived from the state. They bought the title, but Day made no agreement to make the tax title good; nor did he become obligated to convey his title to the defendant on his failure to pay one-half of the note, or to give Day