Tbe circuit court permitted tbe county to file an-
Under the decision in Barden v. Supervisors of Columbia Co., 33 Wis., 445, the tax certificates were void for tbe reason that tbe cost of tbe revenue stamp was included in tbe amount for which tbe land was sold; and this action, like that, is brought under tbe provisions of ch. 22, Laws of 1859, to recover back tbe money paid on these void certificates. Tbe counsel for tbe county insists that tbe action'is barred by ch. 112, Laws of 1867, and that none of .the certificates come within the exception contained in this and tbe amenda-tory act of 1868 (cb. 56). In tbe law of 1867 it is in substance enacted, that no tax deed shall be issued on any tax certificate after six years from tbe day of sale of tbe lands for tbe delinquent tax; and tbe act further provides that “ no action either at law or in equity shall be commenced on such certificate after tbe expiration of six years from tbe said day of sale.” There is a proviso that tbe act shall not apply to a certificate owned by any county or municipal corporation, or by their assignee until tbe expiration of six years from tbe date of the assignment of tbe certificate. But sb far as certificates .Nos. 1145, 743, 758, 615 and 505 are concerned, we cannot see why this act does not bar a recovery upon them. This action is one at law brought directly upon tbe certificates, and comes within tbe very terms of the act. Tbe oldest cer
It appears that the land embraced in tax certificate No. 1245 was bid in by the county; but whether the certificate was assigned six years before the commencement of the action, the evidence does not disclose. We cannot, therefore, determine whether that certificate comes within the saving clause of the act.
In attempting to sustain the plaintiff’s right to recover under secs. 26 and 27, cli. 22, supra, it was insisted that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until the error in the tax proceedings, or the invalidity in the certificate or tax
By the Court. — -The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings.