23 Kan. 196 | Kan. | 1879
The opinion of the court was 'delivered by
This was an action brought by the National Land Company against the board of county commissioners of -Dickinson county to recover for money paid into the county treasury of that county on five separate tax-sale certificates, all of which tax-sale certificates were illegal and void, because the taxes upon which they were founded were-illegal and void. The case was tried in the court below by a. jury, and the court below, after all the evidence was introduced, gave a general instruction to the jury, charging them’
The defendant then moved the court for a new trial, upon the grounds that the verdict was not sustained by sufficient evidence, and was contrary to law, and for error of law occurring at the trial, and excepted to. The court overruled the motion, and the defendant, as plaintiff in error, now brings the case to this court for review.
The only questions necessary to be determined are as follows: 1. Did the court below err in giving said instruction ? 2. Is the verdict sustained by sufficient evidence? These two questions may be reduced to one, as follows: Is the verdict the only proper one that could have been rendered in the case upon the evidence introduced? And this question depends solely upon this other question: Was the plaintiff below (which held said tax-sale certificates, apparently as the assignee thereof,) in fact and in law the assignee thereof, or was the plaintiff only a tax-payer or a redemptioner ? For the plaintiff undoubtedly had the right to recover under § 120 of the tax law of 1868, (Gen. Stat., p. 1058: for the present law, see Comp. Laws of 1879, p. 968, § 145,) unless it was in law a mere tax-payer or redemptioner.
The facts of the case are substantially as follows: The lands for which said tax-sale certificates were issued belonged to the United States, but had previously been granted by an act of congress, upon certain conditions, to the Kansas Pacific railway company. These conditions had not yet been complied with or fulfilled when the lauds were taxed; and hence, as held by the supreme court of the United States, in the cases of Culp and Prescott, (K. P. Rly. Co. v. Culp and Prescott, 9 Kas. 38, et seq.; Railway Co. v. Prescott, 16 Wallace, 603,) the lands still remained the property of the United States, and were not taxable, and the taxes levied upon them were illegal and void. The railway company had contracted to sell a large portion of these lands to the National Land Company, the land company agreeing to pay all taxes that
Can the plaintiff recover? That it cannot, at common law, is admitted; for it paid the money on said tax-sale certificates voluntarily, and with a full knowledge of all the facts. (Railroad Co. v. Commissioners, 98 U. S. 541, and cases there cited.) And it is also admitted that, if the plaintiff was a mere tax-payer or redemptioner, it cannot recover under the statute, for the statute does not apply to mere tax-payers or redemptioners. But it is claimed by the plaintiff that it is not a mere tax-payer or redemptioner, but that it is the assignee and holder of tax-sale certificates. Prima faeie, of course, it is the assignee and holder of tax-sale certificates, and prima faeie, it has the right to recover under the statutes. But the defendant (the county) claims that the plaintiff is not in law the assignee and holder of tax-sale certificates; that it is not what it appears to be, and that the county may show this by evidence aliunde-, that it may
“ But we are of opinion that the plaintiff cannot be regarded as a purchaser of the lands. The moneys were paid by him on behalf of the National Land Company under the belief that the taxes were legal and valid, and it is not only apparent from the facts found that he made the payment in 1872 by way of redeeming the lands, but if it did not so expressly appear, it ought to be presumed, that he paid the money for that purpose. As between the land company and the Kansas Pacific railway company (which had not yet been paid for,the lands) it was the duty of the former to pay all legal taxes and assessments imposed thereon. The plaintiff, as the agent of the land company, could not acquire a tax title without being guilty of bad faith to the railway company. Taxes on lands in Kansas are assessed against the lands themselves, and a tax sale (when- valid) confers an absolute title.*205 Such a sale, had it been valid in this case, would have given the land company a full and valid title, adverse to that of the railway company; and would have defeated their lien upon the same, for the purchase-money.” (97 U. S. 184.)
Of course, neither the National Land Company nor any of its agents could get a valid tax title as against the railway company, to whom it owed the legal and moral duty of paying all taxes that might be legally imposed upon the lands; and hence, as against the railway company, neither the land company nor any of its agents could become the bona fide purchaser or holder of a tax-sale certificate. And it would make no difference whether the purchase was made directly from the county, or was made from some assignee of the county. The disability would attach to the purchaser (the land company) or its agent, and not to the seller (the county or Richards), and it would attach to the purchaser as against the Kansas Pacific railway company, to whom the purchaser owed the duty, and not as against some, other person or corporation to whom the purchaser owed no duty. And in either case, whether the purchase was made directly from the county, or indirectly from some assignee of the county, the transaction would be held and conclusively presumed, as against the railway company, to be a redemption of the land from the taxes, or a payment of the taxes, and not a purchase of a tax-sale certificate, or of a tax title. But why should this beneficent and equitable presumption be extended farther than to benefit the person or corporation to whom the purchaser owed a duty? Why should it be extended for the mere purpose of benefiting a party who was at the same time wrongfully attempting to impose an illegal tax upon the purchaser? Is-it equitable to transform what is in form and upon its face a purchase, into a redemption, merely for the purpose of benefiting the party committing the wrong — the county? We know of but one principle, legal or moral, human or divine, upon which such a thing might be done, and that is the divine principle, not en-forcible by human courts, but only by divine tribunals, which principle has been expressed in the following language, to wit:
After the county has introduced evidence to show that the plaintiff was under obligation to the railway company or to some other corporation or person to pay the taxes, may the plaintiff then introduce evidence to show that it was not under any such obligation? May it show that the railway company released it from such obligation? May it show
The j udgment of the court below will be reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.