42 Iowa 350 | Iowa | 1876
The evidence shows that at the close of the annual sale in October, 1864, the treasurer announced that the sale was adjourned from day to day, and he posted up notices of that fact. Subsequently he offered the delinquent lands for sale as often as, and whenever, any one came to buy, and in this manner he made sales February 23d, 1865, February 28th, 1865, May 2d, 1865, May 29th, 1865, and June 12th, 1865, on which day the lands in controversy were sold. The delinquent lands were not offered for sale at any other time. The only notice that was given of this sale was the notice that was posted on the door that the tax sale was adjourned from day to day. But one notice of the adjourned tax sale was posted, and that was posted at or soon after the annual sale of October, 1864. J. U. Perry, who was employed in the treasurer’s office, acted as agent for the defendants and various other parties in bidding in lands at the sale in question, June 12th, 1865. He handed the treasurer a list of all the lands he proposed to take, with the names of the different parties lie intended to buy them for written opposite, and then he verbally offered to take each respective tract for the party whose name was written opposite,- for all the taxes, interest and penalties due thereon.
Section 763, of the Eevision, requires the county treasurer to offer lands on which taxes are delinquent at public sale. Section 765 requires the treasurer to offer for sale, separately,' each tract or parcel of real property advertised for sale. Sec-" tion 767 requires the treasurer to continue the sale from day' to day as long as there are bidders, or until the taxes are all paid. Section 773 is as follows: “When all the parcels of real property advertised for sale shall have been offered for sale as provided for in this act, and a portion thereof shall remain unsold for want of bidders, it shall be the duty of tk¿ treasurer to adjourn the sale to some day not exceeding two months from the time of adjournment, due notice of which' day shall be given at the time of the adjournment, and also by keeping a notice thereof posted in a conspicuous place in the treasurer’s office. On the day fixed for the reopening of the sale, the same proceedings shall be had as provided for by this.act in relation to the sales commencing on the first Monday of October; and further adjournments shall be made, from time to time, not to exceed two months, as provided in this section, and the sales shall thus be continued until the next regular annual sale, or until all the taxes have been paid.” The course pursued shows an utter disregard of these provisions.
The sale lacked every requisite of a public sale. At 9 o’clock in the morning, no proclamation being made that there would be a sale, and no notice being given, except a notice posted eight months before that the sale was adjourned from day to day, a clerk in the treasurer’s office handed the treasurer a list of lands, • with the names of persons set opposite them, for whom he wished to buy, and then verbally offered, on behalf of each person whose name was set opposite a tract, to take it for the taxes and penalties. The treasurer did not publicly read over the list nor announce all the descriptions. He did not, therefore, ppblicly announce what land he was selling. Of course there could have be.en no public announcement of the amount of taxes due on each parcel, as that would have involved the necessity of publicly reading the descriptions. Hence, no opportunity for competition was offered, if any one was present to compete. Rut the strong probability, 'from the time of the sale, is that the treasurer and his clerk were the only persons present.
We cannot sanction such a procedure. The case coming nearest this in its facts is Leavitt v. Watson, 37 Iowa, 93. Rut in that case, for aught that was shown, the sale was held at a time authorized bylaw. The treasurer gave public notice
The statute requires that lands upofi which taxes are delinquent shall be sold at public sale on a day prescribed, or on some other day to which the sale is regularly adjourned. The purpose of a public sale- is to secure competition, and the pay-, ment of the taxes for as small a portion of the delinquent lands as possible. Any arrangement between the treasurer and the purchaser, which substitutes a private for the public sale which the law contemplates, operates as a fraud upon the owner of the land, and renders the sale invalid. We hold that the sale in question was private, and hence fraudulent, and that the deed is not conclusive evidence that it was public- and legal.
The cause will be remanded to the court below for an account
Reversed.