21 Iowa 392 | Iowa | 1866
This leaves the plaintiff without a deed, and therefore without any consummated tax title.
The referee, therefore, erred in finding that “ the tax deed vested in the plaintiff the interest in said land” acquired by the vendee of the school fund.
The tax deed, standing alone, vested the plaintiff with no title whatever.
To this position we answer, that there is nothing shown which would render it just, to apply to.the defendant the doctrine of estoppel.
Again (and this is an insuperable objection to the claim of the plaintiff, which wé are now considering), the tax certificate in evidence, while it shows separate sales of the different forties of the land therein described, locates it as in range six, while the petition, tax deed and patent locate it in range seven.
In this view of the case it is not necessary to decide whether the certificate of sale should have been assigned by the heir or the administratrix/ nor the further question, whether the administratrix, with the will annexed, could execute the power given by the will to sell property; nor the still further question, what effect would be given to the subsequent quitclaim deed from the residuary devisee.
The decree helow is reversed, and the plaintiff’s petition dismissed, but without prejudice to his right to institute proceedings to obtain a valid tax deed, if he is thereto
Reversed.