146 N.W. 694 | S.D. | 1914
Action to quiet title: On the 15th day of January, 1890, one Gustave Lehmann died seized in fee of the quarter section of land in Hand county, which is the subject of this action. He left surviving him, as his sole heirs-at-law, his widow — who remarried and is now Wilhelmina Ehrler, and a daughter, Alma Lehmann- — -who was born on the 25th day of July, 1889. Said heirs are the-defendants in this action, and were the owners in fee of the disputed premises at the time of the delinquent tax sale, in 1890.
The taxes on said land for the year 1889 were not paid, and, at the delinquent tax sale in 1890, it was sold for the payment of said taxes. No redemption having been made from the said sale, the county treasurer, on the 21st day of September, 1893, issued a tax deed to the holder of said tax sale certificate. This deed is regular and valid on its face and is the basis of plaintiff’s title as the -successor in interest of the grantee in said tax deed.
Plaintiff commenced this action in October, 1903, under the provisions of chapter 194, Laws of 1903, alleging ownership of said land, and that the defendants are proper parties defendant. At the time of Lehmann’s death, both he and defendants were residents of the state of Illinois, and the defendants have continued to reside there ever since. Defendants, by their answer, set un numerous irregularities in the proceedings of the taxing offcers of Hand county leading up to, and the issuance of, the said deed, alleging, among other things, that no notice of the expiration of the period of redemption and that tax deed would issue, was ever given by the holder of the said tax sale certificate, p"'1 craved for judgment quieting title in themselves and for
To such answer, the plaintiff interposed a reply, in which he pleaded both the three year and the ten year statute of limitation, and that he had made permanent improvements upon said land of the reasonable value of $500. Plaintiff had judgment for the land and defendants appeal.
In Shelley v. Smith, 66 N. W. 172, the Supreme Court of Iowa, in considering a statute precisely .like chapter 151, Laws of 1890, in speaking of the notice, said: “This requirement is absolute, and a failure to observe it will afford ground for setting aside the tax deed. Bradley v. Brown, 75 Iowa, 180, 39 N. W. 258; Callahan v. Raymond, 75 Iowa, 307, 39 N. W. 511; Rice v. Bates, 68 Iowa, 394, 27 N. W. 286; Ellsworth v. Low, 62 Iowa, 179, 17 N. W. 450; Wilkin v. Wilkin, 91 Ia. 652, 60 N. W. 194; Cornoy v. Wetmore, 92 Ia., 100, 60 N. W. 246; Snell v. Railway Co., 88 Ia., 444, 55 N. W. 310. When the required notice has not been given, Sec. 902 of the Code, which provides that ‘no action for the recovery of real property for the nonpayment of taxes shall lie unless the same be brought within five years after the treasurer’s deed is executed and recorded,’ does not bar an action by the owner of the land to- redeem. Slyfield v. Barnum, 71 Iowa, 245, 32 N. W. 270; Wilson v. Russell, 73 Iowa, 395, 35 N. W. 492; Hillyer v. Farneman, 65 Iowa, 227, 21 N. W. 578.” And this court has held that, where the description of the land in the -assessor’s book is not sufficient to properly identify the land, the treasurer is without jurisdiction to issue the deed and the three year statute does not apply. Moran v. Thomas, 19 S. D. 469, 104 N. W. 212; Jackson v. Bailey, 19 S. D. 594; 104 N.
In this case, no notice of the period of redemption having been served on the parties entitled to such notice, they were: “Not officially apprised,” as said in Rector v. Maloney, supra, “of the expiration of the time limited for the redemption of his land and his right to redeem was not thereby extinguished.” If the right to redeem was not extinguished, certainly the statute was not set in motion by the recording of the deed, and the appellants are not barred thereby.
This conclusion renders it unnecessary to1 examine the alleged omissions and irregularities that occurred prior to the delinquent tax sale; and this brings us to the ten year statute, for, conceding that appellants are right in their contentions in respect to the three year statute, the deed when issued, being fair upon its face, constituted color of title, and, so far as the deed itself is concerned, that is all that is necessary to set the ten year statute in motion. Whether that statute will operate as a bar in a particular case or not depends upon other conditions to be performed after the issuance of the deed.
In this case, it is claimed by appellants that respondent is not entitled to the benefit of this statute: First, because respondent and his predecessors in interest had -not been in possession of said land for ten years under said tax deed prior to the commencement of the suit, as required by section 54, Code Civ. Proc., and that the land was not vacant and unoccupied land, as provided for in section 55; second, because he did not, under color of title, pay taxes thereon for ten successive years as required by said sections ; and, third, because respondent did not have “color of title made m good faith” as required by said sections.
As to appellants’ first contention; -the record shows that, at the- time the tax deed was issued and recorded and for three or four years thereafter, the land was vacant and unoccupied, and that, for the remainder of the ten year period, the respondent was in the actual possession and occupancy thereof. Actual posses
On appellant’s second contention, the record shows the tax deed to have been recorded on the 22nd day of September, 1893, and that this action was commenced on the 31st day of October, 1903 — more than ten years after the deed was recorded. On the 9th day of November, 1894, the holder of the tax title paid the taxes that had been levied on the land for the year 1893; taxes for subsequent yeans, down to and including the 1902 tax,’ which was paid October 6, 1903, with the exception of the taxes for the years 1895, ’6, and ’7, were paid by the holder of the tax title before they became delinquent and prior to the commencement of this action.
This disposes of respondent’s rights, so far as the ten year statute is concerned, and renders a consideration of appellants’ third contention unnecessary. Neither is it necessary to consider the othér alleged errors presented by appellants’ assignments.
Appellants’ right of redemption was not extinguished by the issuance of the tax deed, and their right to assert their claim not having been barred by any subsequent act nor by any statute, it necessarily follows that appellants should be allowed to redeem. The trial court should have ascertained the amount necessary for that purpose: also what, if any, credit appellants are entitled to on account of the rental value of the land, as well as what, if any, credit respondent is entitled to for improvements placed upon the land by him.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings according to law.