75 N.W. 775 | N.D. | 1898
In this action, which arises under chapter 67 of the Laws of 1897, the District Court, Hon. Charles A. Pollock presiding, has made a statement of facts and propounded certain questions thereon to this court, pursuant to section 10 of said chapter. The questions certified to this court are as follows: “(1) Was it necessary to the jurisdiction of the court that a certified copy of a resolution of the county commissioners designating a newspaper for the publication of the delinquent tax list should be filed in the office of the Clerk of the District Court prior to the filing or prior to the publication of such tax list, and, if so, then was the resolution, a copy of which is hereto annexed as ‘Exhibit A,’ a sufficient compliance with the statutes? (2) Should the tax list, as filed, and as published, contain ,a discription of each piece of land, and opposite such description the amount of the tax in one column, and in a separate column the amount of the interest and penalty? In other words, should the tax be stated in one column and the interest and penalty in another column, or so stated as to show the amount of the tax and the amount of the interest and penalty for each year?” As explanatory of these
Answering the questions propounded by the District Court m their inverse order, we find little difficulty in reaching the conclusion that said statute does not require, either expressly or by any fair implication from its language, that a statement of the interest and penalty which go to swell the aggregate amount of the tax published in the list shall be separately stated. We think section 1 of the act is substantially complied with if the amount of the tax for each year, including penalty and interest, is stated in the aggregate. If the landowner has any defense or objection to the total tax appearing on the list, he is permitted, under section 5 of the statute, to set out the same by answer. Upon an issue thus formed the court would be authorized to investigate all questions touching the legality of any interest or penalty or costs which may have entered into the total tax appearing on the published list. The fact should not be overlooked that the judicial proceeding authorized by this statute is not a proceeding to set aside or establish a tax title, nor to assess or levy a tax. Its sole purpose is to obtain a judgment for an alleged existing delinquent tax, and in doing so, the taxpayer is given his day in a court of competent jurisdiction, and is unrestricted with respect to any objection or defense which he may desire to urge against the validity of the tax, subject only to the limitations contained in section 9 of the act. The list as published is only prima facie evidence. Id.
The first question propounded by the District Court is one directly involving the jurisdiction of that court to proceed to enter judgment against the lands described in the published list, and is, therefore, of a very serious nature. The proceeding is strictly in rem. It is true, the District Court does not lay hold
Considering the action of the board with respect to the list as a whole, it is apparent from our standpoint that the board did not, by its action as embodied in Exhibit A, intend to designate any particular newspaper as that in which the list should be published. In that action it accepted the bid, and approved the bond of the Fargo Forum. It appears that the words “Fargo Forum” constitute a part of the descriptive name applied indiscriminately to two newspapers published at Fargo, viz. the Fargo Forum and Weekly Republican and the Fargo Forum and Daily Republican. Neither of said newspapers were referred to expressly in the action of the board embraced in Exhibit A, nor was the Fargo Forum in terms designated as the paper which should publish the list. In fact, there is, strictly speaking, no newspaper published at Fargo which bears the name of Fargo Forum. But if the board had intended — as it clearly did not do —to designate the paper by its action, evidenced by Exhibit A, in which the tax list should be published, it failed to do so, in that it made reference to two newspapers then published at Fargo, without pointing out which of the two. papers should publish the list. The statute governing this proceeding is taken literally from the laws of Minnesota, and the point we are here discussing was expressly passed upon by the Supreme Court of that state in Russell v. Gilson, 36 Minn. 366, 31 N. W. Rep. 692. In that case the board designated the Minneapolis Tribune as the
The state’s attorney cites section 9 of chapter 67, and makes the point that, inasmuch as the defendant has failed to show that the omission to file a copy of the resolution of the board with the
The proper order will be entered, and certified to the court below.