27 Minn. 109 | Minn. | 1880
After the entry of tax judgments against certain lands, and the sale of the lands, the same being bid in for the state, and the expiration of the time to redeem, the St. Paul & Duluth Bailroad Company, claiming to own the-lands, made an application for an order opening the judgment,, and granting leave to answer and defend. The only ground for the application was that the lands were exempt from taxation. The order was granted, and from that order the appeal is brought.
The objection is made that the order is not appealable,, because the proceeding to enforce payment of taxes upon real estate is not an action, and therefore the provisions of Gen.. St. 1878, c. 86, § 8, relating to appeals to this court, do not apply. The proceeding is not an ordinary action, and all the-proceedings, from the filing of the list to the entry of judgment, including the mode of review of the decisions of the-court below, up to the entry of judgment, are specially regu
As the statute regulating the proceeding does not point out any way to review orders made after the judgment, we think the provisions of chapter 86, § 8, apply, and give the right of appeal where they give it in case of similar orders in any other action. Com’rs of Aitkin Co. v. Morrison, 25 Minn. 295. An order setting aside a judgment, upon an application addressed to the discretion of the court, will not be reviewed unless there is an abuse of discretion. But if the order determines the strict legal rights of the parties, as distinguished from those mere questions of practice which every court regulates for itself, and those matters depending on the discretion' or favor of the court, it involves the merits of the action, within the meaning of the third subdivision of section 8, chapter 86, and is appealable. Barker v. Keith, 11 Minn. 37, (65;) Holmes v. Campbell, 13 Minn. 66.
The only ground on which the application for the order was made was that the court had no jurisdiction of the pro-' ceedings in which the judgments were rendered, because the lands were exempt from taxation. The only mode in which the state can assert a right to tax lands, so that the claim of right may be judicially determined, is by the filing of the list. That is equivalent to the commencement of an action for the determination of such claim of right. Gen. St. 1878, c. 11, § 70. No error, irregularity or omission, prior to filing the list, affects the jurisdiction of the court. Section 73. This jurisdiction extends over the interest in the land of every person, company or corporation — of every owner, indeed—
Order reversed.