This is an action to determine adverse claims to 160 acres of land situated in Sargent county. The plaintiffs’ title comes from the original patentee; that of the defendants from a tax judgment sale under chapter 67, p. 76, Laws 1897. It is conceded that plaintiff’s have title unless it 'has been divested by the proceedings under which the defendants claim title. The trial was to the court without a jury. The findings and conclusions were in all respects favorable to the defendants, and judgment was entered confirming their title and right of possession. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment, and demand a review of the entire case in this court.
The questions which were presented upon this appeal as grounds for reversal rest upon undisputed facts. On December 29, 1897, a tax judgment for the taxes of 1894 was entered against the land in question under the provisions of chapter 67, p. 76, Laws 1897, which is entitled “An act to enforce the payment of taxes which became delinquent in and prior to the year eighteen hundred and ninety-five.” On February 9, 1898, the sheriff offered the land for sale to satisfy said judgment, and, there being no individual bidders, it was bid in for the county, and a sheriff’s certificate of sale issued and delivered. It appears from the findings that on December 21, 1901, which was more than two years after the sale to the county, the defendants, W. E. Purcell and E. A. Divet, paid to the treasurer of Sargent county the amount for which said land had been bid in, with interest thereon, and also the taxes, penalties, and interest which became due upon said land subsequent to the sale, and the treasurer executed and delivered to them an assignment in writing in the form prescribed in section 19 (page 86) of the above act, purporting to transfer all the right, title and interest which the county had obtained by virtue of its certificate of sale. Thereafter, and on January 17, 1902, the county commissioners, in regular session, passed a resolution authorizing the county auditor to execute a special warranty deed of the land in question to the defendants upon payment to the county of all claims for taxes against said land, with interest and penalties, in pursuance of which, on January 28, 1902, the defendants paid the taxes referred to, and the deed thus authorized was executed and delivered to them by the county auditor. The record does not clearly point out. the particular years
A large number of other tracts were sold at the same sale, in reference to which other suits are pending, resting upon the same state of facts and involving the same questions as in this case. By request of appellant’s counsel, counsel in those cases were permitted to participate in the oral argument and file briefs in this case.
Counsel for appellants challenge the validity of (1) the tax judgment, (2) the sale, (3) the certificate issued to the county, (4) the county’s assignment to the defendants, and (5) the deed to the defendants — each upon independent grounds; and further contend that, in any event, the interest which the defendants acquired from the county did not constitute title, and that it has never ripened into title for the reason that notice of expiration of the redemption period was not given. The tax judgment is assailed upon three grounds. It is claimed (1) that the county auditor did not properly certify to the clerk of the district court a copy of the resolution of
The sale is attacked upon the ground that it was made for an excessive amount. The land was bid in for $37.27, and it is said that this sum 'included an illegal item of $5.60 for sheriff’s fees. We are agreed that the inclusion of this item did not render the sale void. Section 15 of this act (Laws 1897, p. 85, c. 67) expressly enumerates the grounds upon which a sale may be held invalid, and the fact that the sale was for an excessive amount is not one of them. Parties in interest are given relief for such errors without disturbing the sale. Section 23 provides that: “Upon application of the party entitled thereto, the treasurer shall pay to such party any money paid info the treasury on the sale of any piece or parcel of land in excess of the amount due upon such piece or parcel at the time of the sale, or for any money paid in for redemption, which he may pay to the purchaser at the sale, or other person appearing from his copy judgment book to hold the right acquired at the sale, taking duplicate receipts therefor.” A similar contention was urged, and overruled by this court, in Shattuck v. Smith, 6 N. D. 56, 73, 69 N. W. 5. In that case a sale made under the general revenue law of 1890 was attacked upon the ground that it was for an excess
As to the objections to the certificate issued to the county, it is sufficient to say that it is in the form prescribed by the statute, and that the objections to it are not of sufficient merit to require discussion. The questions affecting the assignment and the deed are of a more serious character. They are so closely connected that they will be considered together. The important question in this connection is as to the character of the county’s interest or estate in the land at the time these instruments were executed and delivered.
Inasmuch as the county had only a lien upon the land when the defendants obtained the assignment and deed, it could transfer to them no greater interest or estate. Having a mere lien, it could transfer only a lien, and that was effected by the assignment. The deed, even if it were executed by authority, could not convey title, for the county hafi. no title to convey. The assignment is in the form prescribed by the statute, and it is conceded that all taxes subsequent to that for which the land was sold were paid to the county. The fact that they were not all paid when the assignment was delivered does not render it invalid. True,'the payment of all subsequent taxes was essential to the authority of the auditor to assign the certificate. Security Trust Co. v. Von Heyderstaedt, 64 Minn. 409, 67 N. W. 219; Hoyt v. Chapin (Minn.) 89 N. W. 851. But it was not necessary that the assignment should be delivered and payment made at the same time. Both were necessary, and both had been complied with. When the final payments were made, the sale of the certificate was fully executed, and nothing remained to be done to make the sale effective and valid. See Pigott v. O’Halloran, 37 Minn. 415, 35 N. W. 4; also Woodman v. Clapp, 21 Wis. 355; Smith v. Board, 44 Wis. 688.
It follows that the trial court erred in entering judgment confirming title and right of possession in the defendants. It is directed to vacate its judgment, and enter judgment confirming the defendants’ lien under their tax certificate, with costs in the district court. Appellants will recover costs in this court.