87 N.W. 600 | N.D. | 1901
This action is brought to quiet title in the plaintiff to the real estate described in the complaint, situated in the county of Cass. It is conceded ’ that plaintiff is the fee-simple owner of the lands. The lands were sold in 1897 for certain taxes charged against them on the tax list of 1896. Tax certificates were issued pursuant to said tax sales, and the same are now owned by the three defendants last named in the title of this action. The trial court adjudged, among other things, that the taxes of 1896, as charged against said lands on the tax list of Cass county, were legal and valid taxes, and that the sales for said taxes were regular, and that said tax certificates were in all respects regular and valid. Plaintiff has appealed to this court from a part of said judgment only, viz. that part of the same which sustains said taxes of 1896 and said tax sales and certificates.
Appellant caused a statement of the case to be settled which embodies all the evidence offered at the trial relating to said taxes of 1896 and the sales for said taxes made in 1897; but said statement does not purport to contain all the evidence offered at the trial, nor does it contain any request for this court to retry the entire case.
It is the contention of counsel for the respondents that each and all of the foregoing requests embod}’- a demand for the determination of a question of law, and only a question of law, and that none of the same call for the determination of any question of fact. With respect to this contention of counsel this court finds little difficulty in reaching the conclusion (except as to question numbered 5 in the list, which will be separately considered) that the contention is sound and must be sustained. Each and all of the questions in the list, except that numbered 5» in our opinion, are obnoxious to one and the same criticism, i. e. they each and all call for the determination of a question of law. We think the correctness of this view as to the nature of the several questions asked will be made clear by a brief consideration of question numbered 1 of said list. Question numbered 1 is as follows: “Were the town taxes of the town of Raymond legally levied?” We think it is too clear for
We regard it as being unnecessary to separately discuss any matters arising under either questions 2, 3, or 4 of said list of questions. Every criticism which has been offered in discussing question No. 1 applies with equal force to Nos. 2, 3, and 4 of the list. Considering questions 2, 3, and 4 together, we are requested thereby to determine no state of facts and no single fact whatever as to the school-district taxes in the town of Raymond or in the town of Berlin, or as to the town or road taxes of the town of Berlin, or as to the state taxes. On the contrary, we are requested to determine, as a naked law question, whether in 1896 taxes were legally levied either by the state or by the minor political subdivisions named in questions 2, 3, and 4. It is manifest that this court can
Question numbered 7 presents a conglomeration of vague and .general questions concerning both law and fact, and appertaining both to the validity of the taxes of '1896 and the sale made therefor in 1897, and this without specifying a single question of fact for this •court to consider or determine. By question No. 7 we are requested “to retry every question of fact and of law which in any way pertains to such tax or to such tax sale.” But, to comply with this ¡sweeping request, we should be compelled to inquire into and ascertain generally what questions of fact and what questions of law do “in any way pertain” .either to the validity of the taxes or the tax .sale under consideration; and, after this preliminary investigation, we should be compelled to take up the particular facts involved in this case, and which are developed by the testimony in -the record. But such inquiries are out of the question in a case like this, in which a retrial of certain facts only is sought. In such cases, as has 'been seen, it is incumbent upon the appellant to “specify the questions of fact that he desires the Supreme Court to review,” and, if none are specified, then the mandate of the statute is that the facts .are deemed “to have been properly decided by the trial court.”
Question No. 6 of the list embraces several inquiries. The first is as follows: “Did the law authorize a sale of said lands or of any land for the taxes of 1896? This is clearly a legal question, pure and simple, and as such does not embody a specification of any question of fact to be tried anew in this court. The rest of question No. 6 involves two questions, viz. whether the tax in question was a valid tax, and whether the sale for such taxes was a valid sale. As has been seen, these questions are naked questions of law, and their proper answer would depend upon the existence or nonexistence of specific facts, none of which are called to our attention by any question in the statement of the case.
Turning to question No. 5 in the above-quoted list of questions, we find that the same embraces three questions of fact, viz. (1) Was the land sold for the taxes of the year 1896 under the direction ■of the board of county commissioners of Cass county? (2) Was the notice of sale published in a newspaper designated by a resolution of the board of count}? commissioners of Cass county? (3) Was ■there in Cass county in the year 1897 any newspaper called the “Fargo Argus”? Evidence upon all of these questions, in the form ■of a stipulation, was introduced at the trial, and we have carefully ■considered the same, and our conclusion is, from the evidence, that each of the questions in No. 5, and above set out, must be answered in the affirmative; and we reach the further conclusion of fact and of law that the notice of the tax sale in Cass county for the year 1897 was regularly published pursuant to the provisions of § 74 of Ch. 126 of the Session Laws'of 1897.
Briefly recapitulating what has been said, it appears that the .statement of the case embraces no specifications of any fact or state
Our conclusion is that the judgment must be affirmed, and the costs in this court will be awarded to the respondents.