38 Minn. 463 | Minn. | 1888
This is an appeal from an order overruling a general demurrer to plaintiff’s complaint, which it is claimed sets out a cause of action under Laws 1881, c. 10, § 19. The sales mentioned in said complaint were held in the month of February, 1866; while the judgments which set them aside, and declared the certificates issued therein void, were rendered in November of the same year. The section of the statutes by virtue of which plaintiff seeks relief is as follows: “When any tax sale is declared void by judgment of court, such judgment shall state for what reason such sale is annulled; and in all cases where any sale has been, or hereafter shall be, so set aside, the
The appellant urges that because the section under consideration looks forward to the collection of the amount of the taxes avoided by the judgment, and provides the method of enforcing payment of the same with interest, penalties, and costs, the complaint should allege the levy of a valid tax upon the property; and he also strenuously contends that it must also show that the judgment states “for what reason the sale was annulled.” It would seem to be a sufficient answer to,the first proposition to say that the statute nowhere requires that a valid tax sale shall have preceded the right to recover; and we must not assume that the legislature intended to distinguish between cases in which, for wholly different reasons, the sales have been set aside, or to discriminate between a judgment rendered because the tax has been improperly levied, or perhaps not levied at all, and a judgment annulling a sale on account of some defect in the proceedings subsequent to the levy of the tax. The section is less restrictive, if possible, than that of the same general character construed in State v. Cronkhite, 28 Minn. 197, (9 N. W. Rep. 681,) and which was held sufficiently ample to include all tax sales set aside by judgment of the court.
The next position of the appellant is that, as a condition to recovery, the plaintiff must allege, and consequently establish upon trial, if it be denied, that the judgment declaring the sale void contains a statement of the reason therefor. In 1866, when these sales were made and the judgments rendered, the statute provided for a return of the money to the purchaser, in case the sales were declared void. Gen.
Order affirmed.