219 N.W. 545 | Minn. | 1928
At the annual tax sale May 14, 1923, plaintiff purchased certain tax liens for 1921 taxes. Thereafter plaintiff paid and had entered on the copy tax judgment book as a part of the lien of the respective tax certificates issued to it at said tax sale certain subsequent delinquent taxes. This was the basis of the first cause of action.
At the annual tax sale May 10, 1920, the Yellow Medicine County Bank of Granite Falls purchased certain tax liens for 1918 taxes. Likewise at the May 12, 1919, annual tax sale said bank purchased certain tax liens for 1917 taxes. The bank sold and assigned all its certificates to plaintiff. This is the basis of the second cause of action.
The action seeks to recover all that plaintiff and its grantor paid to the county with interest.
1. All such sales were erroneously made in that all the lands at the time of the respective sales had "theretofore been bid in by the state and not assigned by it or redeemed." These lands should not have been included in the delinquent list. G. S. 1923, § 2106; Forbes v. Stream,
2. A purchaser at such a sale may have a refundment of money paid at a tax sale when it appears: (a) That the land was exempt from taxation; (b) that the taxes were paid before sale; (c) that the assessment of the property or levy of the tax is void. G. S. 1923, § 2177. But the statute does not provide for a refundment to one in plaintiff's situation. *433
3. The legislature has provided that when such certificates prove to be invalid for causes other than specified in § 2177 the lien of the state is passed to such purchaser, who may resort to the property. §§ 2148, 2185, 2191. Blakeley v. L. M. Mann Land Co.
4. The doctrine of caveat emptor applies to purchasers at tax sales. Foster v. Malmberg,
5. A person who buys at tax sales is not a bona fide purchaser. In the absence of statutory provision affording him relief, he has no remedy against the municipality for whose benefit the land is sold in case his title fails for any reason. In such a situation he is without a remedy. Foster v. Malmberg,
Affirmed. *434