102 Wis. 334 | Wis. | 1899
June 9, 1886,’Lincoln county in due form of law acquired title to a tract of land by tax deed based on a tax sale of 1883. December 21, 1896, the county by quitclaim deed conveyed the land to plaintiff. There was no question on the evidence but that plaintiff was entitled to recover by virtue of the title thus acquired, unless defendant was the owner of the land under a tax deed made to her in due form of law, based on a tax sale of the land for taxes of 1889. The latter tax deed plaintiff contended was void because the lands were exempt from taxation for the year 1889, being county land. Defendant answered that contention by saying the proof was insufficient to show exemption from taxation under the statute, and further, that plaintiff possessed under his quitclaim deed no better title than his grantor, and that the latter was estopped from claiming title before conveying the land to plaintiff because of the previous conveyance to defendant, and because of the taxing of the land in 1889, the sale for such taxes, and representations made by the county treasurer at the time of the tax sale that the county bad no interest in the land, upon which defendant relied in purchasing at such sale and thereafter taking the tax deed.
The rule is well settled that a public corporation is not estopped by acts of its officers and agents in excess of their powers; nor by omissions or mistakes of officers in performing duties specifically enjoined upon them by law, as distinguished from duties imposed upon the corporation itself. Every person in dealing with an officer of a corporation is presumed to know the extent of bis powers and the capacity in which he acts in the particular case.
Numerous instances may be found, some of which are cited in the brief of appellant’s counsel, where a public corporation has been held estopped by its corporate acts irregularly performed, as by so issuing corporate bonds. Instances where corporations have been held bound by mere
It is clear that the levy of taxes upon the land while it was exempt, if such were the fact, the return of the land delinquent for the nonpayment of such taxes, the sale that followed and statement made at the time of such sale, and the making of the tax deed, were all mistakes, if mistakes at all, of the officers of the town where the land is situated and officers of the county in the performance of their official duties imposed upon them by law,— not corporate acts strictly so called. Hence the county was not estopped or affected in any way thereby. In contemplation of law, the defendant acted from first to last with full knowledge of the whole situation, and therefore has no reason to complain.
Was the land subject to taxes for the year 1889 ? That is the remaining question. By secs. 1034,1038, and 1191, R. S. 1878, it was not so subject to taxation if the county then held, in addition to its tax title based on the sale of 1883, two tax certificates of sale unredeemed for two years subsequent to such sale. We are unable to find evidence in the record to satisfy that call of the statute; neither does it appear that the conclusion of the learned trial court as to ex
But it is said by plaintiff that by sec. 1191 the county, only, was entitled to purchase the land at a tax sale thereof upon which it already had a tax certificate, hence the sale to defendant was void. That may be admitted; but still she did purchase at the sale, took the tax certificate, and thereafter obtained a tax deed in favor of which the statutes of limitation were set in operation. Such statutes were properly pleaded and insisted upon, and were effectual to bar the claim of the plaintiff in the absence of a showing that the lands were in fact not subject to taxation for the faxes upon which defendant’s deed was based.
It is suggested that, as the lands were subjected to taxation for the two years after that on which the county tax deed was based, and the county only was entitled to purchase at a tax sale for such taxes, it should be presumed that it became the purchaser and was in fact the owner of two certificates of sale required by the exemption provision of the statute. The difficulty with that logic is that it leaves out a very important premise,— the fact that the former owner may have paid the taxes for subsequent years. When that is considered, so as to make the premises complete, all room for the presumption suggested disappears. If any presumption, then, is to be indulged in, it would seem to be against the ownership of the two certificates required to satisfy the exemption provision, because sec. 1191 requires the county clerk annually to furnish the assessor of each town in his county a list of the lands in such town exempt under such section, in order to prevent an improper levy of taxes
It follows that the decision of the trial court, that defendant’s deed was void because the land was exempt from taxation in 1889, cannot be sustained. Inasmuch, however, as the ownership of tax certificates, so as to render the land exempt from taxation, on which the case turns here, does not appear to have occurred to the trial court or been presented to him, but suggested here for the first time, it is considered there should be a new trial on that one subject.
By the Court. — The judgment o£ the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a rehearing on the single question of whether the county, in 1889, was the owner of two certificates of sale unredeemed on the land for two successive years subsequent to the date of the sale on which the county tax deed was based; and if that fact be found in plaintiff’s favor, to render judgment against the defendant according to the prayer of the complaint; otherwise, in favor of the defendant.