Gilman v. Van Brunt

29 Minn. 271 | Minn. | 1882

Beery, J.

This is an action for the removal of an alleged cloud upon plaintiffs’ title to certain town lots. To maintain this action ilie cloud alleged must be prima facie substantial. In other words, ilie facts which are said to constitute the cloud must be such as apparently confer some right, title, or interest in the property. If they are not such per se, but require to give them this apparent effect the hacking of extrinsic facts which have no real or apparent existence, I hen there is no cloud. Or, as it may be otherwise stated, there is no occasion to go into a court of equity in order to have that determined to be void and invalid which has no appearance of being otherwise. Weller v. City of St. Paul, 5 Minn. 70, (95); Scribner v. Allen, 12 Minn. 148; Barton v. Drake, 21 Minn. 299; Conkey v. Dike, 17 Minn. 457; Baldwin v. Canfield, 26 Minn. 43; More v. Card, 14 Mis. 214; Gamble v. Loop, Id. 466; Scott v. Onderdonk, 14 N. Y. 9; Farnham v. Campbell, 34 N. Y. 480; Van Doren v. Mayor, 9 Paige 387; Allen v. City of Buffalo, 39 N. Y. 386; Overing v. Foote, 43 N. Y. 290; Cohen v. Sharp, 44 Cal. 29; Fonda v. Sage, 48 N. Y. 173; Marsh v. City of Brooklyn, 59 N. Y. 280. For the determination of adverse claims or pretensions, there is a remedy either under our statute or by an action in the nature of ejectment, as the facts with regard to possession may advise. See Walton v. Perkins, 28 Minn. 413.

In this case the facts relied upon to make out a cloud are these: Defendant claims title under certain tax-judgment sales made in *2731875, under Laws 1874, c. 1, as amended by Laws 1875, c. 5, and under Laws 1874, c. 2. He holds certain assignments executed' by the county auditor of St. Louis county, (where the lands in controversy lie,) part of the assignments being in the form prescribed by Laws 1874, c. 1, § 129, and the rest in the form prescribed by Laws 1874, c. 2, § 19. A portion of these assignments were issued to defendant directly, and the remainder to another, who has quitclaimed to him. Bach of these assignments, according to the prescribed form, simply assigns “the whole right, title, and interest” of the state (to the piece of land therein named) “acquired” at a designated tax-judgment sale at which such land was bid in for the state ostensibly under the provisions of the tax laws. No effect is given by the statute to an assignment of this character as evidence, prima facie or otherwise, of the regularity or validity of antecedent proceedings, or of any right, title, or interest in the land described. It is a transfer of the right acquired by the state, if any, and nothing more. The mere execution or possession of such assignment creates no cloud upon the title o'f any person claiming to own the land ■ mentioned therein, for it is per se evidence of no right, title, or interest therein on the part of its holder. To create the cloud it is necessary that there should be something back of the assignment, showing an apparent right, titles or interest in the state which could pass by the assignment.

No certificates of sale were executed to the state, such as are provided for in Laws 1874, c. 1, § 120, as amended by Laws 1875, c. 5, § 29, and in Laws 1874, c. 2, § 14, and such as by succeeding sections are mad % prima facie evidence that all the requirements of the law in respect to a tax sale have been complied with. Bor the right, if any, which the state acquired by the sales mentioned in these assignments, the assignee as well as every other person must look at the proceedings which culminated in the sales, and upon which their validity and effect depend.' Upon looking at these proceedings, the court below has found that the court by which the tax judgments upon which the sales were had were entered, never acquired jurisdiction to enter the judgments referred to in the assignments against the lots which are the -subject of this action. If this finding is right, *274tbe assignments raise no cloud upon plaintiff’s* title. They could not do this per se for reasons above given, and they do not by any reference to antecedent proceedings, for these are found to be void for want of jurisdiction.

The court does not find the particular facts from which the want of jurisdiction is inferred, but the plaintiff’s counsel calls attention to and relies, among other things, upon the fact that none of the proceedings antecedent to the assignments, from the list filed by the county auditor with the clerk of the district court down to the sale, contain any description of the lots to which this action relates. These are lots in Cowell’s addition to Duluth, whereas the lots described in the last-mentioned and subsequent proceedings are in Cowell’s addition to Upper Duluth. Without some explanatory facts — if any there can be — it would not appear that these tax-j udgment and sale proceedings have any relation to the lots in controversy. If, as the settled case shows, the assignments were of the right acquired by the state in the lots in controversy upon proceedings against lots in Cowell’s addition to Upper Duluth, they evidently assigned nothing, unless the two are identical, which does not appear. Upon this state of facts the case would seem to be this, viz.: the assignments do not create any-eloud per se, and the proceedings to which they refer show that there is none. Upon the facts of this case as it stands, the defendant has no apparent right, title, or interest in the premises to which this action relates, and by consequence it cannot be maintained.

The judgment is accordingly reversed.

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