Goodrich v. Florer

27 Minn. 97 | Minn. | 1880

Gilfillan, C. J.

The action is under Gen. St. 1878, c. 11, § 91, — the chapter relating to taxes. Section 90 saves, to any person having an interest in land sold for taxes, a right to redeem for two years after the date of the sale. Section 91 provides that “minors, insane persons, idiots, or persons in captivity, or in any country with which the United States are at war, having an estate in or lien on lands sold for taxes, may redeem the same within two years after such disability shall, cease; but in such case the right to redeem must be established in a suit for that purpose brought against the party holding the title under the sale.” This suit is to be brought, not to determine merely the right to redeem, but for the purpose of effecting a redemption, and in it the court *100must declare what land, estate or interest the plaintiff may redeem, and how much he shall pay for that purpose.

Redemptions within two years after sale are to be made by payment to the county treasurer, upon the auditor’s certificate of the amount due; but a claim to redeem, under section 91, may not be made till many years after the sale — till the purchaser has been for years in possession, paying taxes of various kinds — and when it might be difficult, if not impossible, for the auditor to ascertain the amount due. It is evident the legislature did not intend to impose the duty on the auditor in such cases.

Defendant urges that, plaintiff!s disability still continuing, and the two years mentioned in section 90 having expired, she is not entitled to redeem at this time; his argument being that the right of redemption under section 91 can be exercised only after the’ disability of the party shall cease, and that it is suspended, after the two years mentioned in section 90, during the period of disability. This construction would lead to so extraordinary consequences that it is impossible the legislature should have intended it. The evident intention was that the right should not be barred by mere lapse of time, where, during such time, the person might, from the existence of the disabilities mentioned, be unable to protect his interests by redeeming. The right to redeem, therefore, continues, in the cases mentioned in section 91, until two years after the removal of the disability, but is not suspended during the disability.

In this case, the plaintiff was the owner of only an undivided one-seventh of the land. She claimed the right to redeem the entire estate; but the court below decided that she could redeem only the interest that she owned. In this the court was right. Under section 90, within two years after sale, any piece or parcel of land sold may be redeemed by any one having an interest therein, however small the interest. Under section 92 any person who has or claims an in*101terest in, or lien on, an undivided estate in the land sold, may redeem such undivided estate. It is manifestly the intention of section 91 to avoid sacrificing the interests and rights of those who are supposed to be incapable of protecting them by redemption during two years from the sale, and to do this by saving to them a right of redemption until two years after the removal of the incapability. To save their interests it is necessary only that the right should be co-extensive with the interest to be preserved. For this reason we think the right to redeem saved by section 91 is the right mentioned by section 92, with the qualification' that the party seeking to redeem shall actually have (not merely claim) the estate or lien by reason of which he claims to redeem.

The court below also decided that the purchaser — this defendant — having gone into possession and made improvements on the land, the action is one to which the provisions of Gen. St. 1878, c. 75, §'15, and the following sections, apply. The case certainly comes within the terms of those sections as an action to try the title to land. Prima facie, the. certificate of sale passed to the purchaser, at the end of two years from the sale, the absolute title to the land sold. The claim of plaintiff is that the absolute title, as to an undivided one-seventh, did not pass — has not vested in defendant. The first question in the case is: what title did the purchaser get by the tax sale and lapse of the two years ? What title had he when this action was commenced — an absolute or defeasible title ? The trial of this question is merely a trial of title. As to the undivided one-seventh, the court below defeated defendant’s claim to an absolute title. We think the sections of chapter 75, referred to, include such an action as this.

Order affirmed.