165 Mich. 681 | Mich. | 1911
After the. decision in Haney v. Miller, 154 Mich. 337 (117 N. W. 71, 745), was handed down, the complainant, who is the relator here, applied to the auditor general for a certificate of error, canceling the sale and bid to the State of the west half of the northeast quarter of section 26, town 1 north, range 11 west, forcertain drain taxes claimed to have been reassessed thereon in the year 1885, and to cancel the sale and the bid to the
The auditor general answered the petition, and in the answer asserted that relator is entitled to no relief, and that all matters now sought to be inquired into and adjudicated were involved in and were adjudicated and determined by this court in the said cause of Haney v. Miller. The answer of the auditor general was filed in May, 1910, and the matter appears to have stood upon petition and answer until some time in October, 1910, when relator moved for an order striking respondent’s answer from the files and also to have an issue framed for trial. This motion was noticed for hearing on October 25, 1910. December 3,1910, an order was made, denying the motion to strike respondent’s answer from the files, but permitting relator to file a replication, if he desired to do so, and to propose issues to be framed for settlement. Under date March 23, 1911, relator proposed questions of law and fact, with notice to the auditor general and an invitation to propose amendments. Objections were filed by the auditor general, who again insisted that the situation is the same as that considered by this court in deciding Haney v. Miller, and that this is an attempt to reverse the decision of this court in that case.
It appears from the record in the case of Haney v. Miller, and from the opinions which were filed, that the complainant sought a decree permitting him to redeem
Two propositions are made plain in the opinion agreed to by a majority of the justices, which are, first, that the auditor general had no right to sell the State’s title to the land to any person who should not pay all taxes which had been returned and appeared on his books as outstanding and unpaid, and, reaffirming former decisions of the court, that the State took title to this land in 1893, the complainant was completely divested of title, and when the State parted with its title to the defendant Miller it was upon the condition that complainant might secure a reconveyance when he had repaid to the purchaser the money which had been paid to the auditor general, with the statutory costs and penalties.
It will be noticed that in the minority opinion it is said:
*684 “ Complainant by his bill and proofs made out a case entitling him to equitable relief. The taxes of 1885 were not a valid lien upon this land at the time of defendant Miller’s purchase. The sale for said taxes was a void sale. The entire amount thereof, except $2.83, was absolutely void, and complainant is entitled to have the same so decreed. All the parties in interest are before the court, and such decree can be now made as will dispose of the entire controversy. It will be unnecessary to order this amount of "the 1885 assessment, which is a valid tax, to be returned for reassessment, but the same will be paid by complainant to defendant Miller, with such interest, if any, as may lawfully be added to the same, if returned for reassessment. This amount, together with the amount tendered by complainant to said defendant Miller, will be decreed to be paid him by complainant, and thereupon said Miller to reconvey all his interest in the lands in question to complainant. The auditor general will be decreed to refund to defendant Miller the money paid on his purchase for such portion of the 1885 taxes as are by this opinion declared to be invalid.”
This reference is made to show the scope of the inquiry and the questions which were considered upon that appeal.
But in the majority opinion appears this language:
“Again, the remedy through cancellation may possibly render redress to the repurchasing owner in proper cases, though we do not decide that question” — a remark which it may be assumed invited the complainant, the relator here, to attempt in this proceeding to secure a cancellation of the tax deeds and a return to him from the State of a portion of the money which he had paid to secure a reconveyance of his land. If it can be said that any new matter is set up in the petition for the order to show cause, it is because relator asserts therein that he paid the taxes for the year 1891 to the township treasurer and has a writing which he exhibits, purporting to be made by the township treasurer, to the effect that the taxes on said quarter section for the year 1891 were paid on January 20, 1892. It was expressly found in the chancery proceeding that by virtue of the sale of the land for the taxes of*685 1891 the State obtained an absolute title to these premises. It was complainant’s theory in >that proceeding that he 'was bound to pay to the purchaser of the State’s title the taxes of the year 1891, with the proper penalties, and that he had tendered the necessary amount to the purchaser. It was not claimed that the taxes for the year 1891 were paid, or that they were not valid. Relator is "therefore concluded by the adjudication then made.
This being so, it is evident that the only question open to relator is the one whether in this proceeding he may procure a cancellation of the deed for the taxes of the previous years, and the cancellation and setting aside of those taxes as invalid. That he may not do this is a conclusion which logically follows the reasoning of the majority of the justices in Haney v. Miller. If the State’s title, acquired in the year 1898, divested the complainant of all interest in the land — was an absolute title — and, in selling that title, the auditor general was lawfully bound to exact from the purchaser payment to the State of the taxes for the previous years which stood upon the books of the State charged to this land, and if the owner to secure a re-conveyance of that absolute title was bound to pay to the purchaser the monéy which the purchaser so paid to the State, with the statutory costs and penalties, this being the limit and extent of the grace extended to him by the State, there is no escape from the conclusion that having secured such reconveyance upon such terms he may not now secure from the State a portion of the sum so paid, upon the theory that it was an unlawful exaction.
The order of this court, permitting the relator to propose issues to be framed, is set aside and revoked, and relator’s petition dismissed.