23 Minn. 231 | Minn. | 1876
“ Upon the sale of any land or town lot for delinquent taxes, the lien which the state has thereon for taxes then due is transferred to the purchaser at such sale ; and if such sale proves to be invalid, on account of any irregularity in the proceedings of any officer having any duty to perform in relation thereto, the purchaser at such sale is entitled to receive from the proprietor o.f such land or lot the amount of taxes and penalty and interest legally due thereon, and the amount of taxes paid thereon by the purchaser, subsequent to such sale, and such land or lot is bound for the payment thereof.” Gen. St. a 11, § 142.
This question must be answered in the negative, for the reason that there is no statute, nor any principle or rule of the law of evidence outside of statute, making a duplicate such prima facie evidence. As an official document, a tax duplicate is proper evidence of its own existence and contents ; but it is not evidence of a step in the tax proceedings anterior to itself, like the assessment and levy of taxes.
The ■ presumption that, in making it out and issuing it to the county treasurer, the county auditor did his duty, docs not carry with it the presumption that the preliminary steps of assessment and levy wore properly taken, since both of these steps are jurisdictional as respects the authority of the auditor to make out and issue the duplicate, and the existence of jurisdictional facts is not a matter of presumption. Cooley on Tax. 329. See, also, Hopper v. Malleson, 16 N. J. Eq. 382.
Judgment affirmed.