152 P. 952 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1915
The first cause above entitled is an action to quiet title to two lots of land in the city of Long Beach. The second is an action in ejectment brought by Hall against Tucker et al., who were in possession of the same property as tenants thereof under a lease from Jackson Deets, the alleged owner of the property.
Against the ownership of plaintiff's testate, Hall claimed title to the property under and by virtue of two tax-deeds from the state.
Judgment was rendered against Hall in both cases, from which he appeals.
The sole question involved is the validity of the tax-deeds under which Hall asserts ownership of the property.
Without discussing other alleged defects in the deeds and proceedings, the judgments must be affirmed on account of noncompliance on the part of the tax-collector with the provisions of section 3897 of the Political Code. This section requires that the tax-collector, as a prerequisite to a valid conveyance by the state of property purchased by it for delinquent taxes, shall cause a notice of such sale to be published for three successive weeks prior to the date fixed for the sale, and shall "mail . . . a copy of said notice, postage thereon prepaid and registered to the party to whom the land was last assessed next before the sale, at his last known post-office address." The copy of the notice required to be published must, where the name of the party to whom the property was last assessed is known, be mailed at least three weeks before the sale. (Healton v. Morrison,
At the trial, appellant offered in evidence a receipt signed by Jackson Deets showing that he had received the registered envelope wherein was inclosed the copy of the notice so mailed to him on February 2d, to the reception of which an objection on the part of respondents was sustained. There was no error in this ruling, since it did not tend to prove a compliance with the provisions of the statute, without which there was no authority in the tax-collector to make the sale. (Cooley on Taxation, 1883 ed., p. 335.) Actual notice of the time fixed for the sale cannot be deemed a substitute for the statutory requirement.
It appears that in a former trial involving the same tax proceedings a judgment was rendered in favor of Hall, from which Jackson Deets appealed to the supreme court; the case being reported in Deets v. Hall,
It is unnecessary to discuss appellant's contention that the decisions upon which we base our conclusion are founded upon an erroneous premise. Under the repeated decisions of both this court and the supreme court, we do not deem the question open to such contention.
The judgments in both cases are affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on November 26, 1915. *439