100 P. 290 | Or. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
“A full and complete assessment of such taxable property entered thereon, including a full and precise description of the lands or lots owned by each person therein named, on March first of each year, at the hour of 1 o’clock A. M. * * All land shall be assessed and taxed in the county in which the same shall lie, and every person shall be assessed in the county where he resides on the first day of March of the year, when the assessment shall be made for all real and personal property then owned by him within such county; and unoccupied land, if the owner is unknown, may be assessed as such, without inserting the name of any owner.”
Sections 2768, 2770, 2776, Hill’s Ann. Laws 1892, also directly require or contemplate that the assessment shall
“Notwithstanding (1) any indefiniteness or imperfection in the description of such lands on the assessment roll: Provided, that the person assessed shall, at the time of the assessment, have been the owner of record of a parcel of property to which such description shall have been applicable, and of only one such parcel; or (2) the omission in the assessment roll of the name of the owner, or the entry of a name other than that ■ of the true owner, or a mistake in the name of the owner: Provided, the property be correctly described.”
The first of these provisions seeks to cure defects in the description of the property, and the second to cure assessments made in the name of the wrong party, but the assessment in question is not within either of these provisions. As to the first proviso, although so far as the complaint discloses,' Johns may have been the owner of record of the property in question here at the time of the assessment, yet it does not appear that he was the owner of record of a parcel of property to which the description in the assessment roll is applicable, for the property assessed does not disclose in what township or range it was situated, and therefore does not identify it as the property involved here. As to the second proviso, the name of the owner was omitted, and it was assessed in the name of one other than the true owner, but the property is not correctly described, and therefore these defects in the assessment are not cured by the statute. Lewis v. Blackburn, 42 Or. 114 (69 Pac. 1024).
“As a rule, these statutes reach only those defects which do not go to the absence of authority to sell or convey. They do not operate to cure jurisdictional defects or to validate titles which are void for want of power to sell the property.”
Many cases in which this question is considered hold that a tax deed, valid on its face, is a complete bar in an action to recover the property after the expiration of the period of limitation, however defective the tax proceeding may have been, but that such limitation will not apply in favor of one in possession under a deed void on its face. These decisions relate to cases in which the tax sale purchaser is in possession of the property by virtue of the tax deed. Such' a limitation is not a curative statute, but the title thus acquired is in the nature of a prescriptive title, in which the deed must be sufficient on its face to constitute color of title under which possession is held. 27 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 ed.) 987; Blackwell, Tax Title, §§ 897, 943; Gomer v. Chaffee, 6 Colo. 314; Moore v. Brown, 11 How. 413 (13 L. Ed. 751).
The decree of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.