241 N.W. 671 | Iowa | 1932
The facts in this case were stipulated and agreed upon by and between the parties hereto upon the beginning of the trial. *950
The defendant City of Boone, Iowa, is a municipal corporation and a regularly organized city; the defendant M. Abrahamson is the duly elected, qualified and acting county treasurer of Boone County, Iowa. There is no dispute between the parties concerning the facts. The plaintiff-appellee seeks to have his title quieted as to five separate descriptions of real estate as against the claims of the City of Boone, and asks that the county treasurer be enjoined from advertising such property for sale because of the non-payment of certain special assessments which had been levied against it by the City. The trial court granted the relief prayed in the petition.
It appears that the plaintiff is the owner of certain tax deeds, which were issued to him by the county treasurer of Boone County. They were all based upon the sale of such property because of default in the payment of the ordinary regular tax. In each case the City of Boone, after the tax sale, levied certain special assessments against the property between the time of the tax sale and the date of the tax deed. It is the contention of the plaintiff-appellee that the lien of the ordinary and regular tax, which is created by Section 7202, Code 1927, is superior to all persons except the State, and has precedence over the liens of the special assessments in question. In other words, the theory of the plaintiff is that the tax deeds vested in the purchaser, not only all the right, title and interest of the former owner of the property, but also all the interest, right, and claim of the state and county by virtue of Section 7286, Code 1927, and that the lien of the regular or ordinary taxes has precedence over the lien of special assessments. Section 6008, Code 1927. The question then is, if property is sold and not redeemed, and a tax sale certificate ripens into a tax deed in the regular and legal manner that such lien is transmitted in such a way that the grantee in the tax deed acquires a title, does this title convey to him, not only all the interest of the former owner, but also the interest of the county and state? It is well settled in this state that a tax title is not derivative, but a new title, in the nature of an independent grant from the Sovereign. Petersborough Sav. Bank v. Des Moines Sav. Bank,
"The right to become a purchaser at a sale is quite a different thing than the right to redeem, even after treasurer's deed has been issued." Incorporated Town of Story City v. H.E. Hadley,
See, also, Section 7290, Code 1927.
A tax deed vests in the purchaser all the right, title, and estate of the former owner in and to the land conveyed and all right, title and estate of the state and county thereto. Harrington v. Valley Savings Bank,
In the light of the legal propositions herein announced, the decree of the trial court which quieted the title to the property involved in plaintiff-appellee and against the City of Boone on account of its liens arising from its special assessments was *952 correct, and the trial court properly enjoined the county treasurer from selling such property involved here, by reason of a default in the payment of such special assessments subsequently levied.
The decree is, therefore, — Affirmed.
WAGNER, C.J., and STEVENS, FAVILLE, and ALBERT, JJ., concur.