77 Minn. 343 | Minn. | 1899
The facts in this case are undisputed. The plaintiff’s assignor, on January 31, 1889, paid into the treasury of the defendant city $1,-602.88, in consideration of the assignment to him of a certain tax certificate of sale of the lot therein described. The certificate was assigned to the plaintiff, which, on March 11,1895, surrendered it to the city comptroller, and a tax deed was issued to it for the lot. Upon receiving the deed, the plaintiff, in April, 1895, went into possession of the lot, and thereafter, in September, 1898, brought suit against the holder of the record title to determine his adverse claim. The defendant in that action, in his answer, denied the plaintiff’s title, alleged title in himself, and demanded affirmative relief to the effect that he recover possession of the lot; and no claim is here made that the action was not brought and prosecuted in good faith. On the trial of the precedent action, the plaintiff, to establish its title, offered the tax deed in evidence, to which the defendant .objected on the ground that notice of the expiration of redemption had not been given before the deed was issued, and on the ground of seven other irregularities claimed to appear on the face of the deed, which rendered it void. The court refused to receive the deed in evidence, but did not state on which of the grounds urged the objection to the admission of the deed in evidence was sustained.
1. Section 142, Municipal Code of St. Paul (Sp. Laws 1889, c. 32, § 50, p. 590), provides as follows:
“That in any action heretofore or hereafter commenced in which the validity of a deed or certificate of sale issued under this act is brought into question, and on account of any irregularities, the same shall be set aside, the party holding such deed or certificate of sale shall recover from the city of St. Paul the amount paid by the purchaser at the sale, or by the assignee of the city on taking an assignment certificate, with interest at the rate of seven (7) per cent, per annum from the date of such payment. Such amount shall be paid out of the city treasury upon the order of the common council of said city.”
It will be observed that the holder of the tax certificate or deed can recover from the city only when such certificate or deed is set aside “on account of any irregularities.” The language here employed is essentially different from that used in G-. S. 1894, § 1610. The city does not agree to defend the lien or title which it assigns or conveys under its charter, and it may be a question whether the city is bound by the result of the precedent action mentioned in section 142, unless there was in fact an actual irregularity on which the court was in such precedent action warranted in setting aside the certificate or deed. But that question has not been argued, and it is not necessary to decide it here.
At most, but two irregularities, or alleged irregularities, were made to appear affirmatively in this action as irregularities on which the court in the precedent action was warranted in setting aside the deed. One of these irregularities is that the deed is void on its face for the want of proper recitals of the prior proceedings on which it is founded. (Such prior proceedings were not introduced in evidence in the precedent action.) It is not necessary to consider the sufficiency of this alleged irregularity, because, in any
No other irregularities appearing, the action of the court in setting aside the deed in the former suit will be referred to such irregularities as do appear and are sufficient ground to warrant the court in rightfully setting the deed aside. But those two irregularities affect the deed alone, and do not affect the certificate which plaintiff purchased from the city. We held, in Flanagan v. City of St. Paul, 65 Minn. 347, 68 N. W. 47, that if the city treasurer fails to give the proper notice to cut off the time for redemption at the end of the five years, the notice may be given afterwards, and the time to redeem terminated at a date subsequent thereto. It therefore follows that plaintiff’s certificate has not yet been merged in a deed, and has not yet become functus officio, because no valid deed has yet been issued. Neither was this certificate set aside, either directly or indirectly, in the precedent action.
But plaintiff claims that under the above-quoted language of the statute it is entitled to refundment from the city whenever its certificate or its deed is set aside for any such an irregularity; that it is not necessary, under the wording of the statute, that both the deed and the certificate be so set aside. This position is very plausible, but is not, in our opinion, warranted by a proper analysis and construction of the different provisions of the statute. Said section 142 is section 50, tit. 1, sube. 7, c. 7, Sp. Laws 1887 (as so amended in 1889). Section 45 provides that, if no one else bids at the tax sale the amount due, the lot or parcel
“Shall be struck off to the city; and thereupon the city shall receive, in the'corporate name, a certificate of the sale thereof and shall be vested with the same rights as other purchasers at such sales.”
The statute provides that this certificate is assignable, and other provisions of the statute contemplate that, if the purchaser from the city makes his purchase before the time to redeem expires, he shall take an assignment of this certificate; but, if he makes his pur
By the terms of the contract between plaintiff and the city, the city should, of its own motion, have terminated the time to redeem at the end of the five years. But this provision of the contract is a condition subsequent, and for the purposes of forfeiture or rescission such conditions are construed more strictly than are conditions precedent. In executing the deed, the city officials did not act merely as the agents of the city. They acted as agents or trustees for all parties, — for the city, the plaintiff, and the owner of the equity of redemption, — just as the sheriff on a foreclosure sale under the power acts as -agent or trustee for all parties. When the five years expired, and the plaintiff applied for the deed, the city officials should have said to plaintiff: “We owe it as a duty to the owner of the equity of redemption to refuse to execute this deed to you, and thereby cloud his title, or embarrass him with a void deed.” If the city officials had thus refused, plaintiff could not have compelled them to execute the deed. A deed which never existed could not have been set aside in the precedent action, and plaintiff could never have maintained that action.
Under these circumstances, plaintiff cannot found a cause of action on the fact that he procured from the city officials % void deed, which he had no right to demand, and they had no authority to issue. Neither can it be held that the above-quoted provisions of the statute apply to such a deed. The deed mentioned in those provisions is the deed which is the subject of the purchase from the
2. The land in controversy is lot 1, block 5, in Bazille & Roberts’ addition to West St. Paul, in the city of St. Paul. It is described in the tax proceeding and in the certificate and tax deed as “lot 1, block 5, in Bazille & Roberts’ addition to (or in) St. Paul.” There is no other addition in the city known as “Bazille & Roberts’ Addition.” In our opinion, the description is sufficient, even in proceedings in invitum. This disposes of the case.
The order denying a new trial should be affirmed. So ordered.