15 Neb. 408 | Neb. | 1884
Plaintiff brought his action in the court below under the provisions of section 71 of the old revenue law (Gen. Stat., 924). His petition contains two causes of action, in each of which he alleges the purchase by him from the county treasurer of Otoe county in his official capacity on the 4th day of January, 1878, of different and specified tracts of land situate in said county for delinquent taxes of 1876, and the payment, to him of the taxes on said tracts of land for the several years therein specified; that said lands were in each case wrongfully sold to said' plaintiff for the nonpayment of the taxes aforesaid, and were sold contrary to the provisions of the revenue law of this state then in force, because a part of the said taxes for which said lands were sold was a land road tax, so called, levied by the county commissioners upon said lands at the rate of four dollars upon each quarter section, without regard ’ to valuation or assessment; that in the one case, one John Warden was the owner and occupant of said tract of land at the time of the sale and the several levies and other proceedings therein involved, and to whom the said lands were, for each of the years involved, assessed, and that he, the said John Warden, had at all times and was the owner of sufficient personal property upon said land out of which the said taxes could have been collected by the seizure and sale thereof by the then treasurer of said county; that the county treasurer of said county did not give the notice of
The section of the statute under which this action was brought is as follows:
“ Sec. 71. ' When by mistake or wrongful act of the treasurer or other officer, land has been sold contrary to the provisions of this act, the county is to save the purchaser harmless by paying him the amount of principal and interest to which he would have been entitled had the land been rightfully sold; and the treasurer or other officer and their sureties shall be liable for the amount on their bonds to the county, or the purchaser may recover the amount directly from the treasurer or other officer making such mistake or error.” Gen. Stat., 924.
Parties dealing with a county, or other municipal corporation, are under a peculiar obligation to act with fairness and in good faith, as such corporation can only act through its records and other instrumentalities given it by law. Such persons are bound to take notice of such records, not only of what they show, but also, if such be the case, of their failure to show, matters material to the business in hand. It was then the duty of the plaintiff, before buying the lands in question at private tax sale, to examine the record and gee for what taxes they^were being
In regard to the failure of the assesssor to take, subscribe and attach, to the assessment roll the oath prescribed by section 12 of the old revenue law, it is only necessary to say that if such failure can be held to be such a “mistake or wrongful act of the treasurer or other officer” as would deprive the purchaser at tax sale of any right “to which he would have been entitled had the land been rightfully sold,” then, as the presence or absence of such oath is a matter of record, the purchaser must act upon it at his peril. As to any objection that might exist to the manner of making said sale — that the lands were not offered to the person who would pay the taxes for the smallest portion of each subdivision, or that the lands were not sold f<jr all the taxes then due on them — such objection.
But there is one remaining “ mistake or wrongful act of the treasurer,” by which it is alleged that thé said lands were “sold contrary to the provisions of the revenue law:”’ that is, that the owners, to whom they were severally assessed, were in the occupancy thereof at and before the time of such sale, and had thereon sufficient personal property out of which said taxes could have been made by the said treasurer by the seizure and sale thereof, but that the said lands were sold for said taxes without any attempt to make the same out of such personal property. This court has repeatedly held that a sale of land for taxes under circumstances such as these was void, and, as the law underwent an important amendment in 1877, it is improbable that the principle of such, decisions will be reconsidered, whatever might now be the views of the court as to its correctness as an original proposition. Unlike those which we have been considering, the “wrongful act of the treasurer” in selling the land for taxes without first making an
It is assumed in the brief of plaintiff in error that the demurrer was sustained on the ground that the claim of the plaintiff was barred by the statute of limitations, and that to reach that conclusion the court held that the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued immediately upon his purchase of the land. If that was the ground of the decision, it cannot be sustained. In the case of Peet v. O’Brien, 5 Neb., 360, this court held that, “the title acquired by a purchaser at a tax sale might be said to fail when it should be pronounced invalid by the judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction over the subject matter.” Until plaintiff’s title failed he had no right to call on Otoe county to hold him harmless, etc., and it was then that the statute commenced to run.
The judgment of the district court is reversed, the demurrer overruled, and the cause remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with law.
Reversed AND remaNded.