39 Neb. 763 | Neb. | 1894
In this case the appellant filed a petition in the district court of Lancaster county, containing sixteen separate c mses of action, and alleged the purchase, by plaintiff, of sixteen tracts of land in said county, belonging to defendants, at a tax sale held December 8, 1888, also the payment by plaintiff of various sums, taxes on the premises, prior and subsequent to the date of sale.; and further alleged that no tax deeds had ever been executed, or any application made for the same. The prayer of the petition was for a finding of amount due, a foreclosure of the tax cértifioates or liens, and sale of the premises; also, for an allowance, as an attorney’s fee, of an amount equal to ten per
Defendant Carlos C. Burr answered, admitting that he was the owner in fee of all the land described in the sixteen causes of action in the petition of plaintiff; denied that plaintiff owned the tax certificates set forth and described in the petition, and also denied that there was any sum due upon the certificates or either of them. The answer further alleges that immediately prior to the date of the commencement of his ownership of said lands his co-defendant, James E. Jones, was the owner in fee of said premises. The answer further states that no notice was given by plaintiff, or any one for him, to Jones, or the answering defendant, Burr, personally, or by publication or otherwise, of any claim of plaintiff against the lands, or of any purchase of them by him at tax sale; that the assessor of said lands for the year of sale (1877) did not take or subscribe any oath; that the schedules and assessment rolls or lists for 1877 had no oath of the assessor attached thereto, and no oath of the assessor was contained therein, and hence they were invalid, and the taxes assessed and levied thereon were invalid and were not liens on the lands; that a large number of the items of taxes (enumerated in the answer), contained in the certificates of sale issued to plaintiff when he paid the taxes and sought to be foreclosed in this action, were levies of taxes made upon valuations of the property, which valuation had been raised by the board of equalization without any notice to plaintiff or his grantor, James E. Jones, and were void and not liens upon the lands. This answer was filed January 9, 1892.
February 10, 1892, plaintiff filed a reply, in which he admitted Burr’s ownership in the lands, also admitted that no notice of tax sale, as a condition precedent to demand for tax deeds, had ever been served upon the owners of the lands as required by the statutes; and further denied each and every other allegation of the answer.
Plaintiff, in reply to this supplemental answer of defendant, admitted the tender, in amount and for the purpose stated in the answer, and the refusal to accept the same by plaintiff, and denied each and every other allegation of the answer, and alleged that he had notified defendant Burr personally, and also by letter, of plaintiff’s ownership of the tax certificates in suit before beginning the action, and requested or demanded payment of the amounts due upon the certificates, and informed defendant that if payment was not made plaintiff would institute action upon them, and that defendant refused to pay the amounts due; that the tender was not made until after the action was commenced, and that it was made now solely to defeat plaintiff’s recovery of costs accrued and hereinafter to accrue in this action.
April 18, 1892, judgment was rendered for the amount of principal and interest due upon the certificates, foreclosing the liens and ordering sale of the lands. There was also a finding that the tender was made as pleaded in the supplemental answer of Burr; that plaintiff was not entitled to recover any attorney fee, and the recovery of an attorney fee of ten per cent was denied plaintiff.
The case is brought here on appeal by the plaintiff, and
This case, in its essential features, bears a very close resemblance to one in which the maker of a note, mortgage, or other instrument agrees in such instrument to pay a certain per cent of the judgment rendered, or recovery allowed, upon the note or other instrument, as an attorney fee. On February 18, 1873, an act passed the legislature of this state on this subject, with reference to instruments for the payment of money only, which was as follows:
We call attention particularly to that portion of the law above quoted, and the decisions construing it, where it is definitely and clearly stated that the amount of the attorney’s fee and its allowance is based upon the judgment and made to depend upon the recovery of a judgment. The low governing in the case at bar provides, as to the attorney’s fee: “At the time of the rendition of such decree, the court shall award to the plaintiff an attorney’s fee equal to ten per cent thereof, which shall be taxed as part of the costs in the action.” It is provided in another section of the act in question in regard to “Revenue:” “The owner of any certificate or certificates of tax sale * * * may * * * proceed by action * * *
The rule of tender was. in force at the time of the passage of the act under which the plaintiff claims the relief sought for in this action, and was, and had been for many
The attorneys for plaintiff, in their brief, cite us to the case of Hand v. Phillips, 18 Neb., 593, and strenuously insist that it supports their view of the case in regard to tender, and that in the case the doctrine is announced that the attorney fees being in the nature of costs, a portion of them accrued when the petition was filed. The syllabus of the case cited is as follows: “Under a statute which authorizes the allowance of an attorney’s fee in certain cases,
The plaintiff, it will be remembered, admitted that there was no notice to redeem served upon the defendant. It
The attorney for appellees has, in his brief, gone into the question of the constitutionality of the portion of the revenue act which allows attorney’s fees as costs in an action to foreclose tax certificates; but as the conclusion reached in the case, so far as we have now considered it, will dispose of it and favorably to the contention of appellees as to the only point in the case, we do not deem it necessary to here discuss or decide the constitutional query. The decree of the court below was right and is
Affirmed.