This section was commenced by L. B. Neff to quiet title to certain lots in the city of Tulsa. The lots were sold at the 1938 tax resale to Tulsa county, and thereafter they were sold to the plaintiff at a county sale. B. B. Calk intervened asserting liens for special assessments for street improvements under special tax bills issued in 1930, on which only the first installment had been paid. The seven installments for the years 1932 to 1938, both inclusive, were delinquent on February 1st prior to the resale, but the two installments for the years 1939 and 1940 were not then delinquent. The delinquent installments were not certified to the county treasurer for collection. This was at the request of the owner of the tax bills. The trial court held that the liens for the special assessments were superior to the title of plaintiff under the tax resale and decreed foreclosure of the liens. From that judgment, the plaintiff has appealed.
The first question for decision is whether the resale had the effect of can-celling the liens for the special assessments as to all or any portion of the unpaid installments on the special assessments. We think this question has been settled by the decision in Hutchman v. Tate,
Finally plaintiff argues that interven-eF is barred from foreclosing the. lien by laches. This argument has reference to all nine of the unpaid installments. Since we hold that the installments delinquent at the time of the resale in 1938 were extinguished by the resale, the question is whether the last two are barred by laches. We think not. Ordinarily, the courts apply by analogy the period of limitations fixed by statute to the plea of laches. Wilson v. Bombeck,
Reversed, with directions to cancel all but the last two installments, and to enter judgment foreclosing those two installments and to allow intervener a reasonable attorney fee as provided in the tax bills.
