95 P. 836 | Mont. | 1908
Judge of the Third Judicial District, sitting in place of Associate Justice Smith, delivered the opinion of the court.
A rehearing was granted herein, on the appellants’ motion, upon the questions: What significance, if any, should be given to the recitals in the tax deeds touching the method by which the county of Lewis and Clark obtained title to the lands in controversy? Are these recitals surplusage or not?
Counsel for appellants contend that the deeds do not affirmatively show that the county was a competitive bidder, because they show that the county took all the lands for the taxes; and the statement in the deeds “that at said auction Lewis and Clark county was the bidder who was willing to take the least quantity or smallest portion of said land and pay the taxes,” etc., as well as the statement that the land “was by said county treasurer aforesaid, on the twenty-fifth day of January, 1901, in accordance with law, to pay said taxes, charges and costs delinquent as aforesaid, offered at public auction in front of the county treasurer’s office,” show affirmatively that there was no-other bidder for said lands, and therefore no competitive bidding; and that the recitals in the deeds as to the method by which the
The statement in the deeds that the land was offered “in accordance with law,” was merely a statement of a conclusion of law, and can impart no validity to the deeds, especially in the face of the plain recitals in the deeds to the effect that the property was sold at public auction, and the county of Lewis and Clark was a bidder at such auction.
It is contended by appellants that, so long as a tax deed to a county recites the matters required by law to be recited in a tax deed to an individual, and does not affirmatively show that the statute, in respect to the county as a bidder, was not complied with, it is a valid deed. But, as has been heretofore said, the deeds in question show that the statute was not complied with. While the statute provides no set form of deed for either a cash purchaser or a county, it is apparent that it was the intention of the legislature that, in the case of both the cash purchaser and the county, the truth of the transaction should be shown. As was said in the case of Dyke v. Whyte, 17 Colo. 296, 29 Pac. 128, “The difference between the rights and privileges of a cash purchaser and the duties of the treasurer, as a bidder for the county at a tax sale under the statute, is quite manifest. The treasurer is authorized to sell for cash only so much of each parcel of land as shall be sufficient to pay the taxes and charges thereon,' including all costs and penalties; but when it shall become the treasurer’s duty to bid off any parcel of land for the county, he is authorized to bid off the whole parcel for the amount of the taxes, interest and costs thereon. The cash purr chaser may buy the first time the land is offered for sale; but
Tbe provisions of our Code respecting tbe sales of property for delinquent taxes are very general in their terms, and apply primarily to sales to cash purchasers; but, as said above by tbe Colorado court, they were doubtless deemed sufficient, by tbe legislature, to furnish a guide in case property should be struck off to tbe county, and it was no doubt taken for granted that in such cases tbe treasurer would so vary tbe form of tbe certificate and deed as to make them state tbe facts as they actually existed. So, where a county becomes tbe purchaser of property at a tax sale because there are no cash purchasers, tbe certificate of sale, as well as the deed, should show that there was no purchaser in good faith for tbe property on tbe first day that tbe property was offered for sale, and that, when tbe property was thereafter offered for sale, there was no purchaser in good faith for the same, and that tbe whole amount of tbe property
For the reasons set forth in the former opinion of the court, and for the reasons herein stated, we adhere to our former decision.