28 Minn. 358 | Minn. | 1881
On the merits of this case there are two reasons why the peremptory writ ought not to have been granted:
First, the writ is sought against a county auditor in his official capacity, to compel him to perform an official act, to wit, to compel him to certify to the amount required for redemption from tax sale of a certain tract of land, and it does not appear that any demand was made upon him to do the act prior to the application for the writ,- and, without such demand, the relator is not entitled to the writ. State v. Davis, 17 Minn. 429.
Second, it was not the duty of the auditor, and he had no authority; to certify as required by the writ. The facts were these: Taxes had been levied upon the west half of a section of land as one tract, and the half section was sold as one .tract to satisfy the taxes. The relator subsequently became the owner of the north-west quarter of the section through the foreclosure of a mortgage resting upon it at the time the taxes were levied. She claimed a right to redeem that quarter from the tax sales, and the purpose of the writ is to compel the respondent, as county auditor, to certify to the amount required to redeem that quarter. There can be no question that the relator had such añ interest in the tract sold — the half section — as gave her the right, under Gen. St. 1878, c. 11, § 90, to redeem such tract from the sale. But the statute gives no right to redeem from tax sale a separate part of any tract sold entire, nor, except in the case of an undivided estate, does it allow any redemption by payment of less than the entire amount for which the tract sold was bid off at the sale, with the additions made to that by the statute. There is no right of redemption from tax sale but such as the statute gives, and it gives the right to redeem only an entire tract sold, or an undivided estate or interest in it. It does not contemplate that a tract sold as one may, for the purpose of redemption, be divided into several tracts at the instance of 4he several owners. The auditor has no data in his office from which
Judgment reversed.