44 Colo. 520 | Colo. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court:
In this action to cancel a tax deed defendant appealed from the decree which adjudicated the same void and ordered its cancellation..
The only objections of importance which plaintiff urges against defendant’s title thereby evidenced, is that proper proof of the publication of the delinquent tax list and notice of sale and the posting thereof was not made, or filed in the office of the county clerk, as our law requires. — Secs. 3883, 3884, 2 Mills’ Ann. Stats. The tax deed, introduced in evidence by defendant, is valid on its face and by § 3902, 2 Mills’ Ann. Stats., it is prima facie evidence, inter alia, that the property was advertised for sale in the manner and for the length of time required by law. To overcome this presumption plaintiff showed that when this action was begun there was not on file with the county clerk an affidavit of the county treasurer of the posting of the delinquent tax list and notice of sale, as required by § 3885, 2 Mills’ Ann. Stats., and while there was an affidavit by the publisher of a newspaper of the publication therein of such list and notice, as required by § 3884, the same was, under decisions of this court in Rustin v. M. & M. Tunnel Co., 23 Colo. 351, and Morris et al. v. St. Louis National Bank, 17 Colo. 231, fatally defective. After this showing as to the absence from the files of the treasurer’s, and the insufficiency of the publishers’, affidavit, which, unless overcome or supple
2. It is established by the Rustin and Burr cases, supra, that the publisher’s affidavit of publication and the treasurer’s affidavit of posting, when filed with the clerk, constitute the exclusive proof respectively of the facts of publication and posting, and that evidence thereof is incompetent, unless the affidavits have been filed and subsequently lost or mislaid, and then only that such affidavits had in fact been filed and lost or mislaid and that they complied with the statute. These affidavits being properly in evidence, and that of the publisher being in strict compliance with the law and its force in no respect being weakened,* the fact of publication has been established as our revenue law requires.
The remaining question, therefore, and it presents the sole contention of plaintiff which has any merit, relates to the affidavit of the treasurer. The plaintiff admits that if it was properly in evidence it shows a proper posting of the delinquent tax list and notice of sale; but he maintains that, since the treasurer admits that when he subscribed and verified it
As there is no other ground, than the alleged lack of proof of posting by the treasurer, upon which can rest the decision of the court below adjudicating the tax deed void, and as our conclusion on the evi
Chief Justice Steele and Mr. Justice Gabbert concur.