98 P. 252 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1908
Plaintiff appeals from judgment in an action to quiet title.
Defendants' title to the property was derived from one George P. Badger, who in the year 1894 was the owner thereof. Badger failed to pay the state and county tax levied upon the property for the year 1894, whereupon proceedings were had and taken which, on July 6, 1900, resulted in a deed of the property to the state, made by the tax collector pursuant to the provisions of section 3785 of the Political Code. On March 15, 1901, the state conveyed the property to plaintiff's grantor. Plaintiff's title, therefore, depends *173 upon the validity of the tax proceedings under and by virtue of which the state acquired the property. The law (Pol. Code, sec. 3764) contains a provision requiring the tax collector, on or before June 5th, to publish a delinquent list, which list "must contain the names of the persons and a description of the property delinquent, and the amount of taxes, penalties, and costs due, opposite each name and description"; and section 3765 of said code provides that "the tax collector must append and publish with the delinquent list a notice that unless the taxes delinquent, together with the costs and penalties, are paid, the real property upon which such taxes are a lien will be sold," which "publication (Pol. Code, sec. 3767) must designate the day and hour when the property will, by operation of law, be sold to the state," etc.
The notice under which the property was sold to the state was in full compliance with the provisions of the three sections of the Political Code above referred to, except that there was an erroneous statement contained in the delinquent list, in that the amount of taxes, penalties and costs set opposite the name of said George P. Badger as being due on account of said taxes, penalties and costs, was $19.90, instead of the correct amount of $19.40, and for which the property was in fact sold to the state. The trial court held the deed to the state under which plaintiff deraigned title invalid and gave judgment for defendants, from which plaintiff appeals upon a bill of exceptions.
Appellant contends, first, that the deed to the state is conclusive evidence (except as against actual fraud) of the due and regular publication of the delinquent list (Pol. Code, sec. 3787); and, second, that, if not conclusive, the error of fifty cents in the amount alleged to be due in the delinquent list as published cannot invalidate the deed, inasmuch as the property was in fact sold for the correct amount.
The publication of the delinquent list, setting forth therein the amount due for taxes, penalties and costs, is a prerequisite of a valid sale to the state on the day and hour fixed in the notice of sale attached to such delinquent list. Since it is a statutory requirement, we cannot give less weight to its importance than to other provisions contained in said section which require a description of the property and the name of the owner. (Fox v. Wright,
Conceding that the published notice did not in fact comply with the statute, appellant insists that the deed to the state, which was introduced in evidence, is by its recitals made conclusive evidence of compliance therewith. (Pol. Code, sec. 3787.)
Section 3787 of the Political Code in express terms makes the deed conclusive evidence of the regularity of other proceedings than those enumerated in section 3786 of the Political Code, as to which the deed is made prima facie evidence. The publishing of the delinquent list containing the matters specified in said section 3764, together with the notice of sale designated in section 3765, and fixing the day and hour of sale required by section 3767, are not among the matters enumerated in section 3785, as to the correctness of which the deed is prima facie
evidence. According to appellant's contention, these requirements fall within the phrase, "all other proceedings," referred to in section 3787, in proof of the regularity of which the deed is made conclusive evidence. In the recent case of Fox v. Wright,
From the foregoing views it follows that the judgment should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Allen, P. J., and Taggart, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on December 4, 1908, Beatty, C. J., dissenting. *177