98 Minn. 269 | Minn. | 1906
This is an appeal from an order of the district court of the county of Blue Earth denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial in an action to determine adverse claims to certain lots in the city of Mankato.
The facts found by the trial court are substantially the following: In October, 1874, the plaintiff became the owner of the lots which are and ever have been vacant and unoccupied. In proceedings for the purpose of enforcing payment of special assessments levied upon the-lots for a local improvement, a judgment was duly rendered against each lot in the district court of the county of Blue Earth for the amount of the assessment against it with interest and costs. On February 20;-1896, pursuant to the judgment the lots were separately sold to the city of Mankato and separate 'certificates of sale for each lot duly made and delivered. The time to redeem the lots, except as to one of them, expired on June 17, 1904, and the city of Mankato conveyed them
1. The intervenor, however, raises the preliminary objection that this is an action to determine the validity of the assessment proceedings, hence it is barred by the statute of limitations in the charter of the city of Mankato relating to assessments, judgments, and sales, which so far as here material is this:
No sale shall be set aside or held invalid * * * unless the action, in which the validity of the sale shall be called in question, be brought or the defense alleging its invalidity be interposed within one year after the date of the sale. Sp. Laws 1891, p. 436, c. 47, § 50.
Short statutes of limitations as to actions to test the validity of tax sales, as construed by this court, do not apply to actions for the possession of real estate, nor to actions where the party invoking the statute alleges title in himself and asks the court to determine the question of the title upon the merits and adjudge it to be in him, for such a judgment would carry with it as a necessary incident the unquestionable right to the possession of the land. Baker v. Kelley, 11 Minn. 358 (480); Kipp v. Johnson, 31 Minn. 360, 362, 17 N. W. 957; Feller v. Clark, 36 Minn. 338, 340, 31 N. W. 175; London & N. W. Am. M. Co. v. Gibson, 77 Minn. 394, 80 N. W. 205, 777; Henningsen v. City of Stillwater, 81 Minn. 215, 83 N. W. 983; Holmes v. Loughren, 97 Minn. 83, 105 N. W. 558.
The question was directly involved and decided in the case of London & N. W. Am. M. Co. v. Gibson, which was an action to determine adverse claims to real estate. The answer denied that the plaintiff was the owner of the land, alleged that the defendant was the owner by virtue of a tax title, and pleaded the short statute of limitations ap
We hold that the intervenor cannot invoke the statute.of limitations in this case. If she wished to rely upon the statute to defeat this particular action she should have pleaded the statute and asked for a dismissal of the action and not an adjudication of her title upon the merits.
2. The plaintiff claims that the sale of the lots by the city to the inter-venor is void because the sale was made through the alleged agency of her father, the defendant, John B. Hodapp, who was then recorder of the city and in violation of the prohibition of the city charter to the effect that no officer of the city shall be a party to or interested in any contract in which the city is interested. There was no finding by the trial court that the city recorder was interested in the sale nor does the evidence require such a finding as a matter of law, hence there is no basis of fact for the claim and it is without merit.
3. The plaintiff urges several alleged errors in the proceedings
It is urged that the notice of intended application to the district court for judgment by the city treasurer is not sufficient to’give the court jurisdiction fo1* the reason that there is nothing therein to indicate in, what city or county the real estate is situated. The notice so far as here material is this:
CITY treasurer’s NOTICE OF INTENDED APPLICATION FOR JUDGMENT.
State of Minnesota County of Blue Earth
City of Mankato. Notice is hereby given that a warrant .has been placed in my hands by the city of Mankato for the collection of assessments made by board of public works of said city, for the building of new sidewalks in said city, hereinafter more particularly described and that the assessments in said matter against the following described real estate, in amount respectively set opposite each description, are now delinquent, towit:
Owner’s Name. Description. Eot. Blk. .Amt.
A. M. Willard. Parson’s Add. 1 7......$22 80
A. M. Willard. do do 5 7......$22 88.
It appears with sufficient certainty from the whole notice that the land is in the city of Mankato in the county of Blue Earth. The notice having been duly published, it was sufficient to give the court jurisdiction for the land is so described therein that a man of ordinary intelligence could identify it with reasonable certainty.
That the court may by rule or otherwise direct how and in what' form such proceedings and judgments may be entered. Sp. Laws 1891, p. 432, c. 47, §§ 38, 40.
The difference between the form of the judgment as entered and the form prescribed by the charter appears in the following form, wherein the words in italics are omitted from the judgment as entered and the words inclosed in parenthesis are in the judgment, but not in the form:
Whereas, due notice has been given of the intended application for a judgment against said lands, and no owner hath appeared to make defense or show cause why judgment should not be entered against the said land, and other property, for the assessment, damages, interest and costs due and unpaid thereon. Therefore, it is considered by the court, that judgment be and is hereby entered against the aforesaid lots and parcels of land in favor of the city of Mankato for the sum annexed in each lot or parcel of land, being the amount of assessment, interest, damages and costs, due severally thereon (and set opposite the same, towit). And it is ordered by the court that the several lots, parcels of land, or so much thereof as shall be sufficient of each of them, to satisfy the amount of assessment, interest, damages, and costs annexed to them severally, be sold as the law directs.
We are of the opinion that the judgment is substantially in the form as required by the provisions of the charter, sections 38 and 40, to which we have referred.
5. The plaintiff challenges the validity of the notice of sale of the land to be made pursuant to the judgment. The charter (Sp. Laws,
6. The validity of the certificates of sale issued to the city of Mankato upon a sale of the land to it is attacked by the plaintiff for the alleged reasons following:
(a) That the amount of the judgment nowhere appears in the certificates. The charter requires the certificates of sale to state the amount of the judgment for which the property was'sold, adding interest at the rate of twelve per cent, per annum and fifty cents costs on each description. The correct amount of the judgment including interest and costs was stated in the certificates, but not the original amount of the judgment. The certificates were sufficient in this respect.
(b) That the time when the right to redeem would expire was stated in the respective certificates to be five years from the date thereof instead of five years from the date of sale. The date of the certificate and the date of sale were the same, for the first date written in the
(c) That none of the certificates have affixed thereto any seal, either the official seal of the treasurer or any other._ The charter requires that the certificates shall be made, subscribed in the presence of two witnesses, and acknowledged by the treasurer. Whether or not the treasurer of the city of Mankato has an official seal the record does not disclose, but, this aside, the charter does not require his seal, if he has one, to be affixed to' the certificate. It was entirely competent for the legislature to prescribe the form of the certificates and the manner of their execution. We cannot add to the charter the requirement that the certificates must be sealed.
(d) That the certificates do not show upon their face any authority for making the sale and further that they do not show that there were no bids for the lots other than that of the city. The recitals in the certificates in this respect are the following:
This is to certify that the treasurer of the corporation of the city of Mankato, by virtue of an order of sale, issued, directed, and delivered to him by the clerk of the district court, under a judgment of said court duly entered under the seal thereof and in pursuance of said order, as treasurer of said city of Mankato, on the 20th day of February, 1896, has offered for sale and did sell at the front door of the City Hall of the city of Mankato, commencing at the hour of ten o’clock a. m. .on said day, the following described real estate, towit.
This is a compliance with the charter provisions which do not require the certificates to state that there were no bidders other than the city. The cases cited by the plaintiff in this connection arose under tax laws prior to the year 1874, when the method of enforcing the payment of taxes on real estate was radically changed, and are not here in point.
(e) That section 44, c. 47, p. 434, of the charter provides that the certificates shall contain in addition to what is required by law certain matters placed in quotation marks; the latter portion.of such quotation
7. The last objection of the plaintiff to the title of the intervenor to the lots, which the trial court found that she owned, is that the notice of expiration of the time of redemption is void for the reason that it does not describe the warrants or the assessment or the judgment rendered thereon, and, furthermore, does not state the correct amount necessary to redeem, the error amounting to thirty eight cents. The notice complied with the charter provisions as to redemptions (Sp. Laws 1891, p. 435, c. 47, § 47), which do not require the warrants or assessments or the judgment to be described in the notice. The actual discrepancy, if any, in the statement of the amount necessary to be paid to effect a redemption, some thirty eight cents, did not render the notice void. London & N. W. Am. M. Co. v. Gibson, 77 Minn. 394, 80 N. W. 205, 777.
We have examined all the alleged errors urged in the appellant’s brief, and have reached the conclusion that the findings and decision of the trial court are correct.
Order affirmed.