111 P. 247 | Idaho | 1910
This is an action to quiet title to lots 8, 9, .10, 11 and 12 in block 5 of Ireland’s addition to Boise City. Said lots were sold by the clerk of the Independent School District under and by virtue of an alleged delinquency and failure to pay school taxes, and penalty, in the sum of $4.15. The complaint is in the usual form of complaints to quiet title, and prays that the defendant be required to set forth the nature of his claim and that plaintiff be decreed to be the owner of said lots. To this complaint the defendant answered, denying the ownership or the possession of the plaintiff or that she was entitled to the possession of said lots; admitted that plaintiff claimed an estate and interest in said premises, and the whole thereof, adverse to plaintiff; and also, by way of cross-complaint, asked to have the title to said lots quieted in the defendant.
Upon the issues thus made, trial was had and judgment entered in favor of the defendant. A motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and order denying a new trial.
The questions presented go to the sufficiency of the proceedings had in the assessment and sale of said lots, the recitals in said deed and to that part of the school law of Boise City (Special and Local Laws of Idaho, sec. 177, p. 40), which provides that “Any deed derived from a sale of real property under this act shall be conclusive evidence of title, except as against actual frauds or prepayment of the taxes upon which such sale was made and shall entitle the holder thereof to a writ from the district court to obtain possession of such property.”
It is first contended that it does not appear that the treasurer in making the sale of said property for taxes sold
The next question discussed in appellant’s brief is the power of the legislature to make tax deeds prima facie or conclusive evidence. It is well settled that the legislature does not possess the power to make or declare tax deeds conclusive evidence of a compliance with those requirements that are essential to the exercise of the taxing power, and that a statute that undertakes to make a tax deed “conclusive evidence of a complete title, and to preclude the owner of the original title from showing the invalidity of such deed,” is unconstitutional, and would result in confiscation of property without due process of law. (Cooley on Taxation, 2d ed., 298, 521; Cooley on Const. Lim., 4th ed., 459; Blackwell on Tax Titles, 4th ed., 83; Black on Tax Titles, sec. 253.) However, it is competent for the legislature to declare that a tax deed shall be prima facie evidence, not only of the regularity of the sale, but of all prior proceedings and of title in the purchaser. But the legislature cannot deprive one of his property by making his adversary’s claim to it conclusive of its own validity. (Cooley on Taxation, 2d ed., 183.)
In passing upon a similar question, in Gardner v. Early, 69 Iowa, 42, 28 N. W. 427, the court said: “As to this we desire simply to say that the deed cannot be regarded as conclusive evidence of a sale which the treasurer had no power to make.”
It is clear that the great weight of authority as to matters which are jurisdictional, in the exercise of the taxing power, is to the effect that the recitations in a tax deed cannot be made conclusive by legislative enactment, and thus deny the right to defend against such deed. That provision of said section of the school law of Boise City making tax deeds conclusive evidence of title is clearly unconstitutional, unless the phrase in said section, “except against actual frauds, ’ ’ be construed to include all matters which are jurisdictional in the taxing power to levy the tax.
Under the provisions of sec. 1765, Rev. Codes, a tax deed duly acknowledged and proved is prima facie evidence of the regularity of all other proceedings therein from the assessment up to the execution of the tax deed. It is contended that the foregoing section does not apply to tax deeds executed by Independent School District of Boise City, but that contention is not well founded. In the absence of a special law applicable to deeds executed by said district, the general law would apply. Making a tax deed prima facie evidence of title simply shifts the burden of proof, but does not deny the right to defend title against a tax deed.
We conclude that such tax deeds are prima facie evidence of the regularity of all of the proceedings from the assessment of the property, inclusive, up to the execution of the deed, but this does not prevent the owner of the property from showing as a defense that any of the jurisdictional acts in the assessment or sale of the property have not been performed.
There was no effort on the part of the appellant to introduce evidence tending to show that any jurisdictional act required to be done in the assessment and sale of said property had not been done by the treasurer or officer authorized
It is contended by counsel that the respondent has failed to show that the tax certificate was filed with the county recorder, and that such filing is a condition precedent to the execution of the deed, and for that reason the deed was issued without authority of law and passed no title. The law requires such certificate to be issued in duplicate, one to be given to the purchaser and the other to be filed with the county recorder, and the one introduced in evidence no doubt was the duplicate given to the purchaser. There is no evidence in the record to show that the original was not filed as required by law, and it is not necessary for us to pass upon the question whether or not the failure to file the original as required by law was a jurisdictional act. So far as the evidence shows, everything required by law to be done was done in said matter. The record does not show that the trial eourt rejected any evidence that was offered to show that the jurisdictional requirements had not all been complied with in said matter.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff paid the county and state tax on said lots after said tax sale had been made, and it seems a hardship that she should now lose property that.
The judgment must be affirmed, and it is so ordered.