This is an action to quiet title. The plaintiff’s title to the locus in quo is derived as follows: 1. A grant, no consideration being named, from W. B. Taylor, who was at the time the owner of the land, to Cornelia S. Gwynn, November 5, 1880; 2. Deed, grant, bargain, and sale in form, expressing a consideration of three hundred and fifty dollars, from Cornelia S. Gwynn to R. W. Bessinger, June 4, 1887; 3. Deed from R. W. Bessinger to plaintiff, December, 1887; 4. Deed from plaintiff to C. S. Gwynn, consideration love and affection, dated September 6,1888; 5. Deed from C. S. Gwynn to plaintiff, February 21, 1889; 6. Deed from William Gwynn, Sr., father of plaintiff, to the plaintiff, expressing consideration of five hundred dollars, February 20,1889; 7. Deed from William Gwynn, Sr., to plaintiff, November 20, 1889.
The defendant claims title under a certificate of sale by the sheriff of Yolo county, dated April 18,1891. The sale was made pursuant to a decree rendered against Cornelia S. Gwynn, June 11, 1888, in an action brought to foreclose the lien of a delinquent swamp-land assessment upon the land in controversy. At the time of the conveyance by Taylor to Cornelia S. Gwynn, the latter and William Gwynn, Sr., were, and ever since have been, husband and wife.
*565The court below rendered judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff moved for a new trial, and from the order denying the same he has appealed.
The deed from Taylor to Cornelia S. Gwynn vested the title in the marital community. It does not appear whether the purchase price was paid from separate or community funds—the presumption is they were community funds. Such a presumption may be rebutted by showing that it was purchased with money belonging to the separate estate of the wife, but. no attempt to do so was made in this case. The defendant could take no better title under the decree foreclosing the swamp-land assessment lien than he would have acquired if the plaintiff had conveyed directly to him, and all parties purchasing real estate standing in the name of a wife, where the deed presumptively or in fact was given for a money consideration during coverture, do so at their peril. (Ramsdell v. Fuller, 28 Cal. 43.) The rule stated in the case just cited has been approved over and over again in this state, and has become a settled rule of property. Whether a deed be taken in the name of one or the other of the spouses upon a valuable consideration, the presumption is the same. The fact that the property is taken in the name of the wife alone does not of itself give a purchaser notice of any separate claim or right to the property. It is otherwise where the deed upon its face shows an intention on the part of the husband to have the property conveyed to her as her separate estate. The fact that the deed from the plaintiff to his mother was a deed of gift is immaterial, it being shown that at the time the deed was given he had no title to convey. Section 164 of the Civil Code, as amended in 1889, is not retroactive in effect. (Tolman v. Smith, 85 Cal. 280; Jordan v. Fay, 98 Cal. 267.)
The sale of the land under the decree of foreclosure did not affect the title of William Gwynn, Sr. The assessment in the name of Cornelia S. Gwynn was void. It is a universal rule, applicable to all statutes upon the *566subject of taxation, that provisions for the assessment of property are in invitum, and must be strictly followed to divest title. (Hearst v. Egglestone, 55 Cal. 365; Weyse v. Crawford, 85 Cal. 199; Shipman v. Forbes, 97 Cal. 574.) Where an assessment names a party as the owner, no liability is created against anybody else, and not against the party named, unless he is the owner of the property. (Taylor v. Donner, 31 Cal. 483.) The record does not show whether the property was assessed to Cornelia S. Gwynn or to unknown owners. It must have been assessed to the former, however, as the suit was against her, and against her alone. She would not have been a party to the suit unless it had been assessed in her name, and if it was assessed to her and to unknown owners the assessment was void. (Himmelmann v. Steiner, 88 Cal. 178; City v. Dunham, 59 Cal. 608; Klumpke v. Baker, 68 Cal. 561; Jatunn v. O’Brien, 89 Cal. 61.)
Section 3461 of the Political Code provides that the list must contain the names of the owners of each tract, if known, “ and if unknown, that fact.” In this respect the law applicable to swamp-land assessments is the same as former provisions with respect to taxation, and in Grotefend v. Ultz, 53 Cal. 666, the court said: “ The first duty of the assessor, under these provisions, is to ascertain the name of the owner of each piece or parcel of property, and to assess it to him; his second—if he fails to ascertain the name of the owner—is to assess it to ‘unknown owners/ It follows that the assessment to D. B. Matlock, and all owners and claimants, known or unknown, was void.” (See, also, Brady v. Dowden, 59 Cal. 51; Bosworth v. Webster, 64 Cal. 1.) In Reclamation District v. Evans, 61 Cal. 104, it was held that no assessment against any tract of land can be enforced except by an action to which the owner of the tract has been made a party. He must be given an opportunity to contest the charge before it is declared a lien upon his land. (Black on Tax Titles, sec. 57.)
We think that the deed from William Gwynn, Sr., to *567plaintiff conveyed the title to the latter, and that it was not- divested by the judicial proceedings referred to. The order appealed from is reversed.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.