In this, an action instituted in the district court of Douglas county, the plaintiff sought to have quieted the title to lots 5 and 6, in block 1, of Hillside Addition No. 2 of the city of Omaha, which he had acquired by tax deed issued to him by the county treasurer of Douglas county. It was alleged that plaintiff had purchased the property at private sale, made for the delinquent taxes for the year 1889, and after the usual proceedings in such cases, the property not having been redeemed, a deed was issued by the county treasurer by which it was conveyed to the plaintiff. It was also pleaded that the defendant had or claimed some interest in or to the property. The defendant (hereinafter designated the appellant) answered denying many of the allegations of appellee’s petition, and stated affirmatively several reasons why the deed by the treasurer to appellee was void and of no effect; also that prior to the time of appellee’s alleged purchase the title to the premises in controversy had been conveyed to appellant by warranty deed executed and delivered by certain named parties, and the ownership' and title had at all times since such conveyance continued in the appellant. In regard to the taxes for the year 1889, and some other years, there were in the answer the following allegations: “In answer to the paragraph numbered 7, this defendant says that he was not aware or had no knowledge or information that the said J. L. Browne had a tax certificate for said lots, and says if the treasurer of Douglas county sold said lots, he did so con*467trary to law. This defendant paid all taxes against said lots demanded of him by the city and county treasurer for the year 1889, and received receipts for the same; that he made out a list on the 17th day of October, 1890, of all property owned and controlled by him, in which list was included lots 5 and 6, block 1, in Hillside Addition No. 2, which he gave to the county treasurer and requested him to give him the amount of taxes against said property, which county treasurer did, and this defendant paid him the amount in full and he received receipts for said taxes; that this defendant afterwards learned that said lots had been sold for taxes, and on the 27th day of July, 1892, went to the office of the county treasurer to redeem said property, and paid to the county treasurer the money to redeem said lots and received from the county treasurer a redemption receipt by mistake for lot 1, block 1, Hillside Addition No. 2, which mistake this defendant did not notice at the time. The defendant says that he never owned said lot 1 or had any interest or claim to the same.” The answer closed with a prayer that the tax deed be canceled, all claims of the appellee to the property be declared without force, the cloud on the title be removed, and the action of appellee be dismissed.
It appears that at the commencement and during the trial, it was asked for the appellee that an amendment to the petition be allowed by which would be made to appear in detail the several sums of taxes which he claimed to have paid on the property at and subsequent to the time of purchase at the sale by the treasurer. This was not done, but the court received evidence of these amounts, and also of an amount expended by appellee in building a fence on the premises, evidently on the theory that if appellant succeeded and obtained the affirmative relief asked for in his answer, the appellee might recover the amounts he had paid and expended for taxes and improvements on the property. A decree was rendered which, although nothing is stated in it on the subject, or to such effect, plainly proceeded on the theory that *468the title of appellant asserted by virtue of tbe tax deed failed, or did not exist, that tbe deed was void, and awarded tbe appellee tbe aggregate of the sums be bad paid in taxes on tbe property, together with tbe amount which tbe fence bad cost, and established the total-amount as a lien on the property paramount to tbe rights of appellant thereto. Tbe tax deed to appellee was void. (See Dickey v. Paterson, 45 Neb., 848; Larson v. Dickey, 39 Neb., 463.) This being settled, should tbe appellee be allowed to recover tbe amounts of taxes paid by him?, It will be remembered that tbe appellant asked tbe affirmative relief of tbe cancellation of tbe tax deed and tbe removal of tbe cloud from bis title to tbe property; and it lias been announced by this court that in order that such relief may be afforded, the party seeking it will be required to pay tbe taxes justly chargeable against tbe property, paid by tbe other party whose claims and rights are to be affected by tbe decree. (Dillon v. Merriam, 22 Neb., 151; Wygant v. Dahl, 26 Neb., 562; Adams v. Osgood, 42 Neb., 451.) In relation to some of these taxes it is urged that tbe appellant bad paid them, and by mistake of tbe officer or officers charged with their collections, and who received them, tbe payments were applied in settlement of tbe taxes on other property; and further, that tbe appellant should not and cannot be made to bear and suffer tbe results of tbe inattention of tbe officers; that tbe payments must be held to have extinguished (when sufficient in amounts) tbe taxes for tbe adjustment of which they were made to the officers, and tbe appellee must be relegated to bis action against tbe county, whose agents tbe officers were. In this connection we think it proper to quote from tbe evidence of tbe appellant, which was as follows:
“On or about tbe 18th of October, 1889, Thomas K. Sudborougb and bis wife made, executed, and delivered a deed in fee-simple for two certain lots of land, to-wit, lots 5 and 6, in Hillside No. 2, block 1, of tbe city of Omaha, Nebraska, to said John B. Finley, trustee, bis *469heirs, assigns, and legal representatives, and that said deed was subsequently recorded in the proper office for the recording of deeds of Douglas county, Nebraska; all previous taxes and assessments thereon were represented to have been paid, and that at said time I was not aware that there were any taxes or assessments due and unpaid on said lots for either the year 1889 or any other year. * * * Also, on the 17th of October, 1890, I addressed a letter to the county treasurer of Douglas county, Nebraska, desiring to obtain from him a statement of all the taxes and assessments against the property described in said letter, a copy of which is hereto annexed, marked ‘A;’ that in compliance with said letter the said county treasurer prepared and delivered to me a statement of the aggregate amount of all taxes due and unpaid against the property described in said letter, which amount was paid to him on the same day by my check on the First National Bank of Omaha, Nebraska; that it was my intention to pay all taxes and assessments due against said property, and I fully believed that I had paid all that the treasurer required; that subsequently, on the 27th of June, 1892, while on a visit to Omaha, I discovered that said lots had been sold for the unpaid taxes of 1889, and desiring to have the same redeemed, I called at the office of the county treasurer of Douglas county for that purpose. By mistake a certificate of redemption was made out for a different property from that which was owned by myself, said lot being on Burt street and in the name of J. L. Browne, which led me to the belief, and also the clerk in the treasurer’s office, that this property on Burt street was the same that belonged to me, and had been sold to J. L. Browne for unpaid taxes. Accordingly it was redeemed by me, but has been since found not to be the same property that was owned by me and which I had redeemed. A copy of said certificate of redemption, marked ‘B,’ is hereto annexed. I also present papers marked Exhibits ‘C,’ ‘D,’ ‘E,’ ‘F,’ and ‘G,’ being copies of receipts for taxes and assessments paid by me on said *470lots to John Rush, city treasurer of Omaha, dated October 14, 15, 1889, and October 28, 1890.”
The letter, to a copy of which reference is made in the foregoing as annexed to the evidence, and marked ‘A’ (the evidence was in form of deposition), contained what it is claimed was intended for a description of the property in controversy, as follows: “Lots 5 and 6 of Hillside No. 1, corner of Burt and Thirtieth streets.” To be correct this should have been Hillside No. 2, and not No. 1. Pursuant to the directions of the letter, the county treasurer prepared and delivered to the appellant a statement of the amounts of taxes due against the property therein described, including lots 5 and 6 of Hillside No. 1. It appears that the lots just named were not at the “corner of Burt and Thirtieth streets,” and it is urged that if the treasurer or his assistant, the party who made the statement, had looked at a plat or map of the city of Omaha and its additions, it would have been discovered that the lots at the corner of Burt and Thirtieth streets were 5 and 6, Hillside No. 2, and the statement would have been, as to the taxes against the property, the amount of which the appellant desired to know and to pay, and the subsequent payment would have been properly applied; that it was the duty of the officer to make such examination, and he was careless in not doing so, and the appellant blameless. With the foregoing view we do not agree. The description of the property as it appears in the letter was the work of the appellant,' and the portion of it which assigned the situation of the property as “Hillside No. 1” was the more specific and particular than that of the “corner of Burt and Thirtieth streets.” The officer must necessarily choose one or the other, and we must conclude that he was not careless, nor was it wholly his mistake that he did not ascertain the correct property. The description furnished by the appellant was well calculated to mislead the officer; hence the appellant cannot be held blameless and must suffer the consequences of his own error. When the appellant, on the 27th of June, 1892, *471while he was in Omaha, discovered, that this property had been sold for taxes, he went to the office of the county treasurer, and, as he states (see his evidence hereinbefore quoted), by mistake, he redeemed another property, a lot which he did not own and which had been sold for taxes; that he was misled by certain facts in respect to the street on which it was situated, and that it had been sold to J. L. Browne, and that he believed it to be his property; that the clerk in the treasurer’s office was also misled, and the mistake in the application of the payment and issuance of the redemption certificate for the property other than was appellant’s intention ensued. The fair and most natural inference or conclusion to be drawn from this testimony is that the appellant directed the application of the money he paid to the redemption of the lot which was then redeemed, and which did not belong to him, or that he was actively participating in what was done, and by his directions or suggestions in respect to the description of the property he desired to redeem, caused the mistake to be made, or was so far instrumental therein that he nmst be charged with the consequences and bear the blame and results, rather than the county as represented by its treasurer. This being true, he cannot now successfully assert a right to have the payment shifted and applied to the redemption of the lots in suit as against the rights of the appellee, the purchaser at the tax sale.
In relation to the amount which was adjudged due the appellee for improvement, — the fence which he had caused to be built on the lots, — it must be said that it was not pleaded nor demanded, neither was it claimed under the provisions of chapter 63 of the Compiled Statutes,“the Occupying Claimants’ Act.” It had no legitimate standing in the suit, and should not have been allowed and must now be rejected. The true amount for which appellee should have been allowed in the decree was fl30.82, to which sum the amount adjudged his due will- now be changed, and as thus modified the decree will be affirmed. *472The appellant will also be awarded a decree here canceling of record the tax deed which was issued to appellee.
Judgment accordingly.