Powers v. First National Bank

Morgan, C. J.

The plaintiff brings an action against McHenry county and one W. H. McIntosh, seeking to cancel and annul four tax certificates issued on • a tax sale in 1900 for the delinquent taxes of 1899. The defendant bank is the holder of such certificates under an assignment thereof from said McIntosh, the purchaser at the sale, and was substituted as defendant in place of said McIntosh at the trial. The complaint alleges that plaintiff is the owner of the land, which was sold for such delinquent taxes in separate tracts, comprising in all 480 acres; that the defendants claim interests and liens in and against said real estate adverse to the plaintiff “under alleged tax sales, levies and assessments for the years 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898 and 1899, all of which are void;” that the claim of the defendants is without any right whatever, and that neither of said defendants has any interest, lien or right in or to any portion of said lands; “that the defendant McIntosh claims to be the holder and owner of alleged tax sale certificates for the tax sale of 1900 for alleged taxes of the year 1899 on said lands, being tax certificates numbered 41, 44, 46 and 47, and will apply for and obtain deeds from defendant county of McHenry under said certificates for said lands unless the said defendants and each of then be enjoined and restrained by this court from taking or issuing deeds thereunder, and that in case of the issue of any deed or deeds to any of said lands the title of plaintiff to said lands will be clouded, and he will be irreparably *468damaged; that all of said alleged taxes and tax certificates are void.” The prayer for relief asks that the defendants and each of them be required to set forth the nature of their claims, and that a decree be entered adjudging that the defendants have no interest or estate in said lands, and that plaintiff’s title to said lands be declared valid, and that all of said tax certificates be declared null and void; “that said defendants, and each of them, be forever enjoined and debarred from asserting any claim whatever in or to said land by or under any of said alleged tax sale certificates and that plaintiff have such other and further relief as shall be agreeable to equity,” etc. The defendant bank answered, and alleged that the taxes under which the lands were sold under a regular sale for valid taxes were duly levied in the year 1899, and that the plaintiff had never paid any of said taxes, or offered to pay any of them, as a condition precedent to setting aside said certificates.

The complaint is not strictly one for the determination of adverse claims only, as it asks for an injunction against the county officials and the owner of the certificates to prevent the county from issuing a deed on said certificates and the holder from accepting such deed. These certificates are pleaded, and the court is asked to cancel them on the ground that they are invalid. The precise ground of the alleged invalidity of the certificates is not set forth in the complaint, and need not be set forth in an action to determine adverse claims. The grounds claimed to have been shown by the evidence are: (1) That the county levy for 1899 was made by percentages and not in specific amounts. (2j That -no proper designation of a newspaper in which the delinquent tax list was to be published was made by the county commissioners.

We do not deem it necessary to consider the question whether these alleged omissions rendered the subsequent tax proceedings void or not. It may be conceded for the purposes “of this case that a levy by percentages or mills was a void lev3 but from that it will not follow that all the taxes levied for that year were void. The levy by percentages pertained to the county taxes only. The state and township levies were not affected thereby Hence it necessarily follows that some of the taxes under which the land was sold are not void, nor are they claimed to be void. In the absence of such showing, they are presumed to be valid, *469and the plaintiff will not be relieved from the entire burden of taxation by a court of equity upon a showing that some of the taxes are so irregularly imposed as to render such portion void.

The complaint sets forth an equitable cause of action. It asks for an injunction against the county officials, forbidding them from proceedings to deliver to the bank a deed upon the tax sale. To that extent it is the same as the complaint in the case of Douglas v. City of Fargo, 14 N. D. 467, 101 N. W. 919. In that case it was determined that the rule laid down in Farrington v. N. E. Investment Co., 1 N. D. 102, 45 N. W. 191, should be adhered to, and that interference by a court of equity could not be justly invoked unless the plaintiff showed that he had offered to pay such taxes as were justly due in cases where no claim was made that the whole assessment was void for jurisdictional reasons particularly pointed out in the opinion in that case. Plaintiff contends, however, that an injunction was not necessary in this case, and that the action was dismissed at the trial on plaintiff’s motion as to the county commissioners. Plaintiff therefore insists that the action must be determined as involving only the rights of private parties, entirely dissolved from the rights of the public. The argument is not convincing. In the ultimate results there is no difference in the two cases. In both cases the public is deprived in the end of the taxes. In this case, if the certificates be adjudged void, the county must refund the taxes paid by the bank. Section 88, c. 126, p. 256, Laws 1897'. The fact that the action was finally resolved into a contest between private litigants in no way detracts from the statement that it interferes with the collection or use of the public revenues. It is not alleged or contended that the land was not taxable, nor that it was excessively taxed. No constitutional provision is claimed to have been violated. No prejudice is alleged, unless it can be claimed that the levy by percentages implies prejudice, and such contention could not be upheld. No equitable principle is involved as a ground from immunity from payment of the taxes assessed. Nothing affecting the fundamental groundwork of the taxes has been omitted or wrongfully performed. This is an equitable-action, to be determined on equitable principles, although the county interests be eliminated from the issues. The plaintiff seeks the cancellation of certificates and the setting aside of levies and taxes. He seeks to set aside the lien created by a tax cer*470tificate. He asks for general equitable relief. Under the issues framed, it is an equitable action, and held to be such in this state. O’Neill v. Tyler, 3 N. D. 47, 53 N. W. 434; Tracy v. Wheeler (just decided) 107 N. W. 68. The relief sought is equitable, hence equitable principles must be applied in the determination of the issues. The mere fact that the action is between private parties only is not enough to take it out of the rules applicable to equity cases. It is not an answer to say that the doctrine of caveat emptor applies in suits to determine the validity of taxes, sales, or tax deeds. That rule does apply in such cases, but that does hot justify a court of equity in holding that a tax sale purchaser shall be compelled to look elsewhere for his money, and the owner relieved from all payments and burdens imposed upon owners of property by the revenue laws. The owner comes into a court of equity, asking that he be relieved from tax proceedings which he claims to be illegal. Before his prayer should be granted, he should do equity himself, and reimburse the tax purchaser, and save the county from the burden of having to pay out the money received as taxes on plaintiff’s land, which the -latter does not claim not to owe.

A new rule is announced in this case, overruling previous cases, in this court, so far as the application of this equitable principle in actions between private parties to determine the validity of tax sales or certificates or deeds is concerned. Upon mature consideration we conclude that no sound distinction can be drawn, between such actions and those against public officers that will warrant the application of this equitable principle in the one case and withholding it in the other. In Douglas v. City of Fargo, supra, the cases in which this distinction is drawn in this state were cited, but the doctrine was not approved in'that case. The cases were cited and reviewed in that case solely for the purpose of showing that the rule announced in Farrington v. N. E. Investment Co., had not been departed from by this court.

The question involved in this case, whether in an action between private parties affecting tax proceedings as liens on land an offer to pay the just tax should be made, was not there involved. The principle here involved is now a statutory enactment. Chapter 166, p. 232, Laws 1903. In addition to the cases cited in the Douglas case as sustaining the principle here announced, see State Finance Co. v. Beck (just decided), 109 N. W. 357, and the *471cases there cited. Also, Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.) p. 1458, and cases cited under note 2; Knox v. Dunn, 22 Kan. 683.

(109 N. W. 361.

In this case the plaintiff did not allege in the complaint a payment or an offer of payment of the taxes justly due. If the action be considered one solely to determine adverse claims, such an allegation is not necessary, as the statute prescribes a form of complaint for such cases. In such actions if it develops on the trial that taxes are justly due, the plaintiff should offer to pay them before equitable relief will be granted. In this case that was not done, although but two years’ taxes had been paid by the plaintiff during his ownership of some of the land for about ten years. Under each of the grounds claimed to entitle the plaintiff to equitable relief, it is not shown that there was not a valid tax due on the land. Until this is shown, it will be presumed to be valid. Hence, there is no ground for interference by a court of equity until the plaintiff himself shows a disposition to do equity. This involves no hardship to the plaintiff. No deeds have been issued, and the right of redemption from the certificate exists.

The judgment is reversed, and the action directed to be dismissed.

All concur.