delivered the opinion of the court.
1. It is maintained by the plaintiff that it is incumbent upon defendant, in order to overcome the admitted title in him, to show that all the proceedings essential to jurisdiction, in making the sale for taxes, were complied with, and that the deed from the sheriff to defendant, and certificates of sale from the sheriff to the county, together with the part of the tax roll, introduced in evidence, is inadequate for that purpose. Defendant argues that under Section 3123 of B. & C. Comp., a certificate of sale constituted prima facie evidence of title in him, thereby shifting to plaintiff the burden of establishing that the necessary jurisdictional proceedings, relating to the sale for taxes, were not complied with. “The well-established rule,” says Mr. Justice Eakin, in Ayers v. Lund, 49 Or. 303, 305 (89 Pac. 806, 808: 124 Am. St. Rep. 1046), “when not modified by statute, is that the burden of proof *53is on the holder of the tax title to maintain his title, by affirmatively showing that the provisions of the law have been complied withfurther observing that “by Section 3127, B. & C. Comp., in case of a tax sale to a private purchaser, the deed is made prima facie evidence that the provisions of the law have been fully complied with. But this does not apply to a purchase by the county, as no deed is provided for in such case.”
In the case at hand the purchase was not made by the defendant as a private purchaser directly at a sale for taxes, but through the county; the county holding a certificate therefor, which certificate was evidently intended to be issued under Section 3123 of B. & C. Comp., while the deed held by defendant was issued under Section 3 of the act of 1901 (Gen. Laws 1901, p. 72: B. & C. Comp., § 3123). This section, it is contended, makes the certificate prima facie evidence that the property described therein was subject to taxation at the time it was assessed; that the taxes mentioned therein were not paid before the certificate was issued, and that all of the acts and proceedings, requisite to the validity of the sale of the property described, have been duly performed.' But it is urged in response that this position is unsound, for the reason that the property was sold for taxes levied prior to December 1, 1901, and that Section 37 of the act of-1901 (Gen. Laws 1901, p. 256) expressly limits that act to instances involving the collection of taxes thereafter levied, making it essential that taxes levied prior to the passage of the act should be collected under the law then in force, under which law no certificate, showing a sale to and a purchase by the county, was required. This provision injects into the controversy much doubt as to whether the certificates involved were entitled to be given the prima facie effect claimed for them. The writer is of the opinion that it was not contemplated by the act of 1901 that the issuance of the certificates mentioned therein should con*54stitute one of the steps essential to the collection of taxes; that, under either act, the title to the property, when bid in by the county, passed without the issuance of a certificate, the certificate constituting a muniment of title only; and that the clause, “so far as it relates to the collection of taxes heretofore levied,” contained in Section 37 of the 1901 act, did not include, nor was it intended to include, in fact or in effect, the part of the act with reference to the issuance of certificates, and prima facie effect thereof. And the sale having been made after December 1, 1901, the law, so far as related to the issuance of certificates and legal effect thereof, if intended to require an issuance thereof to the counties, the same as to other purchasers, was applicable thereto; which view, if acceded to by the majority, would necessitate an affirmance of the judgment of the trial court. But the majority are of the opinion that the sale, having been postponed from time to time from a date when the old law was in force, although made after the new law became operative, it was only necessary that all the proceedings conform to the requirements of the previous law, making the certificates ineffective for any purpose, and placing defendant in the same position, in reference thereto, as if the certificates to the county had not been issued; from which it must follow that the certificates offered in evidence did not shift to plaintiff the burden of establishing the invalidity of the tax sale, but-, so far as this element was concerned, left it incumbent upon defendant affirmatively to show that the provisions of the law were complied with. Under this view, the question remaining is whether the introduction in evidence of the deed given by the county to defendant had the effect of casting upon plaintiff the onus of establishing that a sale under a tax proceeding to the county was void. If so, defendant must prevail; otherwise, the prima facie showing of title in plaintiff has not been overcome, and the judgment is erroneous. In Ayers v. Lund, it is, in ef*55feet, held, as hereinbefore stated, that a tax deed is prima facie evidence that the provisions of the law have been fully complied with, when the sale is to a private purchaser, but, as no deed is. provided in a case where a sale is to the county, the rule thus invoked is inapplicable. In Section 5 of the act of 1901 (Gen. Laws 1901, p. 73), it is provided that the deed given thereunder shall be conclusive evidence of the regularity of and existence of all proceedings necessary to pass title to the lands conveyed therein, and of the title in the grantee, except as to certain jurisdictional steps therein enumerated. Under the rule announced in Martin v. White, 53 Or. 319 (100 Pac. 290), the conclusiveness of deeds to property growing out of tax sales is limited to irregularities only. But regardless of that feature this deed could not be held to come within the clause specified in Section 3127, B. & C. Comp., for this deed is in no sense a tax deed, but grows out of a sale directly from the county. It follows, in the absence of a statute, that, under any rule of construction, defendant’s deed cannot be held prima facie evidence of anything more than is expressed therein, which does not extend to the proceedings by which the county secured its title, and it is accordingly inadequate to relieve defendant of the burden of affirmatively establishing that the provisions of the law have been fully met.
2. It is next argued that, since plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of the defendant, he must necessarily fail, for the reason that, under Sections 3128, 3135, 3146, more than three years having elapsed after the date of the sale before this action was instituted, the plaintiff is barred from maintaining the action. It has been held by this court that the effect of these provisions is limited to cases where the defendant has, for the statutory period, been in the actual possession of the property, in which event “the title thus acquired is in the nature of a pre*56scriptive title.” But, even then, the deed under which the possession is held “must be sufficient on its face to constitute color of title. * * But when the tax proceeding is void, and the tax sale purchaser is not in possession, it is beyond the power of the legislature to transfer to the purchaser the title of the owner by lapse of time alone.” Martin v. White, 53 Or. 319 (100 Pac. 290). In the case before us it is not shown or contended that this possession existed for the statutory period; possession for two years only being established. Nor can it be said that this was ample time to come within section 5, p. 73, of the act of 1901, for the deed in evidence does not appear to have been placed of record, from which time the limitation there provided begins.
From thé views of the majority thus announced, it follows that the judgment of the circuit court must be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial; and it is so ordered. Reversed.