In proceedings to obtain judgment for delinquent taxes in the county of Pine for the year 1903, the defendant lumber company interposed the defense that its property was unfairly and unequally assessed. After trial in the court below the defense was held not established, and judgment was ordered for the tax in accordance with the assessment ■of the property as it appeared upon the tax list, whereupon the case was certified to this court to determine whether the defense was available to defendant; no application having been made to the board of equalization to correct the assessment.
The facts as developed on the trial below disclosed that in May, 1902, the land in question was listed for taxation and assessed at $43 per acre. There is no claim that this assessment was unfair or unequal or in excess of the then value of the land, and the tax levied pursuant •to it was subsequently paid by defendant. In May, 1903, the land was again entered upon the tax list at the same valuation, pursuant to the statutes, which provide that real property shall be assessed in even-numbered years only. The tax for that year was not paid by defendant, but, when proceedings reached the district court on application for judgment, defendant interposed the defense now relied upon. It -appears, further, that at the time the land was originally assessed in 1902 it was covered by a heavy growth of pine timber, and that subsequent to that assessment and prior to May 1, 1903, the same had been •entirely cut and removed, so that on the latter date the land did hot ■exceed in value the sum of $6. There is nothing in the record tending *395to show that the officers having charge of the levy and assessment of taxes had any notice prior to May 1, 1903, of the fact of the removal of the timber, or that the land had been by reason thereof diminished in value. No application was made to the county board of equalization or the state auditor for a readjustment of the assessment, and attention was first called to the facts constituting the defense when the answer was presented in this proceeding. The question presented is whether the facts stated constitute a defense.
Section 1588, G. S. 1894, in reference to defenses in proceedings of this kind, provides that if all provisions of the law relating to the assessment and levy of taxes have been complied with, of which the list filed with the clerk shall be prima facie evidence, judgment shall be entered for the taxes disclosed by that list, together with penalties and costs, and that no omission-of any of the things by law provided in relation to the assessment and levy of taxes, or of anything required by the officer or officers to be done prior to filing the list with the clerk of the district court, shall be a defense or objection to the taxes, unless it is also made to appear that such omission resulted to the prejudice of the party objecting and that the taxes were partial, or unfairly or unequally assessed. In such case, but in no other, the court is authorized to reduce the amount of tax to correspond with the facts and give judgment accordingly.
The precise question here presented has never before been presented to this court, and its determination depends very largely upon the construction of the statute, the substance of which we have just stated. In the case of County of Otter Tail v. Batchelder, 47 Minn. 512, 50 N. W. 536, the court held that in proceedings for the recovery of a tax judgment it might be shown, for the purpose of reducing the tax charged against the land, that the statutory requirement of equality of assessment had been intentionally disregarded, or that by reason of some perfectly obvious mistake there had been no real assessment upon any rule of equality, even though it did not appear that the taxing officers had failed in any respect in the performance of their duties. It appeared in that case that the lands there involved were unimproved, situated remote from public highways, and the highest cash value of any of them did not exceed $9.70 per acre; that the average cash value of lands in the whole township in which the particular land was located *396did not exceed $4.44 per acre; and that the land in question, of the value of $2.70, was fraudulently assessed at $4.07 per acre, while other lands were assessed at less than one-half their value. Evidence tending to prove these facts was excluded by the trial court, and on appeal the ruling was held error, and that the facts stated constituted a defense. It appeared, however, that prior to the time of interposing the defense the defendant therein appeared before the board of equalization and requested a readjustment of the taxes on a basis of equality.
Reliance is had upon that decision to sustain the defense in the case at bar, but the cases are essentially different. Here no application was made to the board of equalization for a readjustment of the taxes. The-officers of the county were not informed of the removal of the timber which reduced the value of the lands, and the record fails to disclose any obvious mistake in the assessment or any fraudulent overvaluation. It is admitted that the original assessment against the lands in question was fair and in accordance with their true value, which valuation the officers were required, in the absence of some reason made known to-them which would justify a reduction, to adopt as a basis for the taxes, of 1903. To render available the defense that the assessment was unequal and unfair for the year 1903, by reason of the diminished value of the land, application should have been made to the county board of equalization for a readjustment of the same. If such application had been made, it would, on the facts stated, have been the clear duty of the-board, or perhaps the state auditor under the provisions of section 1652,. G. S. 1894, to reduce the assessment to correspond with the facts.
It was held in the case of State v. Lakeside Land Co., 71 Minn. 283, 73 N. W. 970, that matters of this sort can all be corrected by an application to the board of equalization so as to produce entire equality among the several taxpayers, and that it must be presumed that such board would do its duty and correct any and -all omissions or under-valuations which might be brought to their attention. In the absence-of fraud, or demonstrable mistake, the acts and proceedings of the taxing officers prior to the application for judgment conclude the taxpayer, and in a case like that at bar, where the officers fully complied with all statutory requirements and there is no fraud on their part, their action must, in the absence of some sort of an application to them for redress, be held final by the courts. As said in the Batchelder case (page *397516) : “Ordinarily the citizen is concluded by the action of the officers upon whom the duty of assessment rests, if they act in conformity with the statute; and, notwithstanding the peculiar features of our tax law, providing for the rendition of a judgment in the tax proceedings, and giving the right to defend before the property owner is concluded by such judgment, it must still be considered that under ordinary circumstances the assessment value as determined by the assessor and the proper board of equalization is final. It cannot have been the purpose of the law that the honest exercise of their judgment, unaffected by any extraordinary mistake, should be subject to review and reversal by the courts, or that a trial in court should be allowed in the case of every property owner who might consider that the taxing officers had erred in their estimate of the value of his property.”
It follows, therefore, as a necessary result, that the remedy of a taxpayer in a case like this is by application to the board of equalization for relief. If it is denied by that body, then under the rule of the Batchelder case, the defense provided for by G. S. 1894, § 1588, would be available. For the reason that relief was not thus invoked, we are of opinion that the defense was properly overruled by the trial court. This view is sustained by the case of State v. West Duluth Land Co., 75 Minn. 456, 78 N. W. 115, though the precise question here before the court was not there involved, and by the authorities generally. Jaggard, Taxation (Minn.) 235; Jaggard, Taxation (Iowa) 394; Clarke v. County of Stearns, 47 Minn. 552, 50 N. W. 615; Burlington v. Board, 10 Neb. 211, 4 N. W. 1016; Crecelius v. City, (Ky.) 49 S. W. 547. Any other view would result in substituting the court for the board of equalization and cast upon it the duties of that body in all cases where complaints of unequal taxation are made.
We do not wish, however, to be understood as holding that in a case where an original assessment is fraudulently made, largely in excess of the real value of property, which fact was unknown to the taxpayer until application for judgment was made, he would be remediless. Such, however, is not the case at bar. The original assessment here under consideration is conceded to have been in accordance with the true value of the land, and the facts occurring subsequently which reduced its value were not called to the attention of the proper officers. Those facts were within the knowledge of defendant and should have been *398made known. It is not the duty of the officers to make investigation, into the condition of real property entered on the tax rolls in an odd-numbered year in accordance with a previous assessment and valuation for the purpose of ascertaining whether the value has remained, the same.
Affirmed.