Byers v. Minnesota Commercial Loan Co.

Bunn, J.

Action to determine adverse claims to lots in Minneapolis. The complaint alleged that plaintiff was the owner in fee, and that defendant claimed an interest or lien by virtue of certificates of tax sale for the taxes of 1892, on which defendant undertook to serve notices of expiration of redemption, which were, however, void because the amount of unpaid and delinquent taxes was not stated. It was alleged that more than six years had elapsed since the tax sales, and that no notices except those referred to had been served.

The answer denied plaintiff’s ownership of the lots, and alleged title in defendant through the tax certificates above mentioned, and the notices of expiration of redemption, which were alleged to be valid. The answer also alleged a sale of the lots to defendant at the forfeited tax sale May 21, 1900, for taxes of 1893, 1894, and 1895, but did not allege that notices of expiration of redemption from this sale had been given. Defendant asked judgment that it was the owner of the lots, or, in case it should be determined that the notices of redemption were invalid, that it have a lien on the lots for the total amount paid, with interest, as provided by law.

The facts, as they appeared without dispute at the trial, are that plaintiff was the fee owner of the lots, that they were sold to the state at the tax sale in May, 1894, for the taxes of 1892, and the certificates assigned to defendant, but that the notices of expiration of redemption given in 1891 did not include, in the amount stated as necessary to redeem, the taxes of 1893, 1894, and 1895, which were then unpaid and delinquent. May 21, 1900, the lots were, pursuant to chapter 322, p. 410, Laws 1899, sold to defendant for the taxes of 1893, 1894, and 1895. No notices of expiration of re*269demption from this sale were ever served. The lots were also sold to defendant for the taxes of 1899 to 1904, inclusive, and for the taxes of 1907, 1908, and 1909’; but plaintiff redeemed from these sales, and paid the 1910 taxes.

The decision of the trial court was that plaintiff was the owner in fee simple of the lands involved, and that defendant had no right, title, or interest in, or claim or lien upon, said lands. Judgment was entered on the decision, and defendant appealed.

Defendant concedes here, and it is clear it is correct, that the notices of expiration of redemption from the 1894 sales were invalid, and that it has no title to the lots. The claim is that defendant was entitled to an adjudication that he had a lien on the lots for the total of the sums paid for taxes, with interest. This claim is based upon (1) the theory that defendant, as the holder of valid tax certificates upon which notice of expiration of redemption has not been given, had at the time of the passage of chapter 271, p. 407, Laws 1905 [R. L. Supp. 1909, § 956 — 2], a lien on the land which he was entitled to have adjudicated and to enforce in an action by the owner of the fee to determine adverse claims; and (2) upon the theory that the legislature could not and did not destroy this lien by Laws 1905, p. 407, c. 271.

1. We are unable to sustain the first contention. The owner of a valid tax certificate has no estate or interest in the land. He has merely a lien. But what is the nature of this lien ? Is it one which under any statute or in equity can be enforced, except by giving notice of expiration of redemption ?

There never has been a statute that provides for adjudging a lien in favor of a certificate holder so long as his certificate has not been declared invalid for some defect in the judgment or sale. Section 942, R. L. 1905, which was chapter 2, § 31, p. 21, Laws 1902, provides that the lien of the state passes to the purchaser in case the certificate proves to be invalid for any but certain specified causes, and that the certificate holder may collect out of the property covered by such lien the amount of taxes, penalties, and interest. It is clear that neither this section nor prior statutes on the same matter give the certificate holder any such lien on the land where the cer*270tificate does not prove to be invalid. R. L. 1905, § 969, applies only to a case “when in any action or proceeding in court any tax judgment or tax sale shall be adjudged void.” It is settled that, except where given by statute, the holder of a void certificate has no lien on the land for the amount paid at the sale. Barber v. Evans, 27 Minn. 92, 6 N. W. 445; Jenks v. Henningsen, 102 Minn. 352, 113 N. W. 903. In the Jenks case it is said: “It is clear from the decisions of this court that prior to chapter 2, p. 31, Sp. Laws 1902, the purchaser of a tax title, in case the tax title was adjudged invalid, did not succeed to the lien of the state, but was entitled to refundment in accordance with the statutory provisons.” It was held that this law, incorporated into the Code as secton 969, did not apply to sales made before its passage, and that, when the invalidity of such a sale or the judgment on which it was based was adjudicated, the owner of the certificate was not entitled to a lien on the land.

Section 1610, G. S. 1894, did not purport to give the holder of a tax certificate that had been adjudged invalid a lien on the land, but provided that in any action or proceeding to vacate or set aside any tax judgment when the land had been sold to an actual purchaser, the plaintiff should before a decree was entered pay into court for the benefit of the other party all taxes, penalties and costs paid by such party. This provision was an amendment of G. S. 1878, c. 11, § 97, and as said in Robert P. Lewis Co. v. Knowlton, 84 Minn. 53, 86 N. W. 875, was doubtless adopted in view of the decision in Barber v. Evans, 27 Minn. 92, 6 N. W. 445, holding that the purchaser at a tax sale which proves to be invalid acquires no lien upon the property for the amount of his purchase money. It is quite clear that this statute has no application where the action is not to vacate or set aside a tax judgment, and, as the present action did not seek to vacate the judgment, defendant was not entitled to the benefit of this provision, nor can it be construed as giving any lien on the land.

Our attention has been called to no statute that gives a lien when the judgment or the sale has not been declared invalid, and in the case at bar there was .a valid judgment and a valid sale. The holder *271of a valid tax certificate has the rights given him by the statutes in force at the time the judgment was rendered, and only those rights. As to sales on judgments entered prior to 1902, these rights were (1) to receive a valid title to the land on the expiration of the time for redemption, by giving a notice that complies with the law; (2) to receive his money invested, with interest, in case of redemption. In case his certificate is adjudged invalid, except for certain causes, the right of refundment is given, and in ease of suit brought to vacate the judgment, the right to compel the owner of the land to pay the amount of the taxes, penalties, and interest. Otis v. City of St. Paul, 102 Minn. 208, 113 N. W. 269; State v. Krahmer, 105 Minn. 422, 117 N. W. 780, 21 L.R.A.(N.S.) 157.

He had a lien on the land to secure these rights. But he had no lien that could be enforced against the land in any other way than as provided by statute. To say that the owner of a valid certificate could obtain a judgment against the land for the amount of the taxes and interest, and have the land sold to satisfy this judgment, would be giving him a remedy that the statute in no way contemplates. His remedy is purely statutory, and was ample, if he had caused to be given a good notice of expiration of redemption. The failure to give this notice was the fault of defendant, and certainly added nothing to the rights that he had against the land. Until the time when chapter 271, p. 407, Laws 1905, went into effect, defendant had the right to cause a new notice to be given, and the right to obtain title in case there was no redemption.

Chapter 271, Laws 1905, provided that, unless such notices were served within six years from the date of the sale, “all such certificates upon which such notice of expiration of redemption shall not be issued and served * * * shall be void and of no force or effect for any purpose whatever.” This law fixed a limitation of time where none before existed, and was held constitutional in State v. Krahmer, 105 Minn. 422, 117 N. W. 780, 21 L.R.A.(N.S.) 157, on the ground that it did not relieve the state or the landowner of any obligation imposed by the contract, or impose any additional burden upon the holder of the certificate. By the law in force when he purchased the certificate he was required to give *272notice. He was not entitled to a deed upon the mere lapse of the statutory time .for redemption.

As we have pointed out, the holder of these tax certificates had under the laws that were in force when the judgments were rendered and sales made, no right to have it adjudicated that he had a lien on the property for the amounts paid for the certificates, even if they were adjudged void. Therefore chapter 271 did not destroy any vested right, or impair the obligation of his contract. It merely affected the remedy by providing a short statute of limitation. The results which follow from the failure of the certificate holder to comply with the statute could all have been avoided by the simple expedient of complying «with the statute, causing the notice to be given within the time given to certificate holders to give notices before the law went into effect. The language of chapter 271 is clear, and leaves no room for doubt that whatever rights the certificate. holder had to perfect a title or in the nature of a lien were lost by the failure to comply with its provisions.

Defendant insists that there is a distinction between a case where no notice has been given and a case where an insufficient notice has been given. This distinction is perhaps suggested in the Krahmer case, but we see no force in it. Whether the notice be called “void,” . “invalid,’.’ “fatally defective,” or “insufficient,” the fact is that the certificate holder acquires no rights by giving it. The situation is precisely the same as if no notice had been given. The certificate holder does not exhaust his right to obtain a title by giving a new notice. He may cause a valid notice to be given, and must, if he would shut out the right of redemption.

We see no merit in the claim that plaintiff is estopped by misconduct, bad faith, or laches from objecting to defendant’s asserted lien, nor in the proposition that plaintiff’s action was barred by limitation. We find no escape from the conclusion that defendant never had a right to a judgment that the amounts paid for his certificates were a lien on the land, and that his right to perfect a title was lost by the failure to comply with the provisions of chapter 271, p. 407, Laws 1905.

Judgment affirmed.