This case was in the first instance taken by writ of error to the Kansas City Court of Appeals where an opinion was delivered by Judge Gill, concurred in by the other members of the court, affirming the judgment of the trial court. A motion was then filed by plaintiff for a rehearing, one of the grounds being that the cause involves the construction of the revenue law. The motion was overruled, and the case certified to this court upon that ground.
The opinion of the court of appeals is as follows:
“Gill, J. — In October, 1876, the collector of Moniteau county sold certain lands in said county, belonging to defendant Brown, for the taxes of 1873 and 1875, and one Howard became the purchaser, to whom a tax deed was made. Thereafter Howard instituted an action of eject*313ment to recover tbe land. He was successful in tbe circuit court, but on appeal, tbe Supreme Court declared tbe tax sale invalid and reversed tbe judgment, without remanding. [Howard v. Heck, 88 Mo. 456.] In March, 1888, Howard brought this suit, substantially alleging in bis petition, that at tbe date of bis purchase at tbe tax sale and subsequently, he paid taxes on tbe land for tbe years 1871 to- 1885, inclusive. Eor tbe amount of these, with penalties and interest, he prayed that be might have judgment, which should be declared a lien on tbe lands, and that they be sold for tbe payment thereof, etc. Tbe allegations of tbe petition were put in issue by defendant’s answer. During tbe pendency of tbe action, and before tbe trial, Howard’s interest therein was transferred to Burke, who was substituted as plaintiff.
“At tbe trial tbe facts were practically agreed on. It stands admitted that plaintiff’s assignor (Howard) paid certain charges appearing against tbe land and designated as tbe State and county taxes for tbe years 1871 to 1885, inclusive. Among other matters of defense stated in tbe agreed case, appears tbe following:
“ ‘The defendants then introduced tbe real estate tax books from 1871 to 1886 inclusive, being all of tbe years for which said Howard paid taxes on said land, and it is also admitted for tbe purpose of this appeal, that said books were not certified to by tbe clerk of tbe county court, and that they did not contain a certificate that tbe same was a true copy of tbe assessor’s book of tbe year of which it is purported to be tbe tax book, and that said books 'are not authenticated by tbe seal of tbe county court, or tbe certificate of tbe clerk of said court, as required by sec. 65, 2 W. S. 1872, p. 1171, and were not authenticated in any manner; that these were tbe only books upon which tbe payment of taxes was made by tbe plaintiff’s assignor.’
*314“As further indicating the basis of plaintiff’s claim, we append ail instruction, which he asked and the court declined to give:
“ ‘If the court believes from the evidence that the lands described in plaintiff’s amended petition were sold on the 2d day of October, 1876, by the collector of the revenue of the county of Moniteau, for the purpose of collecting the taxes then due and unpaid and which had been assessed against said land for the years 1872, 1873 and 1874, or either of said years, and that the said land was purchased at said sale by William G-. Howard, and that he then and there paid to said collectors the said taxes, and afterwards received a deed from the collector of said county for said land, and that after the said Howard received his said deed from the collector of the said county, he paid all of the taxes assessed against said land for the subsequent years, up to and including those of 1885, and that the said Howard, to wit, in the year 1881, commenced suit in ejectment in the circuit court of said Moniteau county, against defendant Heck; and that afterwards the defendant Brown became a party defendant therein; and that judgment was rendered in the circuit court of said Moniteau county, in favor of the plaintiff therein, adjudging and decreeing that he was entitled to the possession of said land, and that an appeal was taken from said judgment to the Supreme Court of this State, where the said judgment was reversed, and that since then, to wit, on the 19th day of May, 1892, the said Howard sold, assigned, transferred and conveyed all his right, title, claim and interest in and tO' said land and the money paid to said collectors of said county of Moniteau, to the plaintiff, Edmund Burke, then the said Burke is entitled to recover in this case the amount of money so paid by the said Howard, together with all interest, penalties and costs given by law, unless the court shall further believe from the evidence that said, land was not subject to taxation, or that the taxes, for *315which, said laud was sold, were paid before the same was sold, or that it had been redeemed according to law, and that the amount so due the plaintiff is a lien upon said land so bought at said sale by the said Howard.’
“Erom a judgment in defendant’s favor, plaintiff has brought the case here by writ of error.
“I. As will be seen from the foregoing statement, this is an action by the assignee of a defeated holder of a tax title, to recover certain alleged taxes which the assignor paid on the land, at and subsequent to his purchase. The point raised is, whether such an action can be defeated by showing that there was no legal levy or assessment of the taxes which the holder of the alleged tax title assumed to pay. The rights of the parties are governed by the revenue laws of 1872; plaintiff basing his right to recover on section 219, 2 Wagner’s Stat., p. 1206, the latter clause thereof reading as follows:
“ ‘And if the holder of a tax deed, or the party claiming' under him by virtue of a tax deed, be defeated in an action by or against him for the recovery of the land sold, the successful claimant shall be adjudged to p'ay such party claiming under the tax deed, except in cases where the land was not subject to taxation, or the taxes for which the same was sold were paid before the sale, or it has been redeemed according to law, the full amount of all taxes paid by the tax purchaser on such lands at the time of the purchase, and all subsequent taxes paid by him, together with the amount of the redemption money provided for by law, and interest on the whole amount of such taxes from the time of the payment thereof, at the rate of 10 per cent per annum; which judgment shall be a lien upon the real estate in controversy, and may be enforced by execution, as in other cases of judgments and decrees of such court.’
“In the brief of defendant’s counsel, it is contended that plaintiff’s alleged cause of action is barred by the final *316judgment of the Supreme Oourt in Howard v. Heck, 88 Mo. 456, wherein plaintiff was turned away with an adverse judgment; that any rights he might have for taxes paid, ought properly to have been determined in that suit, and that therefore plaintiff ought not to be allowed to prosecute this independent action for a matter which legitimately came within the bounds of that case. We have thought it unnecessary to pass upon Jthat question, since, at all events, we hold that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover — even admitting that he has proceeded in the proper manner.
“Coming back then to the more important question, the defendants contend that, notwithstanding the above quoted statutory provision, they defeat plaintiff’s alleged right to enforce his claim, if they shotr that no tax was ever legally levied or charged on their land, for. the years 1871 to 1885 inclusive. The agreed facts clearly show that there was no valid tax levy for these years. In perfecting the tax levy, assessment and State’s lien, the law then provided, that: ‘As soon as the assessor’s book shall be corrected and adjusted, the clerk of the county court shall within 90 days thereafter, make a fair copy thereof, with the taxes extended therein, authenticated by the seal of the court, for the use of the collector . . . and such copy of the assessor’s book shall be called “the tax book.’ ” ’ [Sec. 65, p. 1171, 2 Wag. Stat.] It is admitted now that there was an entire omission, in all the years for which these taxes were paid, to authenticate the tax books, as required by the foregoing section; and the same remarks, therefore, apply here as in Howard v. Heck, supra, where it was said to ‘follow from these premises that the so-called tax books, not being authenticated in any manner whatever, can not be regarded in any other light than mere unofficial lists, bearing on their face none of the insignia of authority.’ It must be conceded, then, that when the tax collector assumed to act upon these unofficial lists, he was proceeding -without authority of law, *317and bis acts were, in effect, tbe same as if be bimself, of bis own volition, bad made sncb lists. He bas no ‘tax boobs,’ properly so-called; nor were these several amounts, wbicb tbe collector got from Howard, valid and legal tases. They were mere illegal exactions, to wbicb tbe State was not entitled and wbicb tbe landowner was under no obligation to pay. And if then tbe land was not charged with a lien in favor of tbe State in tbe first instance, on what show of reason can it be said that tbe State’s assignee bas a lien? If these illegal and arbitrary charges were non-collectible and non-enforcible by tbe State, bow can it be claimed that they became legal and valid charges by force of a mere assignment to another party? In treating of this subject, Mr. Black, in bis work on tax titles, uses tbe following reasonable language: ‘A mere purchase of land at a tax sale gives no ben enforcible in equity, for tbe reimbursement of tbe money paid. But where tbe tax title proves defective, tbe statutes of several States create a lien in favor of tbe purchaser for tbe amount of tbe price paid. There is, however, a limit to tbe power of tbe legislature to provide for liens of this character. It is only in cases where tbe tax was justly and equitably chargeable upon tbe owner of tbe land, and where tbe title fails only through some irregularity or omission, that its payment can be enforced in this indirect manner. If tbe circumstances were such that tbe owner never was under obligation to pay tbe sum charged to him, so that no enforcible lien attached in favor of tbe State, it seems too plain for argument that no statute can place tbe purchaser in tbe position of bolding a valid lien on tbe land. Hence, if tbe tax was vicious in its inception, because laid for an unlawful purpose, or for other reasons, there is and can be no lien for tbe purchaser of tbe illusory title. ’ [Black on Tax Titles, sec. 266, also, secs. 267, 229.]
“Judge Cooley says: ‘The legislature can have no more authority to compel tbe landowner to pay a lawless *318exaction to a third person than it has to compel a like payment to the State directly. . . . The rule ea/oewb emptor applies to tbe purchaser. He takes all the risks of his purchase, and if he finds in any case that he has secured neither the title he bid for, nor any equitable claim against the owner, the State may, if it see fit, make reparation itself; but it has no more authority to compel the owner of the land to do so than to exercise the like compulsion against any other person.’ [Cooley on Taxation (1 Ed.), 375.]
“In Minnesota there is a statute for the relief of the tax purchaser, similar to our own. In deciding a case involving a question of similar import to this, the Supreme Court, referring to this statute, uses this language: Tts provisions are limited to cases where the taxes have been legally assessed and levied, and have become due and delinquent, but, owing to some irregularity in the proceedings connected with the making of the sales, on the part of some officer having a duty to perform in relation thereto, the sales are rendered invalid. In every such case, the purchaser acquires a lien upon the property for his purchase money, to the extent of the taxes, penalty and interest legally due against the land at the time of the sale, as well as for all taxes subsequently paid thereon by him; but in no other case is he entitled to any lien under the provisions of this section.’ In that case, the said taxes were not levied and •assessed according to law, and such departure (says • the court) ‘made both the assessment and levy wholly illegal. . . . The case therefore does not come within the provisions of section 142, above quoted, for, as there had been no valid assessment and levy, there were no taxes legally due and delinquent from the defendant, on account of the land, at the time of the alleged sale.’ And further, it is said: ‘The statement that there was no evidence tending" to show that said taxes were arbitrary, unjust, or vicious, would seem to be somewhat at variance with the preceding *319portion, of tbe finding; for, under our laws, tbe only basis of just taxation is a Yalid assessment of property in tbe first instance, and if this is wanting, or if tbe levy which is made is not in susbtantial conformity with the requirements of the statute, the tax is necessarily “unjust and vicious;” and the fact that it may have been levied for a public purpose, or that all other taxes which were levied at the same time, were levied in a like manner, would make it none the less illegal.’ In short, it was there held, that a purchaser of real property at a tax sale, which proves to be invalid by reason of an illegality in the assessment of the property and the levy of the tax, acquires no lien upon the property for the amount of. the alleged tax; and that the provisions of the Minnesota statute (which is similar to that of Missouri) has no application to cases of tax sales, invalid because of void levy and assessment. [Barber v. Evans, 27 Minn. 92; to same effect, see, also, Philleo v. Hiles, 42 Wis. 527; Marsh v. Supervisors, Id. 502; Tierney v. Union Lumbering Co., 47 Wis. 248; Roberts v. Deeds, 57 Iowa 320.]
“In these Wisconsin cases, the taxes were held invalid and such as the landowner was not bound to pay to the holder of the tax deed, because the assessor’s lists were not authenticated, as required by the statute. The tax purchaser was held entitled only to taxes legally assessed, and that this failure to properly authenticate the tax books went to the very groundwork of the tax charge. Says the court in Philleo v. Hiles, supra: ‘To require prepayment of the amount of the tax sale, in such a case, would be to create a lien on land, not by a tax, but by a tax sale, where there had been no tax.’
“In our opinion, it was not the purpose of said section 219 (on which plaintiff relies for recovery) arbitrarily to fix a liability upon the landowner, which was not a legal charge under the revenue laws; nor was it intended to deny him any defenses except those named, to wit, that the land *320was not taxable, that the taxes had been paid, or that the land had been redeemed. There is nothing in the statute that gives fair color to so unjust a claim as that the landowner should be bound to pay every pretended charge which the tax purchaser thought proper to pay, whether such charge had any legal basis or not. ‘The statute was evidently designed to have an operation in the nature of an equitable subrogation to the liens on the land held by the State.’ [Pitkin v. Reibel, 104 Mo. 510.] Its purpose was to place the unsuccessful holder of the tax title (who had been denied recovery of the land because of some irregularity or informality in the tax sale or tax deed), in possession of the State’s rights, and with power to enforce its lien through a judgment of the court. And as the stream can not raise higher than its source, so the rights of the tax purchaser can not be superior to those of the State. If the State had no valid charge on the land, neither has the party who has become subrogated to its claim.
“Thus stands the plaintiff. TIis assignor took all the State had, but no more. These pretended charges, while belonging to the State, were invalid and non-enforcible, and they remain so in the hands of the plaintiff.
“The judgment is for the right party and will be affirmed. All concur.”
In this cause, transferred to the Supreme Court from the Kansas City Court of Appeals, we approve the opinion rendered by that court, and affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
All concur, except Mabsuall, J., absent.