1. A treasurer's deed for lands sold for delinquent taxes in the
State of Iowa, if substantially regular in form, is, under the
statutes of that state, at least
prima facie evidence that
a sale was made, and if there was a
bona fide sale, in
substance or in fact, the deed is conclusive evidence that it was
made at the proper time and in the proper manner.
2. In a case where a tax deed, regular in form, recited that the
land was sold Jan. 4, and where the treasurer certified that the
sales of land for delinquent taxes in the county began on that day
and were continued from day to day until Jan. 18, and that he
entered all the sales as made on the 4th, it was
held that
a sale of land at any time during the period from the 4th to the
18th was valid, and that recording such sale as made on the first
day, though actually made later, did not impair the title.
The complainant asserts title to the lands in controversy, by
virtue of his having entered them pursuant to the provisions of the
act of Congress, and the defendant Callanan claims to be
Page 93 U. S. 388
the owner, by force of tax deeds of the Treasurer of the County
of Cass, founded on alleged sales made in January, 1864, for
delinquent taxes. These deeds, having been placed upon record, are,
as the plaintiff avers, a cloud upon his title and the object of
his bill is to procure their cancellation. He charges that they are
void for several reasons: first, that no taxes were levied upon the
lands or any of them for the years for which they were pretended to
be sold; second, that the taxes, if any there were, never became
delinquent; third, that there was no person authorized to receive
payment of the taxes; fourth, that there was no warrant or
authority for the sale of the lands for the nonpayment of
delinquent taxes; and, fifth, that no sale of the land for the
nonpayment of taxes, real or pretended, ever took place, but that
certificates thereof were issued, reciting, contrary to the truth,
the sale of the lands conformably to the provisions of the statutes
of the state, under which certificates the deeds and conveyances
were respectively made. A subsequent amendment of the bill charges,
sixthly, that at the time of the pretended assessments and levies,
the lands were not subject to taxation, and seventhly that two
persons, Reynolds and Mead (through whom the defendant claims), at
and before the issuing of the certificates of sale, unlawfully
combined and confederated with the defendant for the purpose of
preventing competition at the sale of lands for taxes then to be
held in the county.
The court below, upon a final hearing, granted the prayer of the
complainant's bill and entered a decree accordingly, whereupon the
defendant appealed to this Court.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG delivered the opinion of the Court.
Before examining the objections to the validity of the tax deeds
which the original bill and its amendment suggest, it will be
convenient to notice the provisions of the statutes of the state
respecting tax sales, and respecting the effect of treasurers'
deeds for lands sold for delinquent taxes. They are contained in
the Revision of 1860, c. 45. After giving directions for sales of
land by the county treasurer for delinquent taxes,
Page 93 U. S. 389
prescribing notice by advertisement, and providing for the cost
of advertising, the treasurer is directed to offer separately, on
the day of sale, each tract or parcel of real property advertised,
on which the taxes and costs shall not have been paid, and it is
declared that the person who offers to pay the amount of taxes due
on any parcel of land for the smallest portion thereof shall be
considered the purchaser. The treasurer is directed to continue the
sale from day to day as long as there are bidders, or until the
taxes are all paid, and after all has been offered, if any portion
of the lands advertised remain unsold, the sale is to be adjourned.
The purchaser is entitled to a certificate of purchase, describing
the property and the amount of the tax, but the land may be
redeemed at any time within three years from the day of the sale.
At the expiration of three years, if the land remains unredeemed,
the purchaser is entitled to a deed from the treasurer, the form
and effect of which are defined by the statute. We quote a part of
sec. 784 of the act, as having a controlling operation upon the
facts of the present case. It is as follows:
"The deed shall be signed by the treasurer in his official
capacity, and acknowledged by him before some officer authorized to
take acknowledgments of deeds, and, when substantially thus
executed and recorded in the proper record of titles to real
estate, shall vest in the purchaser all the right, title, interest,
and estate of the former owner in and to the land conveyed, . . .
and shall be
prima facie evidence in all courts of this
state in all controversies and suits in relation to the rights of
the purchaser, his heirs or assigns, to the land thereby conveyed,
of the following facts:"
"1. That the property was subject to taxation."
"2. That the taxes were not paid before sale."
"3. That the property conveyed had not been redeemed at the date
of the deed."
"And shall be conclusive evidence of the following facts:"
"1. That the property has been listed and assessed."
"2. That the taxes were levied according to law."
"3. That the property was advertised for sale in the manner and
for the length of time required by law."
"4. That the property was sold for taxes as stated in the
deed."
"5. That the grantee named therein was the purchaser."
"6. That the sale was conducted in the manner required by law.
"
Page 93 U. S. 390
"7. That all the prerequisites of the law were complied with by
all the officers, . . . except in regard to the three points named
in this section, where the deed shall be prima facie evidence
only."
"And in all controversies involving the title under such tax
deed, executed substantially as required by law by the treasurer,
the person claiming title adverse thereto, in order to defeat the
same, must show, either that said property was not subject to
taxation, or that the taxes had been paid before sale, or that the
property had been redeemed from sale according to law. . . . And no
person shall be permitted to question the title under the deed
without first showing . . .
that all taxes due upon the
property have been paid."
The whole act exhibits an intention of the legislature to
enforce the payment of taxes by securing purchasers at tax sales in
their purchases, and thus making it dangerous for owners of
property to neglect payment of taxes due the state. It removes
difficulties which had before existed in the way of establishing a
tax title, and at the same time it works no injustice to owners of
land subject to taxation. The law determines when the taxes should
be levied and when they shall be paid, and it gives ample time
within which to make the payment. It was under this act and in
conformity with its provisions that the treasurer's deeds were
made, through which the defendant below made his claim. They are in
the form prescribed by the statute. If the act is to have any
effect at all, it is plain that the deeds cut off most of the
averments upon which the plaintiff bases his attempt to obtain the
cancellation he seeks. It is not open to him to aver and prove any
allegation he puts forward to establish the invalidity of the
deeds, except that the property was not subject to taxation and
that there was a fraudulent combination of the defendant with
others to prevent bidding. The first of the averments is denied in
the answer, and there has been no attempt to sustain it by
evidence. Besides, the statute declares that the deeds shall be
prima facie evidence that the property was subject to
taxation. They are made affirmative evidence. The allegation of a
fraudulent combination to suppress bidding at the sale is entirely
unsustained by anything in the proofs, and so is every allegation
upon which the bill founds the charge that the deeds are invalid,
unless it
Page 93 U. S. 391
be the averment that no sale for the nonpayment of taxes, real
or pretended, ever took place. The treasurer's deeds, however,
contain a recital that he did, on the fourth day of January, A.D.
1864, by virtue of the authority vested in him by law, at the sale
begun and publicly held on the first Monday of January, A.D. 1864,
expose to public sale at the courthouse in the county aforesaid
(Cass), in substantial conformity with all the requisitions of the
statute in such cases made and provided, the several pieces of real
property above described separately, for the payment of the taxes,
interest, and costs then due and remaining unpaid on each of said
pieces of real property, respectively. The deeds further recite
that at the time and place aforesaid, the persons to whom the deeds
were made offered the most favorable bids, and that the several
pieces of property were stricken off to them at the prices bid.
Now if it be conceded that under the statute, the deeds
containing these recitals are only presumptive evidence that the
sales were actually made as recited, the burden is still on the
complainant to rebut this presumption. And we think that instead of
having rebutted it, the evidence in support of the presumption
greatly preponderates. We need not refer to it in detail. Suffice
it to say that there is not a single witness who is able to deny
that a sale was made, and only one is able to testify that, ten
years after 1864, he cannot recollect it, while others testify
affirmatively that it was made. At the treasurer's sale in January,
1864, there were large bodies of land offered, and the sale was
continued from day to day. Whether the lands now in dispute were
sold on the fourth day of that month or at a later day during the
sale is perhaps not distinctly proved, and it is not necessary that
it should be. If they were not sold until several days later, but
yet while the sales were in progress, unadjourned, and the
treasurer certified them as sold on the opening day, it was at most
but an irregularity which cannot avail the complainant. It has not
interfered with his right to redeem. He suffered eight years to
pass after the sale without asserting any right. During all that
period he paid no taxes, performed no duties which he owed to the
public, suffered the defendant and those under whom the defendant
claims to pay the taxes levied from year to year, and now,
Page 93 U. S. 392
when it may be presumed the land has increased in value, he
seeks the cancellation of the tax deeds, without even offering to
redeem or to refund the taxes which the purchasers at the sale have
paid. He seeks this in the face of a statute which in effect
declares that irregularities shall not suffice to defeat a tax
sale, and when, in view of the evidence, it is exceedingly doubtful
whether in fact there was any irregularity. In this attempt he
cannot succeed.
All the questions presented in this case have been decided by
the Supreme Court of Iowa, and decided adversely to the
complainant.
Phelps v. Meade, 41 Ia. 470. That case was an
attempt to set aside a tax deed of lands sold by the treasurer of
Cass County at the sale in January, 1864. The averments of the bill
were the same as those made in this case, and the case was heard
upon the evidence taken upon the case now before us. The rulings of
the court were, that if there was a
bona fide sale in
substance or in fact, the tax deed is conclusive evidence that it
was made at the proper time and conducted in the proper manner. And
where a tax deed, regular in form, recited that the land was sold
Jan. 4, and the treasurer testified that the sales of land in the
county for delinquent taxes began upon that day, and were continued
until the 18th, and that he entered all the sales as of the date of
the commencement, it was held, that a sale of land at any time
during the continuance of the sale was valid, and that the
recording of the sale as of the first day would not impair the
title.
We do not find in the unreported case of
Butler v.
Delano, to which we have been referred, any thing conflicting
with what was decided in
Phelps v. Meade. The facts of the
two cases, so far as we can gather them from the opinion of the
court in the latter, were widely different. The same may be said of
the other unreported case of
Thompson v. Ware.
Decree reversed, and the cause remitted, with instructions
to dismiss the bill.