O'Donahue v. Hendrix

Decision Date26 September 1882
Citation13 N.W. 281,13 Neb. 257
PartiesJOHN O'DONOHUE, PLAINTIFF IN ERROR, v. JACOB R. HENDRIX, DEFENDANT IN ERROR
CourtNebraska Supreme Court

ERROR to the district court for Sarpy county. Tried below before SAVAGE, J.

REVERSED AND REMANDED.

Redick & Redick, for plaintiff in error.

Clarkson & Hunt, contra.

OPINION

BY THE COURT

This action was brought by the defendant in error against the plaintiff to have a certain tax deed, in which he was named as the grantee, declared valid, but if the court should find it to be invalid, then that the lien for the taxes paid be foreclosed and the premises sold. A decree was rendered in the court below declaring the tax deed invalid but finding the tax sales to have been legally made and awarding the holder of the deed a lien upon the real estate described in the petition for the amount of the purchase money and forty per cent interest thereon, and directing a sale of the premises. The plaintiff brings the cause into this court by petition in error. There is no bill of exceptions, and the only question that can be considered is, whether or not the petition will sustain the decree.

It is alleged in the petition that in January, 1875, the county treasurer of Sarpy county sold to Milton Hendrix, at private tax sale, the lands in controversy, for the taxes levied thereon for the year 1873. That thereafter said Hendrix paid the taxes levied on said real estate for the years 1865 to 1872 inclusive, and 1874, and that on the fourth day of September, 1876, he purchased said premises for the taxes due thereon for 1875. The tax certificates were afterwards assigned to the defendant, who, on the fourteenth day of February, 1880, procured a treasurer's deed for the land. The sale being invalid, is the defendant entitled to forty per cent interest? We think not.

In the case of Tillotson v. Small, ante page 202, and in State v. Helmer, 10 Neb. 25, 4 N.W. 367, we held that a county treasurer had no authority to sell real estate for a portion of the taxes due thereon. The statute authorizes him to sell for all the taxes, penalty, interest, and costs due upon a tract of land.

In State v. Helmer, supra, it is said: "It is doubtless the true intent and meaning of the law that lands or town lots can only be sold for taxes to those who offer to pay and do pay the amount of all taxes due on any parcel of land or town lot, or the smallest portion of the same." We...

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