David Paul Dohrn Vs. Mooring Tax Asset Group, L.l.c., Layne Pershing, Jason Rathje And Shawn Rathje, D/b/a Rpr Partnership Vs. Mooring Tax Asset Group, L.l.c., Cross-appellee. Appeal From The Iowa Distric ( 2008 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 104 / 06-0031
    Filed January 25, 2008
    DAVID PAUL DOHRN,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    MOORING TAX ASSET GROUP,
    L.L.C., LAYNE PERSHING, JASON
    RATHJE and SHAWN RATHJE,
    d/b/a RPR PARTNERSHIP,
    Appellees.
    ------------------------------------------------------
    LAYNE PERSHING, JASON RATHJE
    and SHAWN RATHJE, d/b/a RPR
    PARTNERSHIP,
    Cross-Appellants,
    vs.
    MOORING TAX ASSET GROUP, L.L.C.,
    Cross-Appellee.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Clinton County, David H.
    Sivright, Jr., Judge.
    Plaintiff appeals judgment finding his action to set aside a tax sale
    deed untimely.           AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND
    REMANDED.
    T. Randy Current of Frey, Haufe & Current, P.L.C., Clinton, for
    appellant Dohrn.
    2
    James D. Bruhn of Farwell & Bruhn, Clinton, for cross-appellant RPR
    Partnership.
    Stephen P. Wing of Dwyer & Wing, P.C., Davenport, for appellee
    Mooring Tax Asset Group.
    3
    STREIT, Justice.
    David Dohrn lost forty acres to a tax sale for failure to pay his real
    estate taxes. In an action to void the tax deed, he claims the notice of
    redemption period has not expired because his tenants were not served with
    notice of redemption. We find the tenants should have been given notice of
    their right to redemption. Consequently, the tax deed is void and the
    redemption period remains open. Iowa Code section 448.16 does not bar an
    action challenging a void tax deed. The district court erred by finding
    Dohrn’s action untimely.
    I.    Facts and Prior Proceedings.
    David Dohrn filed a claim in equity seeking to void a tax deed for forty
    acres of farmland and restore title to him. The property was purchased by
    the Mooring Tax Asset Group at a tax sale conducted by the Clinton County
    Treasurer on July 19, 2000, for delinquent 1998 second half real estate
    taxes in the amount of $428, plus interest. Mooring received a certificate of
    purchase and paid subsequent taxes accruing on the property.
    On January 28, 2003, Mooring served a Notice to Redeem from Tax
    Sale on Dohrn, Wesley Rose, the City of Clinton, and Clinton County. The
    notice was sent by certified mail with return receipt requested. The notice
    provided in part, “the right to redemption will expire and a deed for said
    parcel will be made unless redemption from said tax sale is made within
    ninety (90) days from the completed service of this Notice.”          Mooring
    examined a title report to determine persons shown by public record to have
    any leasehold or other right of possession in the forty-acre tract.
    At the time the notice to redeem was served, Dohrn, age forty-six,
    owned the forty acres at issue and the property was taxed in his name. The
    forty acres were part of a 312-acre farm Dohrn inherited from his father
    4
    approximately ten years earlier. In 1996, Dohrn rented most of the tillable
    portion, approximately 230 acres, to Wesley Rose. Rose recorded the lease
    with the Clinton County Recorder on March 15, 1996. The tillable portion
    of the forty-acre tract (approximately thirty-five acres) was included in the
    rental agreement.     Following the 1999 crop year, Dohrn and Rose
    terminated the lease by mutual agreement.          Neither Dohrn nor Rose
    recorded a notice of termination. Dohrn testified he was unaware Rose had
    recorded the lease.
    In 2000 Dohrn leased the same acres to RPR Partnership, which
    consisted of Layne Pershing, Jason Rathje, and Shawn Rathje. This lease
    was never recorded.
    On February 7, 2003, Mooring filed an affidavit of service in the office
    of the Clinton County Treasurer showing the manner and completion of the
    service of notice to redeem. No one redeemed the forty acres within the
    ninety days following the filing of the affidavit of service.     The Clinton
    County Treasurer issued a tax deed to Mooring on May 20, 2003. Mooring
    filed a “120-day affidavit” on June 4, 2003 in the office of the Clinton
    County Recorder. The affidavit stated in part:
    Any person claiming any right, title, or interest in or to the
    parcel adverse to the title or purported title by virtue of the tax
    deed referred to shall file a claim with the recorder of the
    county where the parcel is located, within one hundred twenty
    days after the filing of this affidavit, the claim to set forth the
    nature of the interest, also the time and manner in which the
    interest claimed was acquired.
    (Emphasis added.) No one filed a claim with the recorder during the 120-
    day period. Thereafter, Mooring sold the forty acres to RPR.
    At trial, Dohrn said he was an alcoholic. He has been convicted twice
    of operating while intoxicated and did not have a driver’s license at the time
    5
    of trial. Dohrn contended his alcoholism contributed to his failure to pay
    his real estate taxes.
    Dohrn admitted to receiving notices of real estate taxes due from the
    Clinton County Treasurer. He acknowledged receiving the notice of the
    right to redeem the property from the tax sale via certified mail and recalled
    signing the return receipt. He claimed he never opened the envelope.
    Melissa Dohrn, Dohrn’s daughter, was appointed Dohrn’s conservator
    in part because of this incident.         Melissa acknowledged her father
    understood the nature and extent of his business affairs, but made some
    “bad choices” because of his alcohol problem.
    The district court found Dohrn’s action challenging Mooring’s tax title
    untimely and barred by Iowa Code sections 448.15 and 448.16 (1999) (the
    provisions allowing for a 120-day affidavit). Dohrn appealed. He alleged
    that because persons in possession of the forty acres were not served notice
    of the right to redeem, sections 448.15 and 448.16 do not bar his claim. He
    also claimed title should be restored to him based on general equitable
    principles. RPR cross appealed, claiming the district court erred by not
    ordering Mooring to pay its attorney fees and costs incident to defending
    Dohrn’s claims. Additionally RPR requested, in the event we reverse the
    district court, that we remand this case for further proceedings regarding
    RPR’s cross-claim against Mooring for breach of warranty, breach of
    contract, and unjust enrichment.
    For the reasons that follow, we find the tax deed void and Dohrn’s
    claim timely. Moreover, we find RPR was not entitled to recover its litigation
    expenses.
    6
    II.    Scope of Review.
    Since this is a case in equity, our review is de novo.         Burks v.
    Hedinger, 
    167 N.W.2d 650
    , 652 (Iowa 1969). We give weight to the district
    court’s findings of fact but we are not bound by them. 
    Id. III. Merits.
    A.     Mooring was required to give RPR notice of redemption.
    Tax sales are governed by chapter 446 of the Iowa Code. When a property
    owner fails to pay his or her taxes, the county treasurer shall sell the
    property “for the total amount of taxes, interest, fees, and costs due.” Iowa
    Code § 446.7. The purchaser receives a “certificate of purchase” from the
    county treasurer. 
    Id. § 446.29.
    The certificate represents an inchoate right
    or lien and not an interest in the property. Patterson v. May, 
    239 Iowa 602
    ,
    610, 
    29 N.W.2d 547
    , 552 (1947). The property owner has two years to
    redeem the property by paying the county treasurer the amount for which
    the property was sold as well as the amount of any taxes the certificate
    holder may have paid for subsequent years plus two percent per month
    interest. Iowa Code § 447.1. If the property is not redeemed, the certificate
    holder is entitled to a tax deed. 
    Id. § 448.1.
    However, before the county treasurer may issue a tax deed, the
    certificate holder is required to provide notice of the expiration of the right
    of redemption to “the person in possession of the parcel” and “the person in
    whose name the parcel is taxed.” 
    Id. § 447.9.
    Section 447.9 provides in
    pertinent part:
    After one year and nine months from the date of sale, . . . the
    holder of the certificate of purchase may cause to be served
    upon the person in possession of the parcel, and also upon the
    person in whose name the parcel is taxed, a notice signed by the
    certificate holder or the certificate holder’s agent or attorney,
    stating the date of sale, the description of the parcel sold, the
    name of the purchaser, and that the right of redemption will
    7
    expire and a deed for the parcel be made unless redemption is
    made within ninety days from the completed service of the notice.
    (Emphasis added.) The ninety-day period does not begin until “service is
    complete.” 
    Id. § 447.12.
    Once service of notice is completed and ninety
    days have passed, the county treasurer shall issue a tax deed upon the
    return of the certificate of purchase. 
    Id. § 448.1.
    Dohrn contends the time for redemption has not expired because RPR
    was not served with notice of redemption.1                   Mooring argues it was
    reasonable for it to rely on the public record and only provide notice to
    Dohrn and Rose. Moreover, RPR claims it was not necessary for Mooring to
    serve RPR notice because RPR had “actual notice” of the tax sale and in any
    event waived its right to notice. Thus, we must first address whether RPR
    was entitled to notice, and if so, whether the notice requirement may be
    waived or excused.
    Iowa Code section 447.9 requires all persons in possession of the
    parcel to be served with notice of the expiration of the redemption period.
    Our case law defines “possession” as “conduct that gives notice to the
    holder of the certificate of purchase in determining whether a party is in
    possession.” Pendergast v. Davenport, 
    375 N.W.2d 684
    , 690 (Iowa 1985)
    (citing 
    Burks, 167 N.W.2d at 655
    ). “Frequently, that conduct has been
    actual entry onto the land or some objectively observable use or care made
    of the land.” Nelson v. Forbes, 
    545 N.W.2d 576
    , 580 (Iowa Ct. App. 1996)
    (citing Jamison v. Knosby, 
    423 N.W.2d 2
    , 5 (Iowa 1988)).
    1 Dohrn also claims other persons who either stored personal property on the forty
    acres or used two to three acres of pasture were also entitled to notice of redemption. See
    Pendergast v. Davenport, 
    375 N.W.2d 684
    , 689 (Iowa 1985) (recognizing more than one
    person may be in possession of the property and entitled to notice of redemption). Because
    we find failure to serve notice to RPR prevented the redemption period from expiring, we
    need not determine whether these other persons were entitled to notice.
    8
    It is undisputed RPR was in possession of thirty-five of the forty acres
    when Mooring served notice of redemption on Dohrn and Rose. Mooring
    concedes this point. See Callanan v. Raymond, 
    75 Iowa 307
    , 308, 
    39 N.W. 511
    , 512 (1888) (person growing corn on farmland entitled to notice of
    redemption). However, Mooring claims a tax certificate holder need only
    make a “good faith effort” to identify and serve those persons entitled to
    notice and “need not actually succeed in having the [persons] receive that
    notice.”   In support of this contention, Mooring notes the legislature
    amended section 447.9 in 1999 so that personal service is no longer
    required. Instead, “[t]he notice shall be served by both regular mail and
    certified mail to the person’s last known address and such service is
    deemed completed when the notice by certified mail is deposited in the mail
    and postmarked for delivery.” Iowa Code § 447.9.
    We disagree this amendment excuses a tax certificate holder’s failure
    to identify the persons in possession. Our case law makes clear the onus is
    on the tax certificate holder to identify who is in possession of the property.
    See, e.g., 
    Pendergast, 375 N.W.2d at 691
    (holding telephone company who
    maintained a pay phone on the property entitled to notice); 
    Burks, 167 N.W.2d at 654
    (maintaining a pile of lumber and some broken down
    furniture behind an uninhabited home sufficient for possession and entitled
    to notice); Thompson v. Chambers, 
    229 Iowa 1265
    , 1272, 
    296 N.W. 380
    , 384
    (1941) (a neighbor who went every other day to the house in an attempt to
    exterminate vermin and another neighbor, tenant of the barn on the
    premises, were both deemed to be in possession and each entitled to notice
    of redemption); Sapp v. Walker, 
    66 Iowa 497
    , 498–99, 
    24 N.W. 13
    , 14 (1885)
    (notice required on plaintiff who demonstrated possession of empty city lot
    by cutting weeds and hauling dirt from the property); Ellsworth v. Low,
    9
    Adams & French, 
    62 Iowa 178
    , 179–80, 
    17 N.W. 450
    , 451 (1883) (notice
    required to one removing timber from an uncultivated wood lot). This
    amendment does not effectively overrule our prior holdings as Mooring
    alleges. At most, the amendment may permit a court to excuse a certificate
    holder’s failure to locate a possessor. We need not determine what due
    process requires under those circumstances. In the present case, Mooring
    simply relied on the public record to determine who was entitled to notice.
    However, we have previously held that alone is not sufficient.           See
    
    Pendergast, 375 N.W.2d at 690
    (stating “[o]ne may not presume that the
    owner is in possession as the possession ‘contemplated by the statute is
    actual, as distinguished from that which the record might show.’ ” (quoting
    
    Callanan, 75 Iowa at 309
    , 39 N.W. at 512)). Moreover, it was not reasonable
    for Mooring to rely on the lease because it was impossible to determine from
    the language of the lease whether any of the forty acres was included in the
    lease agreement. The lease agreement provided the legal description of
    Dohrn’s 312 acres and then stated the lease only pertained to the 230 acres
    of tillable ground “exclusive of dwelling and buildings.” It turns out only
    thirty-five of the forty acres were tillable and the remaining five acres
    included buildings and pasture.     Dohrn allowed his cousin to use the
    pasture and Dohrn and others stored personal property in and around the
    buildings. With the exception of Dohrn, none of these people were given
    notice of redemption. Had Mooring visited the property, it would have been
    apparent the lease did not pertain to the entire forty acres.
    Mooring contends the terminated lease was its only means to identify
    who was in possession of the property because it served notice “during the
    middle of winter” when the land was bare. However, we adhere to our case
    law which makes clear neither the time of year nor the use of the property is
    10
    an excuse for failing to identify who was in possession of the land. See, e.g.,
    
    Thompson, 229 Iowa at 1273
    , 296 N.W. at 384 (“ ‘It was not important that
    the acts indicating possession should be exercised at the season of the year
    when the deed was to issue. It was only necessary to do such acts as the
    nature of the particular occupancy required.’ ” (quoting Calahan v. Van
    Sant, 
    87 Iowa 593
    , 596, 
    54 N.W. 433
    , 434 (1893))); 
    Burks, 167 N.W.2d at 655
    (“Actual possession evidently results even if one cannot tell who is in
    possession from an observation of the premises.”         (Emphasis added.)).
    Mooring was required to conduct a diligent investigation, which may have
    required an on-site inspection and even contacting neighbors or others in
    the community.      See, e.g., 
    Burks, 167 N.W.2d at 655
    (“No reason is
    apparent why inquiry from the next-door neighbor . . . would not have
    disclosed this use of the premises was being made by Lorenzo Duke.”).
    Mooring failed to perform an adequate investigation, which would have
    revealed RPR’s leasehold interest.
    B.     Notice may not be waived or excused. Mooring and RPR
    argue even if notice to RPR was required, Mooring’s failure to provide proper
    statutory notice is irrelevant because RPR had “actual notice” and also
    waived notice. RPR learned about the tax sale when Mooring’s realtor
    visited the property in late April or early May 2003. At the time, Lane
    Pershing (one of the RPR partners) was planting his crop. The realtor asked
    Pershing if he was Dohrn. Pershing said he was Dohrn’s tenant. The
    realtor explained Dohrn no longer owned the forty acres because Mooring
    had bought that portion of the farm at a tax sale. A few days later, Shawn
    Rathje, another RPR partner, offered to pay the amount Dohrn owed for the
    taxes so that Dorhn could keep the land. The realtor told Rathje it was too
    late and the land was for sale.
    11
    We doubt one can have actual notice if he was unaware of the right to
    redeem until after such right had expired or was about to expire. In any
    event, “[w]e have consistently held that the requirement of serving notice of
    redemption is an absolute, and the statutory provisions as to notice must
    be strictly complied with before parties are deprived of their property.”
    
    Pendergast, 375 N.W.2d at 691
    ; see also 
    Burks, 167 N.W.2d at 655
    ;
    
    Thompson, 229 Iowa at 1272
    , 296 N.W. at 384; Murphy v. Hatter, 
    227 Iowa 1286
    , 1289, 
    290 N.W. 695
    , 696 (1940); Cornoy v. Wetmore, 
    92 Iowa 100
    ,
    104, 
    60 N.W. 245
    , 246 (1894).
    Although the owner has been served with a notice of
    redemption, he or she may take advantage of the certificate of
    purchase holder’s failure to notify a person in possession. The
    failure to serve a party in possession prevents the service from
    becoming complete and the right of redemption does not
    expire. Even if a court sitting in equity has deemed the
    compliance with the statute to be substantial and further
    notice unnecessary, the courts have no authority to dispense
    with the positive requirements of the statute.
    
    Pendergast, 375 N.W.2d at 691
    (citations omitted). Therefore, actual notice
    is not sufficient and RPR may not waive its right to notice. Lack of proper
    notice to RPR alone is enough to prevent the redemption period from
    expiring.2 Under section 448.1, the county treasurer is only authorized to
    issue a tax sale deed once all of the necessary parties have been served with
    notice of redemption and at least ninety days have passed. Since RPR has
    not been served with notice of redemption, the tax sale deed issued to
    2We   note the legislature has amended section 447.8 so that “A person shall not be
    entitled to maintain [an equitable action to redeem the property after a tax deed has been
    delivered] by claiming that a different person was not properly served with notice of
    expiration of right of redemption, if the person seeking to maintain the action, or the
    person’s predecessor in interest, if applicable, was properly served with the notice.” This
    amendment took effect on April 19, 2005. It is not applicable to this action because the tax
    sale took place in 2000. See Iowa Code § 447.14 (stating “[t]he law in effect at the time of
    tax sale governs redemption”).
    12
    Mooring is void. Id.; 
    Thompson, 229 Iowa at 1272
    , 296 N.W. at 384; Smith
    v. Huber, 
    224 Iowa 817
    , 823, 
    277 N.W. 557
    , 560 (1938).
    C.     Section 448.16 does not bar Dohrn’s claim. Mooring claims
    that even if it did not satisfy the notice of redemption requirements found in
    Iowa Code section 447.8, Dohrn’s action was still untimely and therefore
    barred under sections 448.15 and 448.16. After the tax deed is issued by
    the county treasurer, section 448.15 allows the holder of the deed to file an
    affidavit with the county recorder which shall describe the property and
    explain a tax deed was issued. It shall state:
    Any person claiming any right, title, or interest in or to the
    parcel adverse to the title or purported title by virtue of the tax
    deed referred to shall file a claim with the recorder of the
    county where the parcel is located, within one hundred twenty
    days after the filing of this affidavit, the claim to set forth the
    nature of the interest, also the time and manner in which the
    interest claimed was acquired.
    Iowa Code § 448.15.
    Section 448.16 states:
    When the affidavit described in section 448.15 is filed it shall
    be notice to all persons, and any person claiming any right,
    title, or interest in or to the parcel described adverse to the title
    or purported title by virtue of the tax deed referred to, shall file
    a claim with the county recorder of the county in which the
    parcel is located within one hundred twenty days after the
    filing of the affidavit, which claim shall set forth the nature of
    the interest, the time when and the manner in which the
    interest was acquired.
    At the expiration of the period of one hundred twenty days, if no
    such claim has been filed, all persons shall thereafter be forever
    barred and estopped from having or claiming any right, title, or
    interest in the parcel adverse to the tax title or purported tax title,
    and no action shall thereafter be brought to recover the parcel,
    and the then tax-title owner or owner of the purported tax title
    shall also have acquired title to the parcel by adverse
    possession.
    (Emphasis added.)
    13
    We have previously said Iowa Code section 448.16 is a statute of
    limitation. Simeon v. City of Sioux City, 
    252 Iowa 779
    , 785, 
    108 N.W.2d 506
    , 509–10 (Iowa 1961); Modern Heat & Power Co. v. Bishop Steamotor
    Corp., 
    239 Iowa 1267
    , 1278, 
    34 N.W.2d 581
    , 587 (1948); 
    Patterson, 239 Iowa at 613
    , 29 N.W.2d at 553; 
    Swanson, 238 Iowa at 697
    , 27 N.W.2d at
    23. However, this characterization is inaccurate in light of the fact chapter
    448 contains a three year statute of limitations. Iowa Code section 448.12,
    which is entitled “Limitation of actions,” states “[a]n action for the recovery
    of a parcel sold for the nonpayment of taxes shall not be brought after three
    years from the execution and recording of the county treasurer’s deed . . . .”
    Sections 448.15 and 448.16 simply provide a quick and low-cost alternative
    to bringing an action to quiet title. After the holder of the tax deed files an
    affidavit with the county recorder, section 448.16 cuts the amount of time
    to bring an action adverse to the tax title from three years to 120 days.
    Thus, it is only fair to require the tax deed holder to have a valid deed before
    he may use sections 448.15 and 448.16 to cut off another’s right in the
    property.    Larsen v. Cady, 
    274 N.W.2d 907
    , 909 (Iowa 1979) (holding
    sections 448.15 and 448.16 do not bar an action to set aside a void tax
    deed); see also 
    Smith, 224 Iowa at 826
    –27, 277 N.W. at 562 (stating because
    no notice of redemption was given, the tax deed was invalid, the property
    was subject to redemption, and the five-year bar created by Iowa Code
    section 7295 (a predecessor to section 448.12) did not apply). To hold
    otherwise would in some circumstances “deny a potential claimant all
    opportunity to protest” and violate due process.3 
    Larsen, 274 N.W.2d at 3We
     need not decide for purposes of this appeal whether the mechanism provided
    by sections 448.15 and 448.16 conforms to due process if the tax deed is valid. However,
    we do note these sections do not provide the same protections as an action to quiet title.
    For example, the tax deed holder is not required to serve notice of the 120-day affidavit
    upon those persons who were entitled to the notice of redemption. Instead, the only notice
    14
    909. As we said in Larsen, one cannot “make a void deed valid by a self-
    serving affidavit.” 
    Id. In the
    present case, it is undisputed Mooring filed an affidavit with
    the county recorder which comported with section 448.15 and no one filed a
    claim within 120 days. However, we have already determined the tax sale
    deed issued to Mooring was void because Mooring failed to provide proper
    notice of redemption to RPR. Therefore, sections 448.15 and 448.16 do not
    bar Dohrn’s action. The district court should have set aside the tax deed
    issued to Mooring. If the property is not redeemed within ninety days of
    completed service of notice of redemption, then the county treasurer may
    properly issue a tax deed.
    D.      RPR is not entitled to attorney fees. RPR claims the special
    warranty deed Mooring delivered to RPR entitled RPR to recover its litigation
    expenses against Mooring (regardless of the outcome of this case). The
    special warranty deed provided “Grantors do Hereby Covenant with
    Grantees and successors in interest to Warrant and Defend the real estate
    against the lawful claims of all persons claiming by, through or under them,
    except as may be above stated.” There were no exceptions to the foregoing
    warranty language set out in the deed.
    Although this case is based on a defect in the tax deed for which
    Mooring is responsible, we find the district court correctly denied RPR’s
    request for attorney fees and expenses because Mooring adequately
    protected RPR’s interests in this lawsuit. In Peters v. Lyons, 
    168 N.W.2d 759
    , 769 (Iowa 1969) (quoting Corbin on Contracts), we said:
    _______________________________
    provided is constructive notice via the filing of the affidavit with the county recorder.
    Moreover, the tax deed holder is not required to take possession of the property before filing
    the 120-day affidavit. See Iowa Code § 448.15.
    15
    If the plaintiff can show that the defendant’s breach of contract
    has caused litigation involving the plaintiff in the payment of
    counsel fees, court costs, and the amount of a judgment, and
    shows further that such expenditure is reasonable in amount and
    could not have been avoided by him by reasonable and prudent
    effort, he can recover damages against the defendant measured
    by the amount of these expenditures.
    (Emphasis added.) RPR’s participation in the lawsuit was duplicative of
    Mooring’s efforts and therefore unnecessary.          Moreover, RPR never
    requested Mooring to defend RPR in the action based on the special
    warranty deed.     The district court correctly denied RPR’s request for
    attorney fees.
    IV.   Conclusion.
    The tax deed issued to Mooring was void because RPR, who was in
    possession of the property, was not properly notified of its right to
    redemption. Consequently, sections 448.15 and 448.16 do not bar Dohrn’s
    claim. It was error for the district court to hold otherwise. Mooring must
    start again with its notice of redemption. The district court correctly denied
    RPR’s request for attorney fees.      We remand for further proceedings
    regarding RPR’s cross-claim against Mooring for breach of warranty, breach
    of contract, and unjust enrichment.
    AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.