Building & Loan Ass'n v. Sohn

46 S.E. 222, 54 W. Va. 101, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 101
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 14, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 46 S.E. 222 (Building & Loan Ass'n v. Sohn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Building & Loan Ass'n v. Sohn, 46 S.E. 222, 54 W. Va. 101, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 101 (W. Va. 1903).

Opinion

POEEENBARGER, JUDGE;

On the 12th day of December, 1899, Eathan Sohn purchased a lot in the city of Bluefield, as delinquent for the non-payment of the taxes thereon, at a sale made by the sheriff of Mercer County in the memorandum and receipt given to him by the sheriff and in the sheriff’s report of sale, said lot is described as having beep, sold in the name of Irene Cooper for the non-payment of the taxes thereon for the year 1891, as being thirty-five by one hundred and twenty feet in size, and situated in Bluefield. In the memorandum and receipt the quantity of land sold is designated as uy% of lot 35 x 120 Bluefield,” and in the report of sale as lot.”

On the 22nd day of December, 1900, J. W. Bailey, deputy for E. W. Bailey, surveyor of lands for said county, made a report to the clerk of the county court, which was admitted to record, describing the lot by its location and bounds, and record evidence of title, and further showing that there is a house situated on it, that it is impossible to lay off, to said Sohn, the interest purchased by him, without running through said house, and that he, the surveyor, had made no division of said lot.

On the 20th day of February, 1901, the clerk of the county [104]*104court of said county made a deed to Sohn, reciting the delinquency and sale of land, the purchase by Sohn of “an undivided onc-half interest” in said lot, the lapse of more than one year since the-time of said purchase, the non-redemption of said lot, and the report made by the surveyor.

This suit was brought by the Old Dominion Building and Loan Association to set aside said deed as illegal and void for the following reasons: First, that, under his purchase, Sohn was not entitled to have a deed for an undivided one-half of,the lot, but only for one-half of the lot according to area, not value, and so laid off as not to include the improvements, if practicable. Second, that Hugh G. Woods, before whom the deed was acknowledged as a notary public, had, before the date of said acknowledgment, vacated his office by accepting the office of judge of the criminal court of said county and had no authority to take the acknowledgment- Third, that, in fact, said lot was not delinquent, for non-payment of taxes for the year 1897, as all taxes thereon for said year had been paid.

There was a demurrer to the bill which the court overruled, and then the defendant answered, and depositions were taken and, upon the hearing, the plaintiff tendered the amount of taxes, interest and costs which the defendant had paid to the sheriff, with interest at twelve per cent per annum on the aggregate, and offered to pay any additional costs or charges to which the defendant might be entitled, which tender and offer the defendant declined, and thereupon the court entered a decree setting aside the deed, from which decree the defendant has appealed.

In determining whether the purchaser was entitled to a deed for an undivided one-half of the lot, it is necessary to consider the statute governing the sales of delinquent town lots and the execution of deeds therefor. As they now stand, sections 8, 17, 19 and 24- of chapter 31 of the Code, relating to these subjects, are inconsistent and contradictory. To be more explicit, it may be said that section 17 is contradictory of the other sections named. Section 8, prescribing what shall be sold, says: “The sale shall be of each tract of land, or city, village, or town lot, or of such separate quantities or parts of such tract, or of such undivided interest in such lot as shall be sufficient to satisfy the whole of the taxes.” This statute separates real estate into two [105]*105classes, tracts of land and lots. Tracts may be sold in their entirety, or, separate quantities, or parts thereof, may be sold. City, village or town lots may be sold in their entirety or undivided interests therein may bo sold, but there is ho provision for the sale of separate quantities or parts of town lots.

Past legislation on this subject malees this interpretation of the statute clear. Section 6 of chapter 37 of the Code of 1860 reads as follows: “The sale of tracts of land shall be of each tract separately, or of such quantity or part thereof, as shall be sufficient to satisfy the taxes thereon, with interest and commission as aforesaid, and its proportion of said expense; and the sale of town lots, shall be of each lot separately, or of such undivided interest therein as shall be sufficient to satisfy the taxes thereon, with such interest, commission, and proportion of expense.”

This section was amended by chapter 206 of the Acts of 1871, and made to read in part as follows: “The sale'shall be of such tract of land, or town lot, or of such separate quantities or parts of such tract or undivided interest in such lot as shall bo sufficient to satisfy,” etc. Chapter 117 of the Acts of 1872-3 re-enacted said section as found in -the Acts of 1871, in so far as it relates to the sale; and chapter 130 of the Acts of 1882 amended and re-enacted said section 8 and made it read as it now stands in the Code. That section, read in the light of said previous legislation, and the history of legislation concerning the mode of making sale of delinquent land and lots, as well as by its terms, clearly means that each town lot shall be sold as a whole or an undivided interest therein shall be sold, and gives no authority for selling a separate quantity or part thereof.

Section 19 of chapter 31 of the Code prescribes the form of the deed to be made by the clerk of the county court to the purchaser in the case of a sale of a tract of land or a part thereof. The final clause of that section says: “If the purchase was of a city, town or village lot, or a part thereof, or an undivided interest therein, the above form must be varied according to the facts.”

Section 24 says that a deed may be made for an undivided interest in a town lot. The first part of that section reads as follows: “Where two or more tracts or parts of tracts, or city, town or village lots, charged to the same person, or persons, [106]*106with, taxes, for the same year, or years, shall have been sold for taxes and purchased by the same person at snch sale, the purchaser thereof, or his heirs, devisees or assigns may obtain from the clerk of the county court several deeds for each tract or part of a tract, and city, town or village lot, or undivided interest therein, or for any number of them less than the whole, or he may obtain one deed for the whole of them as he may prefer; but every such deed shall describe each tract and part of a tract, and each lot and undivided interest in a lot .separately ; and such deed when so made, for several tracts and parts of tracts, and several lots and undivided interests in several lots, shall be as valid and as effectual to pass to the grantee therein the title, legal and equitable to every such tract, and part of a tract, and to every such lot and undivided interest in a lot, as a separate deed for each would have been if such separate deed had been made to such grantee.”

The form of deed prescribed by section 19, applicable to tracts of land, provides for the conveyance to the purchaser of “a tract of land (or-acres, part of a tract of land, or the undivided-part of a tract of land, as the case may be,)” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.E. 222, 54 W. Va. 101, 1903 W. Va. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/building-loan-assn-v-sohn-wva-1903.