Caldwell v. Bigger

90 P. 1095, 76 Kan. 49, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 357
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJune 8, 1907
DocketNo. 15,050
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 90 P. 1095 (Caldwell v. Bigger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Caldwell v. Bigger, 90 P. 1095, 76 Kan. 49, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 357 (kan 1907).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The plaintiff in this case brought an action of ejectment to recover the possession of thirteen twenty-eighths of a quarter-section of land. His right to possession depended upon ownership. The defense was that the plaintiff never had title, but if such were not the case whatever rights he once possessed were extinguished by a judgment quieting title against him and by a sheriff’s deed executed and delivered in consummation of an execution sale based upon a judgment against him. -

For the purposes of this decision it may be conceded that, prior to October, 1893, the plaintiff was the owner of the interest which he asserts in the land in controversy, and attention may be directed entirely to the sufficiency of the defenses urged.

In October, 1888, the Hutchinson Investment Company, claiming to be the owner in fee simple of the land, and actually being the owner of a fifteen twenty-eighths interest in it, platted it into lots, blocks, streets and alleys, and filed a copy of the plat with the register of deeds of the county as the Hutchinson Investment [51]*51Company’s Ninth Addition to the city of Hutchinson. The certificate to the plat specifically stated that it embraced the northeast quarter of section 12, township 23 south,, range .6 west of the sixth principal meridian. Thereafter the land was shown upon the tax-rolls by lot and block descriptions. It was assessed by the city assessor, taxes were levied against it in that form, and in October, 1893, a tax deed for substantially all the. lots in the addition was issued to E. L. Meyer and duly recorded.

At different times proceedings were instituted to bring the land covered by the plat within the limits of' the city of Hutchinson. In the year 1890 the plaintiff was in Hutchinson, having business which called him there, and saw that the land had been laid out in streets. Deeds of portions of it by lot and block numbers were made and recorded and possession was taken under them.

In January, 1894, the grantee in the tax deed brought a suit to quiet his title against the plaintiff. In the petition it was alleged that Meyer was the owner of the legal and equitable title to the land and in the actual and peaceable possession of it; that the plaintiff claimed an interest in it, the true source of which was stated; but it was alleged such claim was a cloud upon Meyer’s paramount rights, and he prayed that he be declared to be the owner and holder of the legal and equitable title, that the claim of the plaintiff be declared void, and that his title be quieted against the plaintiff. Service was made by publication. The affidavit was in due form, and the notice was regular in every respect, except that the land was described as lots in blocks of the Hutchinson Investment Company’s Ninth Addition to the city of Hutchinson, according to the recorded plat thereof. The plaintiff defaulted, and the relief prayed for in the petition and described in' the notice was granted in full. No proceeding in error was instituted to reverse, vacate or modify the decree, and no attempt was made within the three-year statute [52]*52of limitations to open it because based on publication service. The question is, therefore, if the Meyer title is open to question in the plaintiff’s ejectment suit.

Attack by means of ejectment is collateral (O’Keefe v. Behrens, 73 Kan. 469, 473, 85 Pac. 555), and the judgment declaring the plaintiff to be without title and declaring Meyer to have the legal and equitable title to the land is conclusive, unless some fact altogether destructive of jurisdiction was wanting in the proceedings. The only claimed defect is that regarding the description of the land in the notice.

The statute provides that when service is made by publication the notice shall state the nature of the judgment to be taken. To make the notice perfect real estate to be affected by the judgment should be described. But it need not describe the real estate at all, to be good against a collateral attack, if it shows even inferentially or imperfectly that real estate will be affected. The decision in Garrett v. Struble, 57 Kan. 508, 46 Pac. 943, is conclusive upon this question. In that case the notice read as follows:

“Said petition will be taken as true, and judgment rendered in said action against said defendant, William J. Struble, for the sum ■ of eight hundred and twenty-eight and 6tioo dollars, with interest thereon at the rate of 7 per cent, per annum from the 23d day of July, 1887, and for the sale of certain real property attached in this action.” (Page 508.)

In the opinion is was said:

“The only question which we deem necessary to consider is whether said notice was void or not. It was complete in all respects, except those pointed out by the trial court. In these it was irregular, defective, and at least voidable. ' It could not have withstood a direct attack, because it did not sufficiently state the nature of the judgment which would be rendered upon default of answer. It indicated the amount of the .judgment that would be taken and that certain real property attached in the action would be sold, but it did not describe the land.
“As against a direct attack the notice was insuffi[53]*53cient under the authority of Adolph Cohen v. C. B. Trowbridge, 6 Kan. 385, and Cackley v. Smith, 38 Kan. 450, 17 Pac. 156. . . . In Harris v. Claflin, 36 Kan. 543, 13 Pac. 830, it was held that if there is a total want of evidence upon a vital point in the affidavit for publication the court acquires no jurisdiction by publication of the summons; but where there is not an entire omission to state some material fact, but it is inferentially or insufficiently set forth, the proceedings are merely voidable. The same principle as nearly as may be should be applied as the test of the sufficiency of a publication notice. If there is a total failure -to state in the notice any material matter required by section 74 of the civil code the service is void; but if there is not an entire omission of such material matter, and it is inferentially or insufficiently set forth, the notice is merely voidable and not void. Following this rule, we hold that the notice in the case of Garrett against Struble was 'irregular, defective, and voidable, but that it was mot void, and therefore must be held sufficient as against a collateral attack.” (Page 510.)

It is not necessary that land be described in a notice by publication by the government description or by lot or block number. All that is required is that any person of common understanding may be able to locate and identify it by following up the notice.

In this case the notice gave a true description. The land had been platted as the Hutchinson Investment Company’s Ninth Addition to the city of Hutchinson. The plat was valid on its face, its dedication had been accepted by the public, and it had been adopted as the basis of official conduct without protest on the part of the plaintiff.- Even if the plaintiff might have impeached it, it had not been vacated, and it was a de facto plat, which served to -identify the ■ property so that no man giving heed to it could be misgqided. Besides this, the notice described the land as it was in fact publicly known and as the plaintiff should have known it from the suggestive fact noted above which had obtruded itself upon him. “Notice” by publication is sufficient, under the statute, to give the court

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 1095, 76 Kan. 49, 1907 Kan. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-bigger-kan-1907.