Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Allfree

20 N.W. 779, 64 Iowa 500
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 9, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 20 N.W. 779 (Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Allfree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway Co. v. Allfree, 20 N.W. 779, 64 Iowa 500 (iowa 1884).

Opinion

Beck, J.

I. The undisputed facts of the case are as follows:

1. The land in' controversy was entered at the proper United States land office in 1854, by one Easley, and, in 1856, this entry was set aside by the action of the proper department of the government.

2. In 1858 the register of the land office for the district in which the land is situated certified to the county of Jasper, wherein the land is located, its entry.

3. The land was taxed by the county for the year 1857 and subsequent years continuously, and was sold for taxes in 1858 and in 1862, and separate tax deeds were made to the [502]*502respective purchasers at these sales. There was an action prosecuted against the unknown owner of the land, under the statute then in force, wherein the right of the owner was foreclosed by a decree of the court in which the proceeding was had.

4. By quit-claim deeds successively issued, defendant acquired title under these tax sales and deeds.

5. Defendant’s grantor, subsequent to his purchase, entered into the possession of the land, and made improvements thereon by digging a well, breaking'part of the land and fencing portions of it. The defendant continued the improvement of the land. Prior to March 10, 1871, thirty or thirty-five acres were broken, a part of the plowing having been done upon each “forty,” the land being a fractional oneeightli of a section, containing eighty-seven and sixty-six one-hundredth acres.

6. March 10, 1871, the land in question was certified to plaintiff upon selections before made under the acts of congress granting lands to plaintiff It becomes unnecessary to state more particularly the facts upon which plaintiff’s title is based, or to refer more specifically to the legislation upon which the title rests, as we assume, for the purpose of this case, that plaintiff acquired a valid title under the grants from the government. We assume, too, that plaintiff did not acquire title prior to the certification of the land under'the grants, which was, as we have just stated, on the tenth day of March, 1871.

7. The regularity of the proceedings under which the tax deeds to defendant’s grantors were made, and of the foreclosure proceedings prosecuted upon one of them above referred to,' are not the subject of dispute, further than is involved-in the claim of plaintiff that they are void for the reason that, at the time of the levy of the taxes, the sales of the land, and execution of the tax deeds, the land was not subject to taxation, because the title thereof was in the United States. The sufficiency of the form of the proceedings is not disputed.

[503]*503II. The defendant interposes the statute of limitations as a bar to plaintiff’s right to recover the land. Eeplying to this defense, the plaintiff insists that, as the title to the land was in the United States at the time of the inception and consummation of defendant’s title, defendant cannot invoke the statute to protect his possession of the land. In support of this position, it is insisted that, as the government held the title, the tax proceedings and tax deed were utterly void, and do not give color of title to defendant, and that he and' his grantors held possession of the land as mere trespassers, and the law will presume that, their possession was under and in subordination to the title, and not adverse thereto. "We will proceed to examine the questions thus raised by plaintiff.

I. STATUTE Of tiHetohmtitutes color of tltleA claim of color of title may be based upon void acts, proceedings and deeds. They may have in law no effect, yet, being in the form which, in the absence of mat- ° ^ers invalidating them, would render them of effect, they have the semblance of regularity, which is sufficient to support the pretense that they confer title or right. The term “color” means “ semblance,” “showj” “pretense,” “appearance^” and implies, in the language of the law, that the thing to which it is applied has not the real character imputed to it. lienee, to give “ color of title,” in pleading, is to allege a fictitious matter, which gives the appearance of title, and is avoided by allegations setting up the real and valid title. So, in criminal law, the term “color of office” implies “a wrong committed by an officer under the pretended authority of his office.” Bouvier’s Dictionary.

The term “ color of title,” used to designate a claim of title under which lands are held that will support the defense based upon the statute of limitations, implies that the title thus described is not valid, but is claimed to be by the party holding under it. Invalid titles are not distinguished by the consideration of the sources and reasons of their invalidity. If a title fails to confer the right of property upon the claim[504]*504ant, it is invalid. If it be invalid because the grantor in the instrument had no title, or had no authority to convey the title, or for any other reason, it is void. In the case before us, the tax deeds pretend to convey the title to the land in question. They fail to do so because the title of the land was in the United States. They are no more invalid — they are no more completely void, than tax deeds issued under any other circumstances which would be the ground of failure to pass the title. There are no degrees of invalidity of deeds. If they fail to convey title for any reason, they are all equally void as to their effect. It is true that a deed may be iuvalid because not of sufficient form, or because it was issued without authority, while another instrument may be invalid for the reason that the grantor did not hold the title. There are different reasons for invalidity; not different degrees of invalidity. In neither case would the deed convey title, but in each it would constitute color of title. The cause of the invalidity of a deed may operate upon its effect beyond its insufficiency to convey title. A deed executed by one under disability would neither convey title nor bind the grantor by its covenants. A deed executed by one eonqietent to convey, but having no title, would pass no estate, yet would bind the grantor by its covenants. Yet, as an instrument of conveyance, each would be equally invalid. The words “valid” and “invalid,” as we have used them, refer to the effect of the deed as to the conveyance of title.

The defendant and his grantors claim title under the tax-deeds. They were invalid, void, on the ground that the officers of the county had no authority to convey the land, for the reason that it was not taxable. But their invalidity for this reason does not prevent them from being regarded as the foundation for a pretense, show, appearance, color of title. Whatever may be the source of the invalidity of a deed, if it purports to convey land, and “ in form passes what purports to be the title, it gives color of title.” Hall v. Law, 102 U. [505]*505S., 461; Rigor v. Frye, 62 Ill., 507; Hinkley v. Green, 52 Id., 223; Molton v. Henderson, 62 Ala., 426; Edgerton v. Bird, 6 Wis., 527.

This court has held that a tax deed, void upon its face, constitutes color of title upon which the statute of limitations may be invoked. Colvin v. McCune, 39 Iowa, 502.

grantorao£St government. III.

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Bluebook (online)
20 N.W. 779, 64 Iowa 500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chicago-rock-island-pacific-railway-co-v-allfree-iowa-1884.