Chickering v. Faile

38 Ill. 342
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 38 Ill. 342 (Chickering v. Faile) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chickering v. Faile, 38 Ill. 342 (Ill. 1865).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

After again reviewing and giving the questions decided in this case when previously before us a careful consideration, we see no reason to be dissatisfied with the conclusions there announced. The portions of the premises then held not to be subject to redemption by reason of the bar of the statute of limitations, we must consider as being still exempt from redemption. We therefore feel it unnecessary to again discuss the questions then presented and passed upon by the court.

When the case was before us, as reported in 29 Ill. 294, it was held that the color of title and payment of taxes concurred as to Lee’s interest in the north-east quarter of section twenty-nine for the full period of seven years, and that the bar to a redemption was complete. It is now objected, that for the years of 1847, 1848,1849 and 1850, the taxes were not legally assessed, and that without including the payment for those years, there was not a payment of all taxes legally assessed for the period of seven successive years, as to Lee’s title. The defect relied upon is the want of some word or character annexed to the valuation to indicate the sum in dollars and cents. In a proceeding to divest title by summary action, it has been held, that such a defect in the judgment for the taxes rendered the sale void. But this is a different question. We are not prepared to hold that such an assessment is void, as, if it is, all the acts performed under the assessment' would render the officers wrong doers, and subject them to an action for taxes collected on the assessment, and the collector a trespasser for distraining property for the collection of such taxes. We do not regard this omission as rendering the assessment illegal, nor the tax extended upon it, although there may have been nothing but the numerals to indicate its amount.

We are not prepared to hold that the want of such a character in the assessment roll to designate the amount of the valuation or the taxes will render the assessment, or the collector’s warrant, invalid and illegal. We see that the officers of the law acted upon these rolls and warrants as legal and binding, and the owners admitted them to be legal and paid the taxes assessed upon their property, and we think that is sufficient. The officers of the law claimed, in good faith, of property holders certain sums to be due for taxes which they admitted and paid. No person but the parties in interest has a right to object. We are not disposed to apply the want of a word or character to the numerals, to indicate' the sum of taxes due, as a defect' to anything prior to the application of the collector for a judgment against delinquent lands, and would not even apply it to the judgment were it not that the judgment must find the sum for which it is rendered. To all of the proceedings prior to the judgment for taxes all persons know what the numerals represent, the amounts, and act upon them accordingly. And persons might so understand in a judgment, but we understand the law to be inflexible that the judgment must, in terms, find the sum due.

It is insisted that the payment of taxes on the remaining tract, the south-west quarter of section twenty, did not concur with the color of title, for the period of limitation. As to Lee’s interest in that tract, a bill had been exhibited for a partition, before there had been seven years’ payment of taxes under color of title. A decree finding the interests of the several tenants in common and directing partition, was rendered, commissioners were appointed to allot the several interests of the tenants in common, a division was made setting apart to each his portion in severalty, which was reported to the court and approved, but deeds were not interchangeably made by the tenants, so as to complete the partition and vest the legal title in the portions assigned to each in severalty

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38 Ill. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chickering-v-faile-ill-1865.