Culbertson v. Munson

4 N.E. 57, 104 Ind. 451, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 7
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1886
DocketNo. 12,283
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 4 N.E. 57 (Culbertson v. Munson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culbertson v. Munson, 4 N.E. 57, 104 Ind. 451, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 7 (Ind. 1886).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

The plaintiffs brought this action to quiet title to a certain one hundred and sixty acre tract of land in Marshall county.

The defendants, after filing a general denial to the complaint, filed a cross complaint in two paragraphs, in both of which they sought to quiet the title to the same land in themselves.

In the first paragraph of the cross complaint, it was averred that the cross complainants were the owners, and in possession of the land described, and that the plaintiffs were asserting an unfounded title to it.

The second paragraph rested the right of the cross complainants specifically on a tax sale, and a title which it was alleged had accrued to them thereunder. It was also averred in the second paragraph that the cross complainants had made lasting and valuable improvements on the land while in possession under the tax deed. As alternative relief, this paragraph prayed that, in the event the cross complainants’ title should prove defective, the court ascertain the amount due them for taxes, penalties, improvements, etc., and decree a lien in their favor for the amount.

Upon the final trial, it was decreed that the plaintiffs were the owners of the land, and that their title should be quieted, subject to a lien in favor of the cross complainants for the sum of $640.80, for taxes, interest, penalties, etc., and in the further sum of $300 for improvements.

The court below having overruled the plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial, they have brought the record here on appeal, and assign for error the overruling of their demurrer to the cross complaint, and overruling their motion for a new trial.

The first paragraph of the cross complaint is not assailed. It is insisted, however, that the second is bad, for the reason that in specifying the character of title under which they claim, the cross complainants have not averred all the requisites of a good title.

It may be true that the paragraph under consideration was [453]*453not sufficient as a complaint to quiet title. The fact must be kept in view, however, that part of the relief demanded was, if the title asserted therein should prove defective, that the court should decree a lien for the taxes paid, together with the interest and penalties thereon and the improvements made by the defendants. It was, therefore, sufficient as to part of the relief demanded, and when a complaint is so far sufficient a demurrer to it is properly overruled. Locke v. Catlett, 96 Ind. 291, and cases cited.

It is argued that upon the facts stated the sale for taxes was unauthorized and void. If this view were conceded, yet, since the auditor issued his deed upon such sale, and the sale does not appear to have been invalid for any of the causes enumerated in section 6495, R. S. 1881, the holders of the deed were entitled to enforce the State’s lien for taxes which, although the sale was utterly void, was nevertheless transferred to them. Locke v. Catlett, supra.

It appeared in evidence that one Jones was at one time the owner of the tax title, and that, at the request of Fred W. Munson, he transferred the title thus held to Stephen Mun-son, through whom the defendants claim. The sale from Jones to Stephen Munson was negotiated by Fred W. Mun-son. Stephén Munson subsequently transferred his interest to Fred W. and Louis L. Munson. The plaintiff offered to prove by Jones that Fred W. Munson, at the time the sale to Stephen Munson was negotiated, represented that he was acting for his (Munson’s) wife and the plaintiffs, in making such purchase, and that he was making it for their benefit, and that by reason of these representations Jones was induced to sell his tax title for less than was actually due according to law. This evidence the court excluded, the defendants having withdrawn any objection to it.

It is argued that it was a legitimate defence to the appellees’ claim to enforce a lien on the land for taxes, to show that they acquired their claim by misrepresentations made to Jones; that because Fred W. Munson, in negotiating the, [454]*454sale from Jones to Stephen Munson, represented that he was acting on behalf of his wife and for the plaintiffs, Stephen Munson took the tax claim in trust for the plaintiffs, and that the transfer from Stephen Munson to Fred W. and his brother made them nothing more than trustees. The case of Gwaltney v. Wheeler, 26 Ind. 415, is relied on.

We do not think the case cited controls the case before us. In that case the facts were that Reitz and Haney recovered judgment against Wheeler, with a decree of foreclosure of a mortgage on real estate. Reitz and Haney sold the real estate upon the judgment, becoming the purchasers at the sale. Wheeler, the judgment debtor, .about this time entered the military service of the United States and went to the seat of war. While Wheeler was thus absent, the appellant Gwaltney went to Reitz and Haney and fraudulently pretended to them that he was interested in the welfare of Wheeler’s wife, and desired to procure the real estate, or the proceeds thereof, for her benefit, and to secure to himself a small debt due him from Wheeler, and proposed to purchase the land from Reitz and Haney for the benefit of Wheeler’s wife. He agreed to pay Reitz and Haney $400, .take an assignment of the certificates of sale, sell the property, and out of the proceeds retain the $400 paid them, the debt due himself, amounting to $40, and pay the balance to Wheeler’s wife. Reitz and Haney were moved by this promise and pretence, and in consideration thereof assigned the certificates to Gwaltney. Gwaltney afterwards sold the land for $2,800, and failed to pay any part thereof to Wheeler’s wife.

It was held that Gwaltney, having obtained the land for a nominal price, upon an agreement that he would sell it, and out of the price which he might receive deduct the amount he paid for it and the sum due him, would be compelled to comply with his agreement, and it was accordingly enforced in Mrs. Wheeler’s behalf.

In the case before us, it is not claimed that there was any agreement that the plaintiffs were to receive the benefit of the [455]*455purchase, by having the lien for taxes surrendered to them without compensation. It might well have been, under the circumstances, that Fred W. Munson would have been held estopped from setting up title to the land, after having purchased the tax lien on the representation that he was doing so in the interest of the plaintiffs and for their protection. But as it did not appear that he was in fact the agent of the plaintiffs, and having paid for the tax claims with his own money, he and those claiming through him were entitled to enforce it for the amount actually due.

If it had been shown,.or if the plaintiffs had proposed to show, that Jones sold his claim for a sum less than the amount actually due, upon an agreement that the plaintiffs were to have the benefit of the reduced price, we think the plaintiffs might have availed themselves of the contract. The evidence offered does not go to this extent. The proposition was simply to show that Fred W. Munson represented that his wife and the plaintiffs were the owners of the land, and that he was negotiating for the tax lien in their interest, and that Jones transferred it to Stephen Munson for a sum less than was actually due him on that account.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E. 57, 104 Ind. 451, 1886 Ind. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culbertson-v-munson-ind-1886.