Davis v. Chapman

24 F. 674, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2146
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana
DecidedAugust 13, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 24 F. 674 (Davis v. Chapman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Chapman, 24 F. 674, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2146 (circtdin 1885).

Opinion

Woods, J.

Ejectment to recover the undivided half of certain town lots in Warsaw, Kosciusko county, Indiana. Upon these lots are the Kirtley House and Kirtley House livery-stables; the house and stables [675]*675being separated by a public alley which divides the lots into two distinct parcels. The entire property was owned in 1858 by Joseph Popham, and afterwards by one Kirtloy, who, before August 28, 1873, had conveyed an undivided half to the defendant, Chapman, who still owns it, and on that day conveyed the other half to Charles Ford, who, on the twenty-second day of July, 1875, mortgaged his interest to Kelson Davis. This mortgage was foreclosed December 11, 1875, by order of the Kosciusko circuit court; and by virtue of the decree the interest of Ford was duly sold on the twenty-second day of January, 1876, to the plaintiff, Rebecca Davis, assignee of the decree, who, after the expiration of a year, received a sheriffs deed, whereby she obtained a perfect legal title, which she still holds, unless it has been divested or defeated by reason of the facts yet to be stated.

On the eighth day of February, 1875, Ford’s half of the property was sold to Chapman at tax sale for $190.75, delinquent taxes of the years 1873-74, and the usual form of certificate of sale issued to the purchaser. The sale was of the undivided half of the entire property, and not of the different parcels separately. After two years Chapman surrendered his certificate and received an auditor’s deed, and that being defective because not witnessed by the county treasurer, ho took a second deed, dated December 30, 1877. On May 1, 1875, Chapman, being a tenant in common with Ford, claims lo have taken exclusive possession of the entire property under and by virtue of his certificate of purchase at tax sale, and to havo continued to hold by the same right to the present time. From the time of taking possession as stated, lie received of the lessee of the entire property, who, it is claimed, attorned to him at that date, rent at the rate of $100 per month. It does not appear that, upon taking or while holding the possession, ho made any open or notorious claim of right hostile to his co-tenant, or that the co-tenant in fact had notice of his hostile intent or claim. On March 18, 1875, Chapman obtained in the Kosciusko circuit court a decree of foreclosure against Joseph Popham of a mortgage executed by Popham in 1858, upon the entire property; and on October 9, 1875, in the same court obtained a judgment against Ford upon notes alleged to have been given by Ford to Kirtloy upon the purchase price of the part of the property conveyed by Kirtloy to Ford, and at the same time obtained a decree declaring a vendor’s lien upon that part of the property for the amount of the judgment; and by virtue of these decrees the property described in each was duly and separately sold by the sheriff, and bid off by Chapman, who, on November 15, 1875, received, and caused to be recorded, sheriff’s deeds made in consummation of the sales. On the seventeenth day of February, 1876, the plaintiff instituted in the Kosciusko circuit court an action against the defendant to have the said decrees, and the sales made thereunder, annulled as against her, and on the second day of April, 1880, obtained a decree to that effect, [676]*676which remains in force. ' On May 6, 1880, the plaintiff demanded of the defendant to be admitted into possession and recognized as his co-tenant of the property. This the defendant refused. The complaint in this case was filed May 14, 1884.

The tax law of 1872, in force at the time of the tax sale mentioned, contains the- following provisions: Sec. 199, (in effect,) that two or more parcels belonging to one person shall not be sold together, hut each parcel must be sold separately to the highest bidder. Sec. 203: The certificate of sale “shall entitle the holder to the possession of the premises therein described.” Sec. 250: “No action for the recovery of real property sold for non-payment of taxes shall lie, unless the same be brought within five years after the date of the sale.” Sec. 256: “If any conveyance shall prove to be invalid and ineffectual to convey title, the lien which the state had on such land shall remain in force, and shall be transferred by such deed to the grantee, and vested in him, his heirs and assigns,” etc.

Upon these facts counsel for Chapman insist that he has a complete defense under his tax title in the statute of limitation. To this counsel for the plaintiff reply (1) that the tax sale was invalid and gave the purchaser only a lien upon the property, and that that lien was merged and lost in the title which Chapman obtained by his purchases under the decrees against Popham and Ford; (2) that within four or six months after the sale Chapman received rents enough to cancel his lien, and by law was bound to apply the rents in that way; and (3) that, being a tenant in common with Ford and with the plaintiff, Chapman could not, under a tax sale, acquire a hostile title.

While the statute provides that a certificate of sale for taxes shall entitle the holder to possession, the supreme court of the state has explicitly decided that the certificate does not confer the right of possession unless the sale was regular and valid. Barton v. McWhinney, 85 Ind. 481. The case of Ethel v. Batchelder, 90 Ind. 520, was decided on the assumption that the sale was regular; and in the opinion it is said obiter that the right of possession under the certificate “carried with it the right to receive the rents of such real estate, and the absolute ownership of such rents, without liability to account therefor;” but this language, when interpreted and restricted by the facts of the case, means no more than the actual decision made, and that is, that when possession has been taken under a certificate of tax sale in all respects valid, a redemption from the sale cannot be had by an enforced application of the rents or rental value of the property, but “only in the manner prescribed by the statute.” An explicit statutory mode of redemption having been provided, it was not for the court, in the absence, at least, of averment of insolvency of the holder of the certificate, or of other showing of equitable necessity, to say that redemption might be effected by an accounting for and application of rents and profits. The question of liability for rents after redemption, accomplished in the statutory way, was not before the court; and [677]*677it is hardly probable that it will over be held that the holder of a tax title, even if valid, who has had possession under a certificate, after receiving back, within the time given for redemption, the amount of his bid, with the large penalties and interest allowed him by tho statute, will bo entitled to retain as his own rents and profits received or enjoyed during or for the time of his possession. The statute gives him the right to take possession under his certificate, and provides that within two years there may be a redemption, but is silent in respect to rents and profits in case redemption is effected. Tho plain and just legal inference in such cases is that the redemption shall relate back to the date of sale; and this done, accountability for rents follows. This, it seems to me, would be tho rule in respect to sales upon execution and decrees of court, (sales on which something like the value of the property is supposed to be bid,) if the law, saying nothing of rents, gave the purchaser immediate possession under his certificate of purchase, subject to the owner’s right of redemption within one year as now allowed.

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Bluebook (online)
24 F. 674, 1885 U.S. App. LEXIS 2146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-chapman-circtdin-1885.