Dunnington v. Hudson

116 S.W. 1083, 217 Mo. 93, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 268
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 25, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 S.W. 1083 (Dunnington v. Hudson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunnington v. Hudson, 116 S.W. 1083, 217 Mo. 93, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 268 (Mo. 1909).

Opinions

GRAVES, J.

By the first count of his petition the plaintiff sues in ejectment for the possession of eighty acres of land in. Benton county, in said petition particularly described. By a second count he asks the court to declare title as provided by section 650', Revised Statutes 1899.

Defendants answer each count separately. Answering the first count they first plead by way of general denial. Further answering said first count they plead that they are in the possession of said premises and went into the possession thereof in 1897 under a deed from Annie M. Boeschen and N. B. Petts to Mary M. Hudson, and during all said time were in the lawful possession thereof, and then invoke by appropriate terms section 4268, Revised Statutes 1899, being the thirty-year Statute of Limitations. The prayer was that the title be declared to be in Mary M. Hudson, and for all proper relief.

The answer to the second count was in terms the same as that to the first count, and the prayer the same.

By a third count in the answer the defendants pleaded that they had placed improvements on the premises in the sum of $200, and since the year 1896 had paid the taxes thereon, all of which had been done in good faith and under the belief that she was the rightful owner, and by prayer it is asked that in the event the court should find for the plaintiff she have judgment for such improvement and taxes.

Reply was general denial.

The trial court in entering its judgment made the following findings of fact, which accord with the evidence.

[97]*97“Now on this day come the parties plaintiff and defendant by their attorneys, and a jury having been waived by both parties, plaintiff and defendants, this cause is now submitted to the court for final determination, and the court after hearing all the evidence adduced by both the respective parties and being fully advised in the premises doth find that Lucy S. Patrick is the common source of title. That she allowed the taxes to become delinquent upon the land in suit for the years 1869 to 1876 inclusive; that suit was brought by the collector of Benton .county, in the name of the State, to enforce the State’s lien therefor; that judgment was rendered for the amount of the taxes, and that on the 5th day of May, 1881, the land was sold by the sheriff, under a special execution for said taxes and costs; that at the said sale Waldo P. Johnson became the purchaser of said land for the price and sum of $4, and a deed was executed, conveying the said land to him. All the proceedings in this tax suit appear to be regular. The plaintiff claims title by mesne conveyances from the said Waldo P. Johnson. The defendant, Mary M. Hudson, claims title under a subsequent deed, executed by the sheriff of Benton county on a suit for delinquent taxes against the said Lucy S. Patrick, resulting from a sale in an action against the said Lucy S. Patrick, which suit was instituted several years after the deed to Waldo P. Johnson, plaintiff’s grantor, was recorded. I find that neither the plaintiff nor his grantors paid any taxes on said land for more than thirty-one years prior to the institution of. this suit. I find further that this land was uninclosed and unimproved, and not in the peaceable possession of any one until taken possession of by the defendant, Mary M. Hudson, in December, 1897, and that on that day the said Mary M. Hudson went into actual possession of the land under her tax deed, and has ever since, with her codefend[98]*98ants, been in actual possession of said land, claiming to own tbe same. I find that about the year 1894-5 one Henry P. Lay, as an agent for tbe grantor of tbe plaintiff, who at that time claimed to own tbe land, went upon tbe land and spent several hours thereon for the purpose of inspecting the land for his principal, and seeing that no trespass was committed thereon; that he, after going over the land, requested a neighbor to keep an eye on the land for the purpose of preventing trespass.”

The trial court found against the plaintiff upon both counts of the petition, and decreed the title to be in Mary M. Hudson, and adjudged the costs against plaintiff. After timely motion for new trial had proved unavailing, the plaintiff duly appealed, and hence the cause is here.

I.' The first question presented is as to whether or not there has been a payment of taxes by the plaintiff or his grantors within thirty years next preceding this suit. Lucy S. Patrick is the common source of title. May 5, 1881, under a judgment against Lucy S. Patrick for taxes for the years 1869 to 1876, inclusive, the property was sold and bought in by Judge Waldo P. Johnson for $4, the costs in the tax proceeding aggregating more than $27. It appears that no taxes were ever paid by Lucy S. Patrick or her subsequent grantees from a date prior to 1869 up to this suit, unless the payment of the $4 at this tax sale should be so held. If that was a payment of taxes, then defendants have no standing, and if not they may have, subject, however, to other questions raised.

Plaintiff cites us to several cases, of which White v. Shell, 84 Mo. 569, is a type, and contends that the court looks upon the payment made by a purchaser at a tax sale as the payment of taxes. These cases all construe the Revenue Act of 1872, under which there was no judgment of the character we have now [99]*99in tax proceedings, nor as we had in 1881, when this sale was had. Here we have the nsnal tax sale under a special execution, and a deed from the sheriff. Here we have the purchaser buying at a sheriff’s sale, under a judgment of the circuit court, and under a provision of a statute, which says that the purchase price shall first be applied to the payment of costs, and then the surplus applied to the payment of the tax judgment. Under the law, in this particular case, there could have been no payment of taxes, because the amount paid and realized from the sale would not pay the costs.

But aside from that, under section 4268 we do not think that even the full payment of all costs and the judgment for taxes by a purchaser at a táx sale, by reason of his bid being equal to or in excess of the judgment and costs, is a payment of taxes within the meaning of the statute. This statute contemplates the voluntary payment of taxes by some person upon whom the moral and legal duty rests. It does not contemplate the payment by a stranger to the title and stranger to the moral and legal obligations, as is a mere purchaser at such a sale. A purchaser at a judicial sale is not paying taxes, but he is purchasing the judgment debtor’s interest in lands, and for all such interest he may pay many times the amount of the taxes, or as in this case much less than the judgment.

After he acquires the title and thus the obligation to pay taxes, such purchaser can stop the running of the statute by the payment of the taxes, but such is not this case. For twenty-four years after the sale, no effort was made to thwart the statute by the payment of taxes, either prior or subsequent, by Judge Johnson and his grantees. Under the facts of this case no taxes have been paid by either plaintiff or Ms grantors for much more than thirty years.

[100]*100II. It is next contended that the defendants were never in the lawful possession of this land, and hence are not in a position to invoke section 4268.

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W. 1083, 217 Mo. 93, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 268, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunnington-v-hudson-mo-1909.