Flader v. Campbell

207 P.2d 1189, 120 Colo. 66, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 185
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 2, 1949
DocketNo. 16,034.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 207 P.2d 1189 (Flader v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flader v. Campbell, 207 P.2d 1189, 120 Colo. 66, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 185 (Colo. 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hays

delivered the opinion of the court.

*68 This is an action in ejectment brought by Herman A. Flader, as plaintiff, against L. Campbell and W. O. Perry, defendants, to recover possession of a quarter section of land in Arapahoe county. The right of possession of said land is here dependent upon the ownership thereof, which is the principal question in dispute. Both plaintiff and defendants allege title and pray for determination thereof. Since this action was started, the United States government, in condemnation proceedings, has acquired title to said land for use as an army bombing field, and is now in full possession thereof. In said condemnation proceedings the government has determined just compensation for the taking of said land and deposited same in the registry of the United States district court for the use of .the owners of said land as their interests may appear. The trial court found in favor of defendants, and plaintiff brings error.

Patent to the land here involved was originally issued by the government to Peter Johnson, March 31, 1900, who died March 1, 1910. By decree of the county court of Denver, September 5, 1911, Everett G. Johnson and Florence A. Van Alstine were found to be the sole and only heirs at law of Peter Johnson, deceased, and that each was possessed of an undivided one-half interest in said property. Thereafter a quitclaim deed was executed by “Mrs. Florence A. Gregg” to Charles H. Reed, dated and acknowledged September 8, 1937, and recorded December 12, 1941. Said deed recited that the grantor above mentioned was the same person as Florence A. Van Alstine, mentioned in the decree of heirship, and that she was executing said deed as the sole and only heir at law of both Everett G. Johnson, deceased, and Peter Johnson, deceased. Plaintiff claims title through mesne conveyances from grantee Reed.

After the death of Peter Johnson, the original owner of the land, taxes for the year 1922 became due, payable and delinquent, and on February 15, 1923, the land was sold for said taxes and certificate of purchase issued to *69 W. C. Foster on account thereof, which was in due course assigned to Tax Service Corporation, which corporation received a tax or treasurer’s deed July 26, 1927. By quitclaim deed the property was transferred by said corporation to E. B. Dill who in turn conveyed to the E. B. Dill Corporation.

No question is raised by either'party as to the validity of the above tax deed or to the title acquired thereunder by the E. B. Dill Corporation, and the same constitutes the common source of title, which neither plaintiff nor defendants can, nor do, dispute. It is sufficient for either party hereto to prove a derivation of title from that corporation, without proving its title. Bay State M. & T. Co. v. Jackson, 27 Colo. 139, 60 Pac. 573; Service v. West, 60 Colo. 366, 153 Pac. 446; 18 Am. Jur., pp. 34, et seq., §§33, 34, and 40.

The tax title vested in the E. B. Dill Corporation December 5, 1927, being valid and so recognized by all parties, cuts off all the right, title and interest held by Peter Johnson and his heirs as of July 26,1927, the date of said tax deed, and the quitclaim deed from the alleged sole heir of the above mentioned deceased, September 8, 1937, could not and did not convey anything. Whatever title it attempted to convey had already become vested in the E. B. Dill Corporation by mesne conveyances from the original tax title holder, Tax Service Corporation; consequently, the only title plaintiff had, if any, at the time of the commencement of this action, was derived from the quitclaim deed dated August 12, 1937, acknowledged September 9, 1937, from the E. B. Dill Corporation to Charles H. Reed, plaintiff’s grantor. This deed was allegedly executed on behalf of the corporation by Adelaide Coxe Dill, treasurer, and recited that she was “duly authorized under existing minutes and records of the board of directors, to execute this conveyance on behalf of the corporation.” The truth of this recital is not here questioned.

It appears in connection with the deed last men *70 tioned that the Dill corporation changed its name, by amending its articles of incorporation February 26, 1931, to “The Junior Trust Corporation,” and that said corporation on October 15, 1934, became defunct and inoperative pursuant to chapter 41, section 83, ’35 C.S.A., and no longer competent to do business in the state of Colorado except as is stated in the statute then in force, “said corporation may acquire, hold, or continue to hold, lease, mortgage, enjoy, sell and convey real estate.”

It therefore appears that even’ though the E. B. Dill Corporation was defunct and inoperative for failure to comply with the corporation laws in respect to making reports and the payment of fees, it still held title to the real estate and had a lawful right on September 9,1937, to convey the same through its proper officers. Dominion Oil Co. v. Lamb, et al., 119 Colo. 62, 201 P. (2d) 372.

Notwithstanding the fact that Adelaide Coxe Dill, as treasurer of the E. B. Dill Corporation, executed a deed to said property to Charles H. Reed, September 9, 1937, she, as president of the Junior Trust Corporation, executed another deed for the same property April 30, 1938, to L. Campbell, and executed still another deed, as sole surviving director of the Junior Trust Corporation, to L. Campbell. Plaintiff claims under the Reed deed, and defendants under the Campbell deeds. No corporation seal was attached to any of the deeds, and it is not shown that the corporation had a seal. It necessarily follows that if the former deed to Reed executed September 9, 1937, is valid, there was no title vested in the Junior Trust Corporation, April 30, 1938, when its deed to Campbell was executed, and, of course, could not and did not pass title. The validity of the Reed deed becomes of prime importance.

It is contended by defendants that the Reed deed is invalid because: (1) There was no corporate seal attached thereto; and (2) that it was “executed after the corporation had changed its name to Junior Trust Corporation and became defunct.” We have heretofore dis *71 posed of the second contention by showing that under the above statute the title to real estate remains in the corporation even though it be “defunct and inoperative” and may be lawfully conveyed by the corporate officials. It is certain in this connection that Campbell acquired nothing through his deed from Mrs. Dill, as sole surviving director of the trust company, because the title was then vested in the corporation and not in the officers as trustees. It is equally true that if Campbell acquired any title from the Dill corporation, it was by virtue of the deed from the Junior Trust corporation to Campbell. Defendants are in the strange situation of claiming title through a deed from a corporation without a corporate seal attached, and at the same time advancing the argument that the prior Reed deed is of no effect because of the absence of such corporate seal. If we should hold that plaintiff’s title was bad for the above reason, by the same token we must likewise hold that defendants’ title is invalid.

Concerning a similar situation in Bean v. Westwood, 101 Colo. 288, 73 P.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P.2d 1189, 120 Colo. 66, 1949 Colo. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flader-v-campbell-colo-1949.