Flanagan v. Grimmet

10 Va. 421
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 10, 1853
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Va. 421 (Flanagan v. Grimmet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan v. Grimmet, 10 Va. 421 (Va. 1853).

Opinion

Allen, J.

Upon the trial of this cause the lessors of the plaintiff offered as evidence a deed purporting to have been executed by Michael Erskine, deputy of William Haynes, sheriff of Monroe county, conveying a tract of land returned delinquent for the nonpayment of taxes. The deed recites, that whereas agreeable to an act of the general assembly, passed the 9th of February 1814, entitled an act to amend and explain [423]*423the act entitled an act concerning taxes on land, the said Michael Erskine, sheriff as aforesaid, after having given notice, by advertisement on the court-house door of the said county, for two months, did commence on the 15th day of August 1815, (being the first day of the August court for said county,)' to expose to public sale the lands theretofore returned delinquent for the nonpayment of the taxes due thereon in the county of Monroe aforesaid. Whereupon the said John Eennel and Hillary Mosely became the purchasers of eight hundred and fifty-one acres, part of one thousand acres, lying in said county, which formerly belonged to and was returned delinquent in the name of E. Wethered, for .the amount of the taxes, damages and costs due on the land returned as aforesaid. How this indenture witnesseth, that the said Michael Erskine, deputy sheriff as aforesaid, for and in consideration of the sum of six dollars and five cents, and in pursuance of said act of assembly, hath sold unto the said John Fennel and Hillary Mosely, &c. &c.

The deed was duly acknowledged and recorded on the 30th of August 1815. To the introduction and reading of this deed as evidence, the defendants objected and the court sustained the objection, and refused to permit the same to be read to the jury.

The plaintiff then, with the object of removing the objections to the deed which appeared on the face thereof, offered to prove by a witness that the sale of delinquent lands recited in said deed to have been made on the first day of the August county court held for said county in the year 1815, had been advertised at the front door of the court-house for said county at the May, June and July terms 1815 of the County court, and also for the space of two months, according to law, in a newspaper then published in the city of Eichmond. To the introduction of this evidence the [424]*424defendants also objected ; and tbe court excluded the testimony : And the first bill of exceptions taken by plaintiff at the trial brings up for review the cor-rec^ness 0f these two decisions. They must be considered in the order in which the questions arose and were decided ; for if the deed should have been permitted to be read in evidence, without any proof of the regularity of the advertisements, there would have been no necessity for the plaintiff to introduce the proof of such regularity which he offered to do, and the second question would not have been raised.

The bill of exceptions does not purport to set out all the testimony; and it does not appear in what stage of the trial or proof the plaintiff offered to introduce the deed from the sheriff to show title in himself. Before he could have availed himself of the deed for such purpose, he must have exhibited proof that the sheriff and deputy sheriff were such officers as in the deed they were recited to be; and that the person in whose name the land was returned delinquent, his heir, devisee, or other person claiming by, through or under him, had title to the land ; for such title alone was given to the purchaser by the sheriff’s sale and conveyance. Such proof may have been offered, or its production dispensed with ; or the deed may have been first tendered with the understanding that such proof would be offered provided the deed was not rejected on other grounds. The bill of exceptions shows that the deed, when first offered, was rejected for objections appearing on the face thereof, and also what the objections were. The deed did not show that the sale had been advertised according to law. The court, proceeding upon the ground, either that it should appear by the recital in the deed, that the sale was regularly advertised, or that it did appear by the recitals that the sale had not been regularly advertised, [425]*425held the deed to be void as a deed made under the statute; and being void, it could not be aided by parol proof that the sale had been regularly advertised.

The propriety of this decision depends upon the provisions of the act of February 9th, 1814, 2 Rev. Code 542; and more especially upon the construction to be given to that portion of the act embraced within the sections extending from the 24th to the 38th sections inclusive.

Some of the provisions of this act, particularly the important provisions contained in the 38th section, intended for the protection of the purchaser of lands sold for taxes, have to some extent been adopted in the subsequent act of April 1st, 1831, concerning lands returned delinquent for nonpayment of taxes, Sess. Acts 90, § 7; the act of March 10th, 1832, concerning delinquent and forfeited lands, and providing for the sale of lands returned delinquent thereafter for the nonpayment of taxes, Sess. Acts, 65, § 22; Code 204, ch. 37, § 22, the general law providing for sales of land for taxes. By virtue of these laws and other acts intended to carry out the policy of the two first recited acts, the great mass of delinquent lands in the country west of the Alleghany mountains, has been disposed of. The lands have passed into the hands of purchasers and actual occupants under junior patents;, have been placed in a condition for settlement and improvement, and again become a subject of productive revenue; and under the general law for the salea of land for taxes, titles have been acquired through all parts of the state, the validity of which may in a great measure depend upon the construction of the law under consideration.

When the act of February 9th, 1814, was enacted, the legislature was fully aware of the construction which had uniformly been put on laws of this description. New principles of law were more firmly settled, [426]*426and from their influence on the transactions of others, more widely known than that where the validity of a deed depends upon an act in pais, the party claiming mi¿¡er p jg b01inc[ t0 pr0ve the performance of the act; that in the case of a naked power not coupled with an interest, the law requires that every prerequisite to the exercise of such power should precede it; that the claimant under a sale made to enforce a forfeiture, must show that the law has been strictly complied with; that the recitals in a deed of an officer selling for taxes, were not even prima facie evidence of the regularity of his proceedings; and that these facts must be proved by evidence aliunde. Yancey v. Hopkins, 1 Munf. 419; Christy v. Minor, 4 Munf. 431; Nalle v. Fenwick, 4 Rand. 585; Steed v. Course, 4 Cranch R. 402; Parker v. Rule's lessee, 9 Cranch R. 64; Williams v. Peyton, 4 Wheat. R. 77; Allen v. Smith, 1 Leigh 231; Ronkendorf v. Taylor, 4 Peters’ R. 349.

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Related

Allen v. Smith
1 Va. 231 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1829)
Christy v. Minor
4 Munf. 431 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1815)
Nalle's Representatives v. Fenwick
4 Rand. 585 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1826)
Shanks v. Lancaster
5 Gratt. 110 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1848)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Va. 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-grimmet-va-1853.