Franklin v. Dragoo

294 N.E.2d 165, 155 Ind. App. 682, 1973 Ind. App. LEXIS 1271
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 5, 1973
Docket2-672A25
StatusPublished

This text of 294 N.E.2d 165 (Franklin v. Dragoo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Franklin v. Dragoo, 294 N.E.2d 165, 155 Ind. App. 682, 1973 Ind. App. LEXIS 1271 (Ind. Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

Sullivan, J.

Ruth Patterson Franklin appeals from a judgment in a suit by her to quiet title and partition real property located in Yorktown, Indiana. She claims title through a 1898 deed to her father, Thomas A. Patterson, which, upon his death, established a co-tenancy among the children of Thomas A. Patterson. Appellant’s sister, Blanche Patterson Kilgore was such a co-tenant, and she and her *684 husband went into occupancy of the realty at the death of Thomas A. Patterson. In 1932, the realty was sold for taxes to a third party, but Franklin T. Kilgore, Blanche Patterson Kilgore’s husband, secured title to the whole in his name in 1936. In 1942, the land was again sold for delinquent taxes to a third party, who sold the realty to Paul A. Lennington. In 1943, Lennington sold the realty to Franklin T. Kilgore, who recorded the quit-claim deed. Franklin T. Kilgore and Blanche Kilgore continued in sole possession of the realty paying taxes thereon until their deaths in 1946. Their descendants, appellees herein, continued in possession, paying taxes upon the property.

Appellant contends that the tax sales and eventual quitclaim deed from Lennington to Kilgore did not effectively interrupt the co-tenancy which began upon the death of Thomas A. Patterson. Impliedly, she also argues that the 1932 tax sale and the subsequent deed from that tax sale purchaser to Franklin T. Kilgore in 1936 did not terminate the co-tenancy of Thomas Patterson’s children. Therefore, she claims that ownership of the property, instead of being vested absolutely in appellees, continues to be vested in the five original co-tenants or their respective heirs. Since she is one of the original co-tenants, she claims a one-fifth interest in the property in question.

Subsequent to the filing of the suit, the attorneys for the parties stipulated to a pre-trial order which recited that the determination of the dispute is governed by the answer to the following question: Whether a spouse of a co-tenant can acquire absolute title to the co-tenancy property subsequent to a tax sale? It must be noted that plaintiff-appellant made no allegation that fraud or collusion infected the transfer from either the tax sale purchaser in 1936 or from Lennington in 1943, nor was there any evidence of fraud or collusion.

We must agree that as argued by appellant the 1942 tax sale and subsequent conveyance from Lennington to Kilgore *685 did not terminate the co-tenancy. Such co-tenancy had been earlier extinguished, i.e., by the 1932 tax sale and expiration of the redemption period pertaining thereto. Notwithstanding therefore that the pre-trial order reflecting the stipulation of the parties appears to contemplate consideration only of the 1942 tax sale and the 1943 conveyance to Kilgore, the prior transactions of 1932-1936 are of paramount importance. To be sure Franklin and Blanche Kilgore lost title to the premises subsequent to 1936, reacquiring it in 1943. The validity of appellees’ claim to the realty therefore necessarily depends upon the 1943 conveyance to Franklin Kilgore but the title so acquired, if to the exclusion of the other previous co-tenants, depends upon the co-tenancy having terminated prior to 1936 as hereinafter described.

Appellant correctly asserts that the doctrine of inurement had been adopted by Indiana. The doctrine is set forth in Butler v. Butler (1917), 63 Ind. App. 533, 537, 114 N.E.760 as follows :

“Where one of several tenants in common of an estate purchases the common property at a tax sale, he cannot set up his title thus acquired against the common title, but his tax title enures to the common benefit of himself and his co-tenants;...” (63 Ind. App. 533, 537)

Likewise, she recognizes that the doctrine of inurement, as recognized in Indiana, is silent as to whether it is applicable when the spouse of a co-tenant purchases the title from a third party.

Two questions are presented:

1. Whether the doctrine of inurement is applicable to the spouse of a co-tenant?
2. Whether the principle applies to acquisitions from third parties, after the co-tenancy has terminated?

*686 *685 As earlier noted, the law of Indiana has not directly spoken to these questions. Focusing upon the law of other jurisdic *686 tions, it appears that the majority of those jurisdictions hold that when the spouse of a co-tenant acquires an outstanding adverse title to the land, the purchase amounts merely to a redemption or purchase for the benefit of, and in trust for, all of the co-tenants. See Annot., 15B ALR 678 (1944). We approve that rule.

We readily accede to the wisdom of the policy consideration which forms the foundation of the principle that a co-tenant or spouse of a co-tenant, may not unilaterally benefit by an attempted acquisition of a title or claim which is adverse to the interest of other co-tenants. See 20 Am. Jur. 2d, Cotenancy and Joint Ownership, § 69. More particularly, we acknowledge and approve the rule which prevents a co-tenant from enjoying exclusive title to co-tenancy realty by virtue of a tax deed (English v. Powell (1889), 119 Ind. 93, 21 N.E. 458; Bender v. Stewart (1881), 75 Ind. 88; Butler v. Butler (1917), 63 Ind. App. 533, 114 N.E. 760) and have no hesitation applying the doctrine to tax title acquisitions by the spouse of a co-tenant.

The rule is founded upon logic as well as upon public policy. The principle prevents a co-tenant from gaining an advantage from his own fraud or negligence in failing to pay taxes, and is premised upon the tenant that while the relationship of co-tenancy continues, there is a community of interest which establishes a relation of trust and confidence giving rise to reciprocal and mutual duties and obligations.

Quite a different question is presented however by a purchase from a third-party by the spouse of a former co-tenant subsequent to the termination of the co-tenancy.

The variant factor of a third party as insulation against the prohibition mandated by the doctrine of inurement was acknowledged, and the fact situation as herein presented anticipated, by the Court in Bender v. Stewart, supra, as follows:

“There are some cases which hold, and others which suggest, that where a tenant in common buys from a purchaser at a *687 tax sale, after the time for redemption has expired, and there are no equitable circumstances making the purchaser a trustee for his co-tenant, or where the taxes, for which the land was sold, accrued before the ownership of the tenant, purchasing the tax-title, commenced, he may purchase for himself such title. Lewis v. Robinson, 10 Watts, 354; Kirkpatrick v. Mathiot, 4 Watts & S. 251; Rinboth v. Zerbe Rim Improvement Co., 29 Pa. St.

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Bluebook (online)
294 N.E.2d 165, 155 Ind. App. 682, 1973 Ind. App. LEXIS 1271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/franklin-v-dragoo-indctapp-1973.