Frey v. Owens

44 N.W. 42, 27 Neb. 862, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 306
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 N.W. 42 (Frey v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frey v. Owens, 44 N.W. 42, 27 Neb. 862, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 306 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This proceeding in error is brought to review a decree of the district court of Cass county.

The complainants in the court below, Ella E. Owens, May Stowell, and Elmer E. Stowell, exhibited their bill against Bertha Frey, widow of John, John Frey Jr., Bertha Frey Jr., George Frey, Clemma Frey, Henry Frey, Tobias Frey, Jacob Frey, and Jerome Frey, minor heirs of said John Frey, deceased, setting up that on March 12, 1862, Eleanor Newhouse conveyed by warranty deed to Castilla Jane Kirkpatrick, Mary Samantha Kirkpatrick, and Naomi B. Kirkpatrick the south half of the southwest quarter of the northwest quarter of the southwest [864]*864quarter of section 3, township 12 N., range 12 E., in Cass county, Nebraska, the said Eleanor at that time being the bona fide and legal owner of said premises; that the grantees in said deed were the only heirs of William H. Kirkpatrick, and the object of said deed was to vest the title in said grantees, and of their share of their father’s estate, the said Kirkpatrick having been in his lifetime a former husband of said Eleanor Newhouse, and she was the mother of the grantees in said deed, which deed was duly filed for record May 19, 1862, and recorded in book E, p. 271.

They further allege that Naomi B. Kirkpatrick departed this life December 2, 1873, under twenty years of age, without issue; that Mary Samantha Kirkpatrick, married to John W. Brice, departed this life June 11,1872, aged thirty-one years, leaving one child, Mary Brice, born in May, 1870, and married to Elmer E. Stowell, one of the plaintiffs; that Castilla J. Kirkpatrick was married to R. M. Owens and departed this life May 2, 1874, aged twenty-four years, leaving one child, Ella E. Owens, born in February, 1870 ; that they are the sole surviving heirs at law of the estate of the grantees in said deed; that the land described was all of the estate which they inherited from their parents and constitutes their sole property in their own right; that since their mother’s decease they have lived with their grandmother, Eleanor Newhouse, except at limited periods, while they resided with other relatives; that they had not, prior to 1888, money or means under their control; that no legally constituted guardian has ever had or taken charge of their said estate with a view or purpose of protecting their interests therein; that they were until February and May, respectively, in 1888, under the age of eighteen years.

That on September 5,1873, the county treasurer executed and delivered to S. N. Merriam a tax deed upon said premises, of record in book T, p. 82, the same having been sold for the taxes of the year-, which sale was made with[865]*865out authority of law, there having been no legal assessment, and the requirements of law were not complied with by the purchaser to obtain said deed; that one of the plaintiffs, Mary Stowell, was then a minor under four years of age; that said deed is void, and if good for anything it is only for the proof of the amount of taxes paid by said Merriam, and was filed for record March 28, 1874.

That on May 8, 1874, the county treasurer issued one-other tax deed to said Merriam, conveying said lands with, other lands therein, which deed was filed for record May 9,. 1874, and which was based upon the sale made on the illegal assessment and levy, and the laws were not sufficiently-complied with to obtain said deed, which is void upon its face, and if good for anything it is only for the proof of the amount of taxes paid for the same; that both of the plaintiffs herein were the owners of said premises, and were-minors under the age of five years at the date of said deed,, and had no notice or knowledge of the proceedings to obtain either of said deeds.

That on July 13, 1878, the county treasurer issued another tax deed to said Merriam for said premises upon a sale for the taxes of 1870, as shown by book X of deeds, p. 102; that the sale was illegal, and the deed void for the reasons stated in the two prior deeds mentioned, the owners and plaintiffs being infants under the age of nine years at the date of the expiration of the time of redemption.

That on November 25,1881, the county treasurer issued a certain other tax deed to said Merriam purporting to convey said premises, which deed and the proceedings on which it is based are illegal and void.

That on December 27, 1886, the county treasurer issued a certain other tax deed attempting to convey said premises to J. P. Mathews, based on the sale of the same for the taxes of 1883; that Mathews afterwards conveyed the same by deed to AY. D. Merriam, who afterwards conveyed the same by deed to said John Frey; that in the said pro[866]*866ceedings to obtain said deed said Mathews caused notice to be served on said Frey, the occupant of said premises, who accepted service; that said Frey was in collusion with said Mathews in the service and acceptance of notice, and was a party to the procuring of said sale for taxes, and that it was in substance and effect the serving of notice by John Frey upon himself, and so far as he was concerned was fraudulently obtained and should be so declared by the court; that all of this occurred on taxes levied subsequently to Frey’s possession of this land; that no other valid notice was served on defendants, nor did they have actual knowledge of the fact that the premises had been sold for the year 1883, or for any other year or years in any of the deeds mentioned; that at the dates of each the plaintiffs were minors under the age of eighteen years, and under such legal disability that they had no right or authority to act had they known of said different sales, purchases, and •execution of tax deeds; that the lands were taxed, listed, and assessed in the name of another aside from the owner as in all the prior deeds; that there was no notice as required by law; that the assessment, listing, levy, and sale •upon which said deed was based does not in any manner ■conform to the laws of this state; that the said deeds are void upon their face, and that at the time the date of redemption expired in all the deeds aforesaid the plaintiffs were minors.

That S. N. Merriam and wife, by ~W. D. Merriam, their attorney in fact, on May 10, 1883, conveyed by deed of that date the said premises to John Frey, who departed this life--, 18 — , leaving as survivors the defendants herein; that no other persons are interested in said •conveyance of said Merriam and wife, except the defendants; that in the year 1883 said Frey entered upon and made sundry improvements of said premises, consisting of plowing the land and building a residence and occupying the same, the house of the value of $350 and other im[867]*867[Movements $150, a total of $500, and no more; that there is in the aggregate, based upon the first year that said land was farmed, and the successive years up to the present time, the sum total that the defendants have received, the benefit and product of the crop on said land of 240 acres, or an ayerage of forty acres each year, and that a reasonable value for the use.and occupation of said premises has been $3 per acre each year, making a total benefit received by defendants of $720, and during all this time prior to February and May, 1888, respectively, the plaintiffs were infants in law under the age of eighteen years.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 N.W. 42, 27 Neb. 862, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frey-v-owens-neb-1889.