Hall's Heirs v. Dodge

18 Kan. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 18 Kan. 277 (Hall's Heirs v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall's Heirs v. Dodge, 18 Kan. 277 (kan 1877).

Opinion

[279]*279The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

i.Ejectment; general denial; practice. This was an action in the nature of ejectment, commenced under section 595 of the code, (Gen. Stat. 747,) and under section 118 of the tax law of 1868, (Gen. Stat. 1057,1058.) The answer of the defendants .... T 1 was a general denial. U nder such an answer we think the defendant had a right to show, by any legal evidence that he might have had, that he was the owner of the property in controversy. (Gen. Stat. 748, §596; Bancroft v. Chambers, 10 Kas. 364.) In this respect this kind of action is similar to' the action of replevin. In this case, the defendant attempted to show that he was the owner of the property in controversy, by introducing in evidence two certain tax deeds. If these tax deeds were valid, then he is undoubtedly the owner of said property, and is entitled to recover in this action; but if on the contrary such deeds are invalid, then he is not the owner, but the plaintiffs, who hold their title directly from the original patentee, are the owners; and in that case it seems to be admitted by the defendant that they are entitled to recover. That is, the defendant has raised no question either in this court or in the court below as to the right of the plaintiffs to recover, provided the defendant’s tax deeds are void. Both parties seem to desire to have the case decided upon its merits, and do not raise any technical objection to the plaintiffs’ right to maintain this particular action, provided the property in law belongs to them. The only question then for us to determine is, whether said tax deeds are valid or not. They are alike in form, and in every essential particular, except as to the descriptions of the land, and the amounts of the taxes. Both were executed July 24th 1865, for the taxes of 1862,1863 and 1864, upon a sale made 5th May 1863 for the taxes of 1862; and both deeds were recorded July 28th 1865. This action was commenced July 13th 1872.

[280]*2802. Tax sale: sepaseparate and distinct sales. 3. Statute of limRations. [279]*279Each tax deed is for several separate and distinct tracts of land, situated in different parts of Lyon county, and in dif* [280]*280ferent townships and ranges; and each deed shows that all these different tracts were sold together in one 0 single sale, Now, such a sale is void; and a tax s]lowjng such a sajej js -also void. This follows from general principles, and is also in consonance with all the statutes of this state, which may in any manner affect the question. Sections 31, 36, and 38, of the act having application to this case, (Comp. Laws of 1862, pp.865, 866,) tend to prove it, and section 40 is not at variance with it. Of course, where two or more tracts of land adjoin each other, and are used and occupied as one tract, they may all be taxed together and sold together as one tract. (M’ Questen v. Swope, 12 Kas. 32.) But that is not this case. In this case the different tracts do not adjoin each other, but 'are widely separated. Said deeds are void upon their face; that is, they present the evidence of their own invalidity upon their face. Such a deed cannot even when recorded set the statute of limitations in operation. (Shoat v. Walker, 6 Kas. 65, 75.) In the case just referred to, this court said: “A tax deed, to be sufficient when recorded to set the statute of limitations in operation, must of itself be prima facie evidence of title. It is not necessary that the deed be absolutely good, under all circumstances. It is not necessary that it be sufficient to withstand all evidence that may be brought against it to show that it is bad; but it must appear to be good upon its face; it must be a deed that would be good if not attacked by evidence aliunde. When the deed discloses upon its face that it is illegal, when it discloses upon its face that it is executed in violation of law, the law will not assist it. No statute of limitation can then be brought in to aid its validity. The party accepting it, and claiming under it, has full notice of its illegality, and must abide the consequences of such illegality. He has no reason to complain.” In the case of Sapp v. Morrill, 8 Kas. 667, 685, this court said: “There would seem to be no reason why a void tax deed should cause the statute «of limitations to run in its favor. Does a party holding such [281]*281a deed constructively oust the original owner by simply putting his deed on record, whether the original owner be in the actual possession of the property covered by the tax deed, or not? A void tax deed cannot draw after it, nor to it, the constructive possession of the property, although the property may be vacant and unoccupied. Then why should the original owner commence any action to test the validity of the tax deed ? He need not commence an action for the recovery of his property, for he is already in the constructive if not in the actual possession thereof; and his title is as good as it ever was. He need not commence an action to remove a supposed cloud from his title, for a deed void upon its face is no cloud upon his title. He need not commence an action to have the deed declared void, for the deed itself upon its face furnishes sufficient evidence of that fact, and about as good evidence as a record of a court declaring the fact would be. Indeed, there would seem to be no reason whatever in any such case for the owner of the land to invoke the interposition of a court of justice. The instrument itself would always furnish sufficient evidence to defeat any claim set up under it.”

4 void aeea coMtracIve6 possession. In the present case the property is vacant and unoccupied, and it never has been in the actual possession of the defendant. And the tax deeds of the defendant being void, they could not draw to him the constructive possession of the property. He has therefore never had any mterest in the’property. His tax deeds, being . -. ,. .. ,. . void upon their face, could not give him any title, or any possession, constructive or otherwise, and he never had any actual possession. It seems to be admitted that the defendant had no interest in the land under his void deeds until the two-years statute of limitations are supposed to have run, and then it is claimed that his title became complete. That is, the whole title, and the whole possession, constructively were in the plaintiffs, and no part of the title or possession or any other interest was in the defendant, until the end of the two years, and then at the expiration of the [282]*282two years, and at the commencement of the third year, the whole title and whole constructive possession all at once passed from the plaintiffs to the defendant simply because the defendant had had a void tax deed on record for two years! We think this can hardly be'so. (With reference to the operation of the statute of limitations, see Taylor v. Miles, 5 Kas. 515, 516; Bowman v. Cockrill, 6 Kas. 337, 338.) It is claimed that the supreme court of Iowa held that their five-years statute of limitation will run in favor of a tax deed like those we now have under consideration. The cases of Thomas v. Stickel, 32 Iowa, 71, and Douglas A Tullock, 34 Iowa, 262, come the nearest holding as defendant claimed, and yet they probably do not intend to go to the extent that he claims. If they do, then we cannot agree with them. But see Boardman v. Bourne, 20 Iowa, 134; Byam v. Cook, 21 Iowa, 392;

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Prowant v. Smith
1920 OK 23 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1920)
Rowsey v. Jameson
1915 OK 363 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1915)
Wilson v. Bombeck
1913 OK 486 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1913)
Harris v. Defenbaugh
109 P. 681 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1910)
Lowenstein v. Sexton
1907 OK 39 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1907)
Cross v. Herman
87 P. 686 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1906)
Nind v. Myers
109 N.W. 335 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1906)
O'Keefe v. Behrens
85 P. 555 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1906)
O'Keefe v. Dillenbeck
1905 OK 53 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1905)
Gibson v. Kueffer
77 P. 282 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1904)
Kelso v. Norton
70 P. 896 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1902)
Keene Syndicate v. Denney
58 P. 242 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1899)
Salmer v. Lathrop
72 N.W. 570 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1897)
Eastman v. Gurrey
49 P. 310 (Utah Supreme Court, 1897)
Emerson v. Shannon
23 Colo. 274 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1896)
De Foresta v. Gast
20 Colo. 307 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1894)
Wyer v. LaRocque
51 Kan. 710 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1893)
Kessinger v. Wilson
14 S.W. 96 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1890)
Dodge v. Emmons
34 Kan. 732 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1886)
Mason v. Crowder
85 Mo. 526 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1885)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Kan. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/halls-heirs-v-dodge-kan-1877.