Hunt v. Hopkins

83 Mo. 13
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 83 Mo. 13 (Hunt v. Hopkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunt v. Hopkins, 83 Mo. 13 (Mo. 1884).

Opinion

Rat, J.

Certain special tax bills were issued by the City of Kansas to plaintiff, under á contract between the city and plaintiff for the construction of sidewalks, in front of certain lots in Ranson & Hopkin’s addition to said city. March 30, 1877, judgments, amounting in the aggregate to $131.35 and for $7.35 costs, were rendered on ten of said special tax bills for the construction of such sidewalks, by a justice of the peace, who was, under said charter, given jurisdiction thereof, and authorized to render a special judgment thereon, where the amounts due thereon did not exceed $300. On the same day Chas. Hopkins filed his affidavit for an appeal therefrom, and the present defendants then made and filed with said justice an appeal bond, by which they acknowledged themselves indebted to plaintiff, in the sum of $150, to be void on the usual conditions in recognizance in ordinary cases of appeals from judgments of justices of the peace, and said appeal was thereupon allowed under the General Statutes regulating such appeals (now secs. 3039 and 3041, Revised Statutes) there being, it seems, no peculiar or special provision in said charter for taking appeals from judgments rendered by justices of the peace in this class of cases.

Upon the trial anew in the special law and equity court, judgments were again rendered October 2, 1877, in favor of plaintiff, on each of said special tax bills for sums amounting in the aggregate to $142.45 and for $24.10 costs, with interest on said judgments at fifteen per cent, per annum. The amended charter, approved March 24, 1875, sec. 4, art. 8, provides among other things:

[16]*16“That in suit upon any tax bill, the judgment shall be special, and that the plaintiff! recover the amount due, including interest, to be levied of the land described in the bill, and a special execution shall issue to sell the land to pay such judgments, interest, and costs, and the judgment shall bear interest at the same rate as the tax bills.”

No execution was ever issued, or applied for, by plaintiff to satisfy said judgments, and they have never been paid. On the-day of-the plaintiff instituted the present action against defendants, on the appeal bond above mentioned, for said sum of $150 and for costs in the said several suits, etc., assigning and alleging as a breach of said bond, said failure to pay or satisfy said judgments.

The joint and several answer of defendants admits the substantial allegations of the petition and the facts hereinbefore set out, but it sets up certain provisions of the charter which will be duly, noticed: a sale of said lots for “delinquent taxes,” and alleges a purchase and conveyance thereof to the plaintiff, and charges that the lien of the “tax bills” became thereby merged and extinguished, and charges that plaintiff suffered no damage by the appeal; that the lots had a higher market value at the time of the rendition of the judgments by the appellate court than when the appeal was taken, and that plaintiff neglects and refuses to take out special executions on said special judgments, cr proceed against the property therein specified, as therein directed; that said judgments are not otherwise enforceable against defendant, Hopkins, and that no other liability attaches, by virtue of the giving of said undertaking, or appeal bond, beyond courts of appeal, etc.

November 13, 1875, the city collector of Kansas City sold said lots, on which the tax bills were thus chargeable, for said delinquent taxes for the years 1874 and 1875, and at said sale Wm. E. Sheffield became the purchaser for $100, which was the amount of taxes, [17]*17interest, costs, etc.,_then due thereon, and .on November 5, 1877, received a deed therefor, .which was read in evidence by defendants. .Under sec. .63, art. 6, of. the. charter, the legal effect of such deed was “to vest in the grantee an absolute estate in fee simple in the real property described therein, free from all. incumbrances of whatsoever kind or nature, subject, however, to all unpaid taxes which are a lien thereon.”

Defendants also read in evidence a quitclaim deed, dated November, 1877, duly executed and acknowledged, from said Sheffield to Mrs. Ellen Hunt, the wife of plaintiff’s brother, Eobert H. Hunt, who was mayor of the city at the time the contracts were let, and under which said tax bills were issued.

William E. Sheffield, being called as a witness by the defendants, testified as follows:

“I am and for years have been the attorney of Michael Hunt, and, also, Eobert H. Hunt. They are brothers; and Ellen L. Hunt, to whom I made the quitclaim deed, is the wife of Eobert H. Hunt. I did not purchase the property at the tax sales with, my own money. I do not know whose .money it was; it was given to me by Eobert H. Hunt, at whose request I purchased the lots. Mrs. Hunt did not pay me anything for my deed to her. I brought the suit upon the tax bills issued to Nathaniel Grant, of Hunt against Charles G. Hopkins and Sands W. Hopkins, which ba.s been referred to. Grant, Michael Hunt, and Long and myself were in partnership in these contracts. Eobert H. Hunt had nothing to do with them, that I know of. Eobert H. Hunt was mayor of the City of Kansas at the time these contracts were let under which said tax bills were issued. I know of no arrangement between Michael Hunt and Eobert H. Hunt with respect to the property in any of these tax bills. I did buy, at tax sales for Eobert H. Hunt, largely property in which Michael Hunt had some interest by way of special tax bills or judgments therein.”

[18]*18Chas. Hopkins testified that each of said lots was worth more when the judgments were rendered in the special law .and equity court than when appeal was taken and have increased in value ever since.

At the conclusion of the evidence, the substance of which we have thus set out, the court gave at plaintiff’s instance the following declarations of law:

1. That the obligors, upon the appeal bond or recognizance sued on in this case, are liable in the same manner and to the same extent as obligors are liable in ordinary cases, upon appeal bonds or recognizances.

2. That it is not necessary in order to maintain this action that execution should have been issued upon the judgments rendered in the special law and equity court, as set out in the petition herein.

The following, asked by the defendant, were refused:

1. If the court finds from the evidence ■ that the several special judgments referred to in the petition and read in evidence, as rendered by the special law and equity court, were unappealed from in that court, that they still remain in full force and effect, and that plaintiff has omitted, and neglected to, and never has- taken out any executions on said special judgments, then the finding should be for the defendants. •

2. If the court finds that the plaintiff and R. H. Hunt are brothers, and that the said Ellen L. Hunt is the wife of said R. H. Hunt; that Sheffield, by the tax deed read in evidence, bought said property at said tax sale, took the deed, and afterwards conveyed the same to said Ellen L. Hunt at the request of plaintiff, or at the request of said R. H. Hunt, and in order to protect the said plaintiff, and with the plaintiff’s consent, then the finding should be for the defendants.

3. On the record and undisputed evidence in this cause, the plaintiff cannot recover.

The defendant duly excepted to the court’s action in giving the former and refusing the latter.

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83 Mo. 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunt-v-hopkins-mo-1884.