Johnston v. Sutton

45 F. 296, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1746

This text of 45 F. 296 (Johnston v. Sutton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. Sutton, 45 F. 296, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1746 (circtndfl 1891).

Opinion

Pardee, J.

From my investigation of this case I am not satisfied that the complainant has shown such title .to the lands in controversy as justifies the maintenance of his bill. The foundation of the complainant’s title is a sale made to the state of Florida for taxes in the year 1849. The evidence shows a certified copy of a deed made by Virgil R. Dupont, tax collector of Orange county, on file in the office of commissioner of lands and immigration. Beyond the said copy there is no evidence offered in this case tending to show any compliance with the [297]*297laws of Florida then in force in regard to the assessment of land for taxes, and the sale of lands delinquent for taxes. The deed of the tax collector does not show that the lands described therein had boon assessed for taxes in the name of any person or for any year, or were delinquent for taxes for any year; nor the amount of delinquent taxes thereon; nor any advertisement of sale; nor any sale by public outcry; nor any sufficient description of the lands purporting to he delinquent for taxes, and sold. And it is not shown by the said deed, nor by any other evidence in this ease, that the law of Florida (chapter 214 of the Acts of Florida, approved January 11, 1849) under which the said sale purported to have been made, was otherwise complied with, in this; that the said tax collector forwarded to the comptroller an abstract showing against whom the tax was assessed, the amount, for what year, and the description of the land bought in for the state. These defects are of such serious nature as to impair the title of the state of Florida acquired by the sale in 1849, unless they have been cured by remedial legislation. The act of 1872, winch is relied upon by complainant as transferring the title from the state of Florida to his predecessors, and as curing all defects in the proceedings from the valuation of the land up to the time of its sale to complainant’s predecessors, provides, in the first section, for the making and advertising of a list of all lands which have accrued to the state by virtue of tax-deeds; in the second section for the redemption of such lands by any person in interest, upon application to the commissioner of lands and immigration, upon the payment of the tax specified in the tax-deed, and the cost of advertising; in the third section, for the sale of all such unredeemed lands after the expiration of six months, and for the sale, as lands subject to private entry, of all lands for which there shall be no bidder, the price of the tax and the cost of advertising; in the fourth section, for the form of the deed to be given the purchaser; and in sections 5, 6, and 7 as follows:

“Sec. 5. Such deed may be recorded as other deeds of land, and, when recorded in the office of the county clerk in the proper county, shall vest in the grantee therein named an absolute estate in fee-simple in the land therein described; and such deed, when so recorded, shall be prima faoie evidence of the regularity of ail the proceedings from the valuation of the land, the sale thereof, the execution of the deed from the tax collector or other officer of the state, up to the execution of the deed under the provisions of this act.
“Sec. 6. Any deed made in conformity with this act, which shall bo recorded in the office of the county clerk in the county in which the land is situated, shall operate as a complete bar after one year from the recording of such deed against any and all persons who may thereafter claim title to said lands in consequence of any informality or illegality of the taxes or proceedings; and the title to said lands shall be complete in the purchaser thereof, his or her heirs or assigns, forever, saving, however, as to lands not subject to taxation, or in which infants, persons of unsound mind, imprisoned, or beyond the sea, the right to appear and contest the title to said lands within one vearof their disabilities are removed.
“Sec. 7. The recording of any deed made under the provisions of this act in the county where the lands are situated shall give the person named in such deed possession in the premises.”

[298]*298Under this statute, the deed given by the commissioner of lands and immigration to the purchaser was required to be in a certain form. The deed offered in evidence in this case is not in the form required by the statute, but seems to have the material averments therein, as required, with the exception that the amount of the taxes assessed due and unpaid on the lands in controversy at the time of the sale in 1849, with the costs and charges thereon, is not correctly given, and the commissioner of lands and immigration did not, as required by said form, affix his official seal, but affixed instead the seal of the Florida state land-office. The fifth, sixth, and seventh sections of the statute, quoted above, provide that the curative effect to be given to the deed to the purchaser in relation to informalities and irregularities in the tax-sale and proceedings depends upon its being recorded, as other deeds of land, in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the land is situated. The law of the state in 1872 and 1873, at the time the law was passed and of the execution of the aforesaid deed, provided—

“That in order to procure the recording of any conveyance, transfer, or mortgage, the execution thereof by the party making the same shall be acknowledged by such party, or shall be proved upon oath by at least one of the subscribing witnesses thereto before the officer authorized by law to record the same, or before some judicial officer.”

The aforesaid deed, given to complainant’s predecessors by DennisEagan, commissioner of lands and immigration, appears to have been executed on the 25th day of April, 1873, to have been acknowledged by said Dennis Eagan on the 5th day of August, 1880, long alter said Dennis Eagan had ceased to be commissioner of lands and immigration, and to have been put on the records without proof or acknowledgment, in the office of the clerk of the circuit court for Volusia county, the county in which the lands were situated, in the manner and at the times appearing by the following certificate:

“I, John W. Dickens, clerk of the circuit court of said county, do hereby certify that the above is a true and correct copy of a deed recorded in my office inLiber A of the tax-titles, page 1, and of the acknowledgment of the same. And I further certify that the same deed was recorded in my office on the 20th day of June, 1876, and the acknowledgment on the same on the 19th day of August, 1880.
“In witness whereof I have.hereunto set my hand and"seal of office, this 7th day of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighty-one.
“[Official Seal.] [Signed] John W. Dickens, Clerk.”

Beyond this certificate, there is no proof in this case of any record of the deed given by the commissioner of lands and immigration to complainant’s predecessors in 1873. If it is conceded that Dennis Eagan could, after he went out of office, make a valid acknowledgment of the deed given by him officially as commissioner of lands and immigration, if still remains that the record as made was of the deed, without either acknowdedgment or proof; and since the deed was acknowledged there has been no record thereof, for certainly the record of the acknowledgment made August 19, 1880, cannot be considered as the record of the deed so acknowledged. That the record of a deed without proof or [299]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 F. 296, 1891 U.S. App. LEXIS 1746, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-sutton-circtndfl-1891.