Kansas City v. Tiernan

202 S.W.2d 20, 356 Mo. 138, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 10, 1947
DocketNo. 39763.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 202 S.W.2d 20 (Kansas City v. Tiernan) 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
Kansas City v. Tiernan, 202 S.W.2d 20, 356 Mo. 138, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 554 (Mo. 1947).

Opinions

Action to determine title to the north 24.75 feet of lot 21, block 9, McGee's Addition, Kansas City. The trial court adjudged title in defendant Municipal Bond Corporation (hereinafter referred to as the bond corporation) subject to tax liens of plaintiff and the state and county; cancelled the deeds under which plaintiff claims title, and plaintiff appealed.

The facts were in the main stipulated. Plaintiff (appellant) claimed title under two deeds, a city tax deed dated October 31, 1940, made pursuant to a sale for city taxes assessed for the year 1933, recorded November 1, 1940, and a sheriff's deed dated June 10, 1943, made pursuant to a special execution sale under a condemnation judgment in the circuit court entered in proceedings by the city to improve 15th street, and recorded July 2, 1943. Also, plaintiff owns certificates of purchase based upon the sale of said lot for city taxes assessed for the year 1938-1942.

The bond corporation claims title under four city tax deeds made pursuant to the sale of said property for city taxes for the years 1934-1936. The dates of these city tax deeds are not shown, but it is stipulated that they were recorded within 20 days after execution and delivery and that they were respectively recorded November 18, 1941, August 27, 1942, August 28, 1942, October 28, 1944. And the bond corporation says that plaintiff got no title by its city tax deed of October 31, 1940, and that plaintiff's sheriff's deed is void as a muniment of title because the condemnation judgment from which the deed stemmed was barred, when the execution was issued, under Sec. 1038, R.S. 1939, Mo. R.S.A., Sec. 1038, and including a legislative limitation act of 1919, Laws 1919, p. 221.

[1] Before taking up the tax deeds involved we dispose of a point made by plaintiff on the ruling of the trial court as to conceded tax liens of the city, and the state and county. In the prayer of the petition plaintiff says that if the court should find that plaintiff is not the owner of said lot, but that it and the state and county have tax liens thereon, then the court is asked to determine and enforce these liens "by a sale of said real property and a division of the proceeds of the sale among the parties hereto in proportion to their *Page 142 respective interests." Defendant Hatten, county collector, in his answer, asked that the state and county tax liens against said lot be enforced and that said property be sold to satisfy said liens. As to the tax liens of plaintiff city and of the state and county the trial court, as appears, supra, adjudged title in the bond corporation subject to these liens, but held that plaintiff and the county collector had respectively adequate remedy at law to enforce these tax lines, and declined to decree enforcement in the manner asked by plaintiff and the county collector. There is no claim that plaintiff city and the county collector did not have respectively the usual charter and statutory remedy to enforce these tax liens, hence the court correctly held that it did not have jurisdiction in this equity cause to foreclose these tax liens. See Kansas City et al. v. Field, 285 Mo. 253,226 S.W. 27; State ex rel. Hibbs et al. v. McGee et al., 328 Mo. 1176,44 S.W.2d 36, l.c. 38, and cases there cited; Koch v. Clyee et al., 232 Mo. App. 689, 92 S.W.2d 985, l.c. 989.

[2] Did plaintiff city acquire title under its city tax deed of October 31, 1940? It was stipulated that the city, when there were no outside bidders at a sale for delinquent city taxes, bid the property in and a tax deed or certificate of purchase, as the case might be, was issued by the city treasurer to the city and recited the bid, etc., but that the taxes for which the sale was made were transferred back to the "back tax records and carried as delinquent and unpaid taxes", and that such sales were known in the city treasurer's office as "book transactions."

[22] If plaintiff city acquired title by its city tax deed of October 31, 1940, then the property thereafter was exempt from taxation. Sec. 6, Art. X, Constitution 1875. Notwithstanding this constitutional provision and its tax deed plaintiff continued to carry the property involved here on the tax books. The date of the tax sale at which plaintiff got its city tax deed of October 31, 1940, does not appear, but it was some 5 years prior to the date of the deed.

To support the contention that title passed by its city tax deed of October 31, 1940, plaintiff principally relies on State ex rel. City of St. Louis v. Baumann, Collector, 348 Mo. 164,153 S.W.2d 31. In that case the city purchased the land there in question at a city tax sale. The owner did not redeem, and after the period of redemption expired, the city demanded deed. The collector refused to execute deed unless the city paid the taxes due prior and subsequent to the sale. The city brought mandamus to compel the collector to issue deed and was successful. But in that case, so far as appears, the city made a bona fide purchase and not a book transaction as here with the land going back to the delinquent tax books. It is pointed out in the Baumann case that the reason why a city in such situations is not required, when bidding property in, to pay the taxes is Sec. 6, *Page 143 Art. X of the Constitution mentioned, supra, which exempts from taxation property of the state, counties and municipal corporations.

If the sale for the 1933 taxes had been a bona fide sale and title acquired by the city by its city tax deed of October 31, 1940, then the property, after 1933, was exempt from taxation. Had the property been removed from the tax books when plaintiff bid it in, probably in 1935, there would have been no tax sales for the city taxes accruing over the years 1934-1937 at which sales defendant bond corporation purchased and paid and there would have been no sales for the taxes accruing over the years 1938-1942, at which sales the city acquired its certificates of purchase. We think the ruling in State ex rel. Associated Holding Company v. Shain et al., 335 Mo. 474, 73 S.W.2d 391, is pertinent on the validity of plaintiff's city tax deed as a muniment of title. The Shain case, as we term it, was in certiorari to quash an opinion of the court of appeals in Associated Holding Co. v. Carrigg, 228 Mo. App. 208,65 S.W.2d 1059. The Carrigg case was to foreclose the lien of paving tax bills issued by the City of St. Joseph and owned by the holding company. The city was a defendant and claimed that it had a lien superior to that of the holding company by reason of the fact that the property against which the paving tax bills were issued had, subsequent thereto, been sold for city taxes, and that the city bid in the property, but had not issued certificate of purchase. The trial court found for the holding company and the city appealed. The court of appeals reversed and certiorari was granted. The sole question was on the superiority of the respective liens.

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Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.2d 20, 356 Mo. 138, 1947 Mo. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kansas-city-v-tiernan-mo-1947.