Keefe v. Bramhall

14 D.C. 551
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1885
DocketNo. 8712
StatusPublished

This text of 14 D.C. 551 (Keefe v. Bramhall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keefe v. Bramhall, 14 D.C. 551 (D.C. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wylie

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill to quiet the title to the west half of lot 3 in square 780. The bill was filed the 19th of September, 1883. The plaintiff claimed under a tax title, and some mesne conveyances. The defendants claim under the real title. The property was vested in James S. Stevenson in his life time, and he died about the year 1811, seized. The defendants are all heirs at law of James S. Stevenson. It is a claim, then,- of the party who holds the tax title under the corporation of Washington against the heirs who hold the real title.

The tax title is briefly this: This piece of property was sold for $1.42, in the year 1827, for taxes due for the years 1824, 1825 and 1826. No tax deed was ever made for this property to the purchaser for thirteen years, and then, in 1841, the tax deed was made in pursuance of the sale which took place in the year 1827, and no possession was taken by the purchaser, or by any person claiming title under this tax sale, until 1870. The tax title had passed by many conveyances through different hands, amongst others William B. Todd, well known in this District as a dealer in tax titles. In 1870 these plaintiffs took possession of the property.

[567]*567The lot lay out in an unimproved part of the city, and although we have no evidence of the .fact, it is very probable, from the lights we have, that the intermediate taxes, after the tax sale in 1827, had been paid by either the original purchaser at the tax sale, or by those who claim under the purchaser. There is no evidence that these heirs ever paid the taxes, which were very small. The bill does not aver that this was a valid tax sale, and there is no proof to establish its validity. But the theory of the bill is that, whether the tax sale was valid or not, the deed under it gave a colorable title. It was necessary, if the plaintiff relied upon the validity of the tax title, that he should show it. A tax deed of itself proves nothing. There are statutes in some States which declare that a deed given by an officer who is authorized to give a tax deed, gives a title prima facie good. But we have no such law. In this District, a man who claims under a tax title must show it to be good just as a man who claims under a deed from the marshal cannot make out any title on the face of the deed. The marshal’s deed itself gives no title, because the marshal is acting under an authority, and his authority to make a deed must be shown, and to establish that authority it is necessary to give in evidence the judgment and the execution, and show the authority of the marshal to make the deed. So in regard to a public officer who sells property for the non-payment of taxes. His deed, on its face, amounts to nothing. His airthority for making the deed must be shown; otherwise it is a void act.

As we have said, the bill does not aver a good tax title. It is merely claimed that it was a colorable title. But a color-able title is generally a void title in itself. A party who claims to enter under color of title, and by length of adverse possession gains a good title, will hold according to the metes and bounds set out in his colorable title, and that is the only effect of his color of title. The entry in the first instance may be that of a mere trespasser, without colorable title, but if he remains in adverse possession twenty years he gains a title — but his title is only for exactly the land that he [568]*568claims and stands upon — that lie has actual possession of But if lie bad entered under a color of title, and bis deed sets out by metes and bounds the- property, then bis possession of a part of tbe land would extend in contemplation of law to the whole, if he bas possession long enough to give him title to tbe whole tract.

It is a very liberal concession to tbe complainant in this case to say that be has a colorable title. For if tbe face of tbe tax deed shows that it was absolutely void it does not even give color of title, and in this case there is strictly nothing to show that this tax deed amounts to anything at 11. But assuming that the complainant has a color of title, as it is claimed, it is only colorable, for he has made out no title under the tax deed. The fact that he has a tax deed, that the tax deed was recorded and that he has paid the taxes on the property, is no proof of title at all as against the real owner. In this case there was no actual possession until the year 1810, and from that date we have thirteen years of adverse possession by the complainant. But thirteen years of adverse possession does not make a title. It requires twenty years of adverse possession to make a good title, and that possession must be open, notorious and actual, not constructive. Payment of taxes does not amount to adverse possession; nor does recording a deed amount to it, and for the reason that it is not visible? open and notorious, and more it is not actual. There is not an authority in the books which supports or gives countenance to the pretext that a man can be ousted of the title to his property by some other person paying his taxes, and by simply getting a tax deed for the land. The tax deed must either be valid or there must be actual, open, notorious, visible adverse possession against all the world for twenty years. It is not necessary that a mere fence should be about it, but there must be actual, open and notorious possession of the property.

We do not find the statute, which is in force here, in regard to adverse ¡Dossession either in Thompson’s Digest or in Kilty’s Laws of Maryland. Our statute is the statute of [569]*56921 James, ch. 1, sec. 16. It is to be found in Alexander's British Statutes, but you will not find in Thompson’s Digest or Kilty any statute on the subject of adverse possession. The statute of James declares that no man shall be deprived of his right to enter upon his land except by afi adverse possession of twenty years. Some of tbe States have their own statutes upon the subject which prescribé twenty-one years, but we have no statute of our own except this English one, which has always been held to be in forcé •here. In this case there has been an adverse holding for thirteen years only. So that there is no title by adverse possession. .

To meet these difficulties, the complainant avers that he has a right to be considered in possession of the property, because the tax deed was recorded in 1841, and that gives him color of title, and that he has been paying taxes upon the property himself, and those under whom he claims have also paid taxes ; but that cannot eke out adverse possession, because the payment of taxes and the recording of the deed are no part of adverse possession. The complainant, therefore, so far as this court can see, has no title upon this record, either under the tax sale or by means of adverse possession. That is enough to dispose of this case, but we wish to say something about these applications to quiet title, in regard to which courts have always been very exact.

Courts of equity will never interfere between two claimants to a piece of real estate, for the purpose of quieting title, unless the complainant shows a clear and indisputable title, but will leave him to any other remedy that he may have.

In Alexander and others vs. Pendleton 8th Cranch, 462, Chief Justice Marshall says that “the prayer of the bill ought not to be granted in a doubtful case ” to quiet title. And in Orton vs. Smith, 18th Howard, 265, Mr.

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14 D.C. 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keefe-v-bramhall-dc-1885.