Moore v. Chalmers-Galloway Live Stock Co.

10 P.2d 950, 90 Colo. 548
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 18, 1932
DocketNo. 12,712.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 10 P.2d 950 (Moore v. Chalmers-Galloway Live Stock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Chalmers-Galloway Live Stock Co., 10 P.2d 950, 90 Colo. 548 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties hereto are hereinafter designated as the receiver and the Chalmers company respectively. The property involved is referred to as the placer, the Reserve Mining Company as the Reserve company, John Fortune as Fortune, and William Monaghan as Monaghan.

The Chalmers company had judgment quieting its title to the placer. The receiver, on the ground that neither he nor the Reserve company were served or appeared therein, moved to vacate as to him. His motion was sustained, he answered, and issue was joined. On the trial he had the affirmative, and at the close of his counsel’s opening statement, and based thereon, counsel for the Chalmers company moved for judgment. That motion was sustained, and to review the judgment so entered the receiver prosecutes this writ.

The first question presented is by cross-error, assigned on the order vacating the judgment as to the receiver and permitting him to answer. If that assignment be good the receiver is out and the litigation ended. Otherwise the next question is the constitutionality of our 1927 recording statute as applied to the Reserve company’s unrecorded deed to the placer.

The facts essential to a comprehension of our conclusions, and either admitted in the pleadings or contained in the opening’ statement in question and admitted for the purposes of the motion based thereon, are as follows:

Fortune, then the owner of the placer, died in 1913, and about one year later his heirs conveyed to Monaghan. In 1915 the property was sold for taxes and struck off to the county. In 1919 Monaghan conveyed by Avar *551 ranty deed to the Reserve company. That deed, which is the sole basis of the receiver’s rights herein, if any, was never recorded and that fact was first disclosed by said opening statement. In 1921 the Chalmers company took a tax deed on said 1915 sale. If the receiver has any standing herein by virtue of his unrecorded deed from Monag’han, this tax deed is void as to him. In 1926 Chalmers took a second tax deed on said 1915 sale. Its status as to the receiver is the same as the other. In 1926 the Monaghan heirs (evidently ignorant of their ancestor’s deed to the Reserve company and believing themselves owners of the title by inheritance) brought suit again the Chalmers company to quiet their title. In that action the Chalmers company had judgment. In 1927 (March 28) the recording act here in question became effective. November 10, following, the complaint herein was filed. Various persons, not including the Reserve company, were specifically named as defendants, as were also “all unknown persons who claim any interest in and to the subject matter of this action.” In 1928 (February 28) summons having been published, judgment was entered in this cause in favor of the Chalmers company. In 1929 (about February 6) the receiver Moore was appointed. February 25, following, he moved to reopen the judgment theretofore entered. His motion was granted and he filed his answer and cross-complaint. In this cross-complaint he alleged that the fee title to the placer was in the Reserve company, that the Chalmers company’s .deeds were void, were clouds upon the title, and prayed that they be removed. June 11, following, the Chalmers company replied to the answer and answered the cross-complaint. January 13, 1930, the receiver replied to the answer to the cross-complaint. April 29, 1930, the cause came on for trial, at the opening whereof counsel for the Chalmers company, with the consent of counsel for the receiver, dismissed his complaint, as to the latter, with prejudice. Thereupon came the opening statement in question.

*552 1. The Chalmers company assigns cross-error on the order reopening' the proceedings and permitting the receiver to answer, on the grounds that three terms of court had passed since the entry of the judgment, that no showing of diligence was made, and that section 81, p. 116, C. L. 1921, was not complied with. Numerous authorities in support of this position are cited. Assuming it otherwise tenable the error was waived by the dismissal as to the receiver. 18 C. J., p. 1172, §64; Newman v. Dick, 23 Ill. 338. Against the rule so announced counsel for the Chalmers company cite Green v. Thatcher, 31 Colo. 363, 72 Pac. 1078. We do not think it touches the point.

2. As a preface to the examination of the receiver’s claim that the statute in question is not applicable to his deed, it should be observed that he must succeed, if •at all, on a pure legal claim to a constitutional exemption therefrom. Eight and equity are all against him. The Reserve company held its deed unrecorded, and apparently in strict secrecy, or with the utmost indifference, for ten years, while numerous other persons, with no intimation of its existence and every reason for faith in the legality of their claims of interest, dealt with this title or litigated concerning it. During that time the placer went to tax sale and at least two tax deeds were issued. The heirs of the Reserve company’s grantor attempted by suit to clear their title. A new act was passed by the legislature making this unrecorded deed (unless excepted) invalid save between the Reserve company and its grantor and their privies, and others with actual notice. The Chalmers company, successful in the foregoing suit and depending upon its tax deeds based upon its payment of taxes on the placer, instituted the present action against all persons claiming an interest and prosecuted it to a successful conclusion. The Reserve company itself had lost its charter for failure to pay its taxes and file its annual report, and appeared in this litigation, within three days of one year after final judgment, by a receiver especially *553 appointed for that purpose, and moved to set aside that judgment. This was the first time, so far as this record discloses, that any intimation could have come to any one that the Reserve company or the' receiver had or claimed the slightest interest in the placer, or that Monaghan, prior to his death, had transferred the title thereto.

Section 11, art. II of our Constitution reads: "No ex post facto law, nor law impairing the obligation of contracts, or retrospective in its operation * * * shall be passed by the general assembly.” Section 4902, p. 1352, C. L. 1921, so far as it applies to the question here under consideration, provides that deeds to real estate "may be recorded in the office of the recorder of the county wherein such real estate is situated and from and after the filing thereof for record in such office, and not before, such deeds, * * * shall take effect as to subsequent bona fide purchasers * * * not having notice thereof. ’ ’ That law stood unchanged from 1868 until March 28, 1927. The question of its intent and the scope of its applicability came before the Court of Appeals in 1913, which then decided that one holding title deraigned from the United States, but whose deed was unrecorded, was unaffected by a decree quieting title in the holder of a tax deed in an action to which he was not a party, said claimant under tax deed and decree based thereon, not being a “subsequent bona fide purchaser or incumbrancer.” Carroll v. Kit Carson Land Co., 24 Colo. App. 217, 133 Pac. 148.

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10 P.2d 950, 90 Colo. 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-chalmers-galloway-live-stock-co-colo-1932.