Patterson v. Durfey

68 Miss. 779
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 68 Miss. 779 (Patterson v. Durfey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patterson v. Durfey, 68 Miss. 779 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Woods, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant, E. E. Durfey, soon after attaining his majority, filed this bill in the chancery court of Yazoo county against the respondents, in which he alleges that as one of the devisees of Mrs. Eliza Askew, deceased, his maternal grandmother, he was entitled to an undivided one-fourth interest in the lands in controversy ; that the several conveyances under which the respondents claim title to the entire estate in the lands is a cloud upon his undivided interest therein; and he prays to redeem, and for an accounting, etc. The respondents in their answer, besides a vast multitude of other matters, show that one Mercer acquired the state’s title to a portion of the lands by conveyances from the auditor of public accounts in the years 1879 and 1880, and to the remainder of said lands by deed from Gwin and Hemingway, commissioners, in the year 1880; that they were Mercer’s vendees by several purchases about the year 1880 : they deny the invalidity of the tax-deeds under which they claim to derive title, and they deny that their deeds are clouds upon complainant’s title: they deny their liability for mesne profits and rents, even if complainant is entitled to redeem, which they deny. In August, 1889, a year and a half after the original bill had been filed, by leave of the court, the adult brother of complainant and two adult sisters were permitted to make themselves parties complainant, and to amend the original bill. The bill, as amended, alleges that the complainants are the rightful owners of the lands by devise from Mrs. Eliza Askew, deceased; that E. E. Durfey, the sole com[783]*783plainant in the original bill, was, and one of the complainants in the amended bill was, under the disability of minority until April, 1886 ; and that the sisters, complainants in the amended bill, were under disability of coverture from 1871 until 1880, and that the claim of title by defendants is a cloud upon their own; and they pray cancellation of defendants’ deeds as clouds. To this amended bill the defendants made voluminous answer, setting up the various matters in defense offered in their answer to the original bill, and especially pleaded the statute of limitations of three years contained in section 539, code 1880, alleging that the defendants have been in the actual occupation of said lands for more than three years since that statute of limitations was enacted and before the commencement of this suit. To invalidate the several deeds under which the defendants claim title derivatively, it is contended by counsel for appellees that the lands conveyed to Mercer by Gwin and Hemingway, commissioners, were not delinquent for taxes in 1869, when they were sold to the levee board, and that the other lands in controversy, purchased by Mercer from the auditor of public accounts, were not liable to sale for non-payment of taxes for the year 1877, for the reason that they were then assessed to the liquidating levee board.

Grant all these defects and irregularities, and the case is no way helped in so far as the three complainants who were made parties to the amended bill are concerned. One of these three complainants was nearly thirty years of age when he became a party to the suit, and the other two added complainants were older. The defendants are shown to have been in actual occupation of their lands since 1881. The statute of limitations of three years, found in section 539, code 1880, interposes an insurmountable bar to any recovery of the lands by P. W. Durfey, Mrs. Cassedy and Mrs. Du-lany. We hold the statute operative from its enactment, and its letter and spirit bar the three older complainants. In pursuance of the public policy to punish the delinquent tax-payer, and to secure the purchaser of land at tax-sale, or, derivatively, under former sales for taxes, and to make so far as legislation having these objects in view can do so, all lands pay taxes, the legislature enacted this [784]*784statute of repose; saying, in effect, to all delinquents: “You shall, despite your past neglect and refusal to pay taxes, have yet three years, after one year from the day of sale, in which to contest the sale and save your forfeited lands; but your failure to act within the prescribed period shall bar any right of action for a recovery, unqualifiedly and absolutely, save in cases of minors or insane persons, and against these the statute shall not run until after the removal of their disabilities.” The period of redemption, as to the three older complainants, has expired, and their right to recovery is finally barred.

T. H. Campbell, for appellee, Filed a lengthy suggestion of error, making the following points:— I respectfully suggest that the court erred in holding that all the complainants, except E. R>. Durfey, were barred of recovery because of three years’ possession by the defendants under § 539, code 1880, at least so far as the land conveyed by Gwin and Hemingway to Mercer is concerned, if not all the lands. This question only applies where there has been a sale by the tax-collector. Clay v. Moore, 65 Miss. 81. The only evidence there could be of a tax-collector’s sale, would be a deed, or after the code of 1871, a certified list. The coinmis-sioners’ deed alone is not prima fade evidence of the original sale for taxes. Clymer v. Cameron, 55 Miss. 593; Weathersby v. Thoma, 57 lb. 296. In these cases it was expressly decided that a deed from the auditor, without the tax-collector’s deed or certified list, was not prima fade evidence of title. There being no evidence of sale by the tax-collector, under Clay v. Moore, § 539 of the code could not be invoked.

As to E. R. Durfey, the bar had not been completed when he filed his original bill, asserting his title to an undivided one-fourth, interest in the lands, and praying to be allowed to redeem. If the defects and irregularities in the tax-sales, under which defendants derive title, really existed, E. R. Durfey can take advantage of them now, and is entitled yet to redeem upon the terms prescribed by our laws. Reversed and remanded.

A careful perusal of § 539 shows that it was not intended to apply where the taxes had been paid, but only where the sale was void because of the defective execution of powers in making the sale, or in some precedent step, as, for instance, where the sale had been made on the wrong day, or where the roll was not returned within the time required. The section could not be intended to validate a sale absolutely void because made contrary to the constitution. Such is the effect of the decision in Nevin v. Bailey, 62 Miss. 433, construing § 1709, code 1871. It was evidently the intention of the legislature to make § 539, code 1880, apply only to delinquents, as it makes three years’ possession a bar to any suit to recover the land, because “ of the defects in the sale of said land for taxes.” There could be no sale “/or toes” if the amount required had been duly paid. Delinquency is as essential to the power to sell lands for taxes as an assessment or levy, and he who has paid all taxes assessed on his property need not trouble himself about the sale of it. Metcalfe v. Perry, 66 Miss. 68.

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