Powell v. County of St. Louis

559 S.W.2d 189, 1977 Mo. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 19, 1977
Docket60160
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 559 S.W.2d 189 (Powell v. County of St. Louis) 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
Powell v. County of St. Louis, 559 S.W.2d 189, 1977 Mo. LEXIS 232 (Mo. 1977).

Opinion

FINCH, Judge.

Plaintiffs brought an equitable action seeking cancellation of county collector’s deeds issued after tax sales in which lots *190 which they owned in St. Louis County were sold for unpaid taxes. The suit also sought to quiet title in plaintiffs.

The trial court entered judgment for defendant and plaintiffs appealed to the Missouri Court of Appeals, St. Louis District, which held that under prior cases it would be obligated to reverse the trial court and hold the tax deeds void. The court determined that the result was dictated by a line of cases holding that constructive fraud is established if the consideration paid at the tax sale is so grossly inadequate in comparison with the value of the property conveyed as to shock the conscience of the court. However, it expressed the view that the rule announced in those earlier cases was unsound and that the law on the subject should be reexamined. The case was ordered transferred to this court and we now decide it as though here on direct appeal. We affirm.

Plaintiffs alleged and defendant stipulated that in August 1972 plaintiffs were the owners in fee simple of the 207 tracts in St. Louis County which were described in plaintiffs’ petition in this suit. 1 Taxes on all of the tracts were unpaid back to and including those for 1967. A description of each tract, together with information as to taxes, interest and penalties due, was given in the notice of sale of delinquent lands and lots advertised by the collector of St. Louis County pursuant to § 140.170 2 prior to the delinquent tax sale held on August 28, 29 and 30,1972. The notice specified that this was the third offering of the lots, 3 all of them having been advertised and offered for sale (but not sold) in the two preceding years pursuant to § 140.240. In each instance the highest bidder for the lots was the Director of Revenue of St. Louis County, acting as trustee pursuant to designation under the terms of § 140.260. 4 One lot was bid in at $663, one at $100,14 others at figures ranging from $20 to $75, and the remainder for bids ranging from $1 to $10. 5 Collector’s deeds conveying the tracts sold were delivered to the trustee and recorded. Plaintiff Roy Powell was present at the tax sale and he bid on some of the lots owned by plaintiffs but he was not the successful bidder as to any of them. His bids were for less than the amount due for taxes, penalties and interest. He did purchase about 10 lots which belonged to other taxpayers.

Mr. Powell, a real estate broker for twenty-one years, testified as to the value in August 1972 of the lots sold which were located in Kinloch as well as those in the Forest Mountain and Westcamp subdivisions. He stated that lots in Forest Mountain and Westcamp were worth at least $375 each and that Kinloch lots were worth at least $375 or $1050 depending on size. 6

Plaintiffs’ first contention is that the collector’s deeds should be set aside on the ground that the published notice of sale was insufficient. Their complaint is that it specified that the sale would be held under *191 the provisions of “Section 140. R.S.Mo., 1969 and amendments thereto” without designating the chapter. Plaintiffs argue that such reference was meaningless and made the entire tax sale void. We disagree. Section 140.170 which contains the publication requirements for delinquent tax sales does not provide for or require statement in the published notice of the statutory basis for the sale. Reference thereto was surplus-age. Incomplete reference to the statute did not render the sale void. Furthermore, plaintiff testified specifically that he was thoroughly familiar with the provisions of the tax law in question (commonly known as the Jones-Munger Law), that he was not misled by the reference to “Section 140” and that he was actually present at the sale and bid on properties offered for sale. We find no merit in plaintiffs’ first assignment.

The principal basis for reversal asserted by plaintiffs is that “defendant St. Louis County cannot legally acquire plaintiffs’ property at a tax sale by bidding sums which are so grossly inadequate as to constitute a small percentage of its value because said collector’s deeds are void instruments and should be set aside.” They rely on numerous cases decided by this court. 7

The leading case applying the rule relied upon by plaintiffs to sales under Chapter 140 is Bussen Realty Co. v. Benson, 349 Mo. 58, 159 S.W.2d 813 (banc 1942). In that case plaintiff received a quit claim deed to an unimproved tract of something over 7 acres in 1931. Taxes for 1929 were unpaid when the property was conveyed and plaintiff did not pay them. In 1934, acting under the Jones-Munger law, the collector sold the tract for $11 (the unpaid taxes then amounted to $10.59). A certificate of purchase was issued to the purchaser. Plaintiff did not avail himself of the two year redemption period but no deed was issued thereafter by the collector to the purchaser because of the threat of suit attacking the sale.

Thereafter, plaintiff filed suit to set aside the sale and enjoin issuance of a collector’s deed, relying solely on the asserted inadequacy of the amount bid and paid at the tax sale. The evidence disclosed that the amount paid was less than 1 per cent of the value of the property. The trial court entered judgment for defendant but on appeal the judgment was reversed and remanded with directions to enter judgment setting aside the tax sale for the reason that the sale price was so inadequate as to shock the conscience of the court. The court’s opinion traced the development of this standard in cases involving judicial sales in ordinary civil cases and its extension to tax cases. It pointed out that in earlier cases the rule had been that relief could be granted based on inadequacy of consideration only if it was accompanied by other grounds for relief from the judicial sale. However, this restriction gradually eroded until it was established that relief would be granted on inadequacy alone. Analyzing this standard, the court said, 159 S.W.2d at 816: “We find no other expressed reason for this court’s application of the rule to tax cases than its refusal to permit property to be so sacrificed as to amount to confiscation.”

The court then proceeded to consider whether the rule applied previously to judicial sales in tax cases should be extended to sales under the Jones-Munger law. It recognized that sales under the Jones-Munger law, unlike judicial sales, allowed redemption by the owner if the property was sold at either the first or second offering. However, the court concluded that this right of redemption was afforded simply to grant quick relief from the summary method of sale on notice rather than judicial action and that it did not affect the right to have a sale declared void for fraud based on inadequacy of consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
559 S.W.2d 189, 1977 Mo. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-county-of-st-louis-mo-1977.