Robins v. Garvine

136 A.2d 549, 37 Del. Ch. 44, 1957 Del. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 27, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 136 A.2d 549 (Robins v. Garvine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robins v. Garvine, 136 A.2d 549, 37 Del. Ch. 44, 1957 Del. LEXIS 106 (Del. 1957).

Opinion

Bramhall, Justice:

This appeal relates to the refusal of the Vice Chancellor to set aside as a cloud on the title a tax deed from the *46 Sheriff to the purchaser at a tax sale given by order of the Superior Court following a judgment in a tax proceeding pursuant to 9 Del.C., Ch. II, § 8721 et seq. The Vice Chancellor held that a judgment regular on its face may not be attacked collaterally except on the ground of fraud, or lack of jurisdiction. In reaching this decision, the Vice Chancellor also determined that a defendant may not attack the return of the Sheriff, even in a direct proceeding, where the Sheriff’s return does not show on its face a lack of jurisdiction.

In 1946 appellant and her late husband became the purchasers by deed of a lot situated in Brandywine Hundred, New Castle County. It was the first property which they, or either of them, had ever purchased. They built thereon a house with their own hands. They dug wells for water. They installed French drains. They then erected a large chicken house. In April of 1954 appellant and her late husband called at the tax office in the Public Building in Wilmington to inquire about the county taxes on their property. They were informed that the taxes were paid. While there, appellant’s husband had a sudden attack of illness, which prevented them from checking fully into their tax situation. In 1956, upon making further inquiry, appellant and her husband learned for the first time that their property had been sold at Sheriff’s sale for non-payment of taxes. They promptly consulted Thomas W. Knowles, a member of the Bar in the City of Wilmington, but shortly thereafter Mr. Knowles died. They then consulted counsel now representing appellant in these proceedings. On August 2, 1956, a bill of complaint was filed by appellant (her husband having died), alleging that the Sheriff’s return as to the posting of the notice of tax sale was not in conformity with the actual facts; that neither the return of sale nor the advertisement thereof mentioned the improvements on the property; that the newspaper publication of the advertisement of the sale was improper and that the Sheriff’s return of sale failed to show where the handbills concerning the sale were posted; that appellant had no knowledge of the institution of proceedings for the sale of the property for non-payment of taxes or of the confirmation of the sale and the execution and delivery of a deed to appellee; that, although the property was sold at the tax sale for the sum of $200 it had a market value in excess of $5,000.

*47 The sale in this case was by virtue of 9 Del.C. 1953, Chapter II, designated as the monition method of sale of real estate in New Castle County. Section 8722 thereof provides, inter alla, that upon the filing of the praecipe for monition in the Office of the Prothonotary by the Collector of Delinquent Taxes for New Castle County a monition shall be issued directed to the Sheriff stating the amount of the judgment for the taxes due and the years thereof, together with “a brief description of the property upon which the taxes are a lien.” It is also provided therein that a description of such property as the same shall appear on the assessment rolls shall be a sufficient description. In § 8725 of said chapter, it is provided that any time after the expiration of twenty days next following the return of the Sheriff, a writ of venditioni exponas shall be issued to the Prothonotary commanding the Sheriff to sell the property mentioned or described in the writ and to make due return of his proceedings in the same manner as similar writs of venditioni exponas are issued out of the Superior Court. It is also provided in this section that the property shall be described in the writ under the description thereof “as it appears on the assessment rolls prepared by the Board of Assessment of New Castle County and by metes and bounds where obtainable, but nothing therein shall be construed to invalidate a writ or a sale pursuant thereto containing only the description as it appears on the assessment rolls or a writ bearing only a description by metes or bounds.” The writ of monition was returned by the Sheriff in the following language: “Posted the 6th day of February A.D. 1952.” The body of the return on the writ of venditioni exponas is as follows: “Advertised the within described real estate for sale on May 2, 1952, and sold the same to Mildred Garvine for the sum of Two Hundred ($200.00) Dollars and applied the same as follows * * *.” § 8724 of Title 9, Del.C. 1953 provides that the monition, or a copy thereof, shall be posted by the Sheriff “upon some prominent place or part of the property against which the judgment for the taxes or assessment is a lien.”

The Vice Chancellor found that appellant’s complaint was in the nature of a bill quia timet, to quiet title, and held, under the ruling of Suplee v. Eckert, 35 Del.Ch. 428, 120 A.2d 718, that a Court of Chancery has jurisdiction of such cases. The Vice Chancellor deter- • mined, however, that the action of the Court of Chancery constituted *48 a collateral attack upon a final judgment of the Superior Court and that in the absence of proof of fraud or lack of jurisdiction in the court rendering the judgment, the complaint must be dismissed. Appellant appealed to this Court, assigning as her reasons for error the same objections as made in her complaint, as hereinbefore set forth.

Appellant contends that the Sheriff’s return should have indicated affirmatively that a copy of the monition was posted on the property and that its failure to do so is jurisdictional. She makes a similar objection relative to the Sheriff’s return on the writ of vendi-tioni exponas.

10 Del.C. 1953, § 4973, provides that public notice of the sale of lands and tenements under execution process shall be given by advertisements posted at least ten days before the day of sale in ten of the most public places in the County and that a “like advertisement shall be delivered at least ten days before the day of sale to the defendant, or left at his usual place of abode * * Again appellant contends that the failure of the writ affirmatively to show either personal service on appellant and her late husband or the leaving of a copy of the writ at their usual place of abode was jurisdictional.

We think that the judgment of the Vice Chancellor should be affirmed. The record in this case does not show a lack of jurisdiction in the Superior Court. The action of the Superior Court in approving the sale established, prima facie, its regularity. Caldwell v. Lord, 4 Boyce 440, 89 A. 132. In the absence of anything on the face of the record showing the contrary, there is a presumption that the Sheriff complied with every requirement of the statute. Abbott Supply Co. v. Shockley, 50 Del. Super. 261, 128 A.2d 794. In making his return to the Court, a Sheriff is not required to “spell out” affirmatively that each and every prerequisite for legal service of process is complied with. Abbott Supply Company, supra; Gibbons v. Mason, 1 Har. 452. See Wooley on Delaware Practice, p. 142.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 A.2d 549, 37 Del. Ch. 44, 1957 Del. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robins-v-garvine-del-1957.