Schmeltzer v. Scheid

157 S.W.2d 193, 203 Ark. 274, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 310
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 8, 1941
Docket4-6503
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 157 S.W.2d 193 (Schmeltzer v. Scheid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmeltzer v. Scheid, 157 S.W.2d 193, 203 Ark. 274, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 310 (Ark. 1941).

Opinion

Smith, J..

This litigation involves the title to blocks ■ 8 and 9, Schattler’s Second Addition to the city of North Little Rock. This second addition was platted in 1907, at which time the blocks in question were a part of a larger tract of land which comprised the addition, all owned by Charles Schattler and his wife, who, on August 10, 1912, mortgaged the entire addition. At the sale under the decree foreclosing the mortgage, John Schmeltzer became the purchaser and received a deed from the commissioner who conducted the sale. Schmeltzer was not a party to the foreclosure suit, but was a third party. Schmeltzer continued to own the property until his death in 1931, and his heirs-at-law have never conveyed the title which they inherited from their ancestor. Without color of title, P. H. Scheid began to pay the taxes on the two blocks above described in 1916, and paid the taxes thereon continuously, including those of the year 1939. Between these years, both inclusive, Scheid paid the general taxes for 24 years, and during all this time the blocks were unenclosed, unimproved, and not in the actual possession of any one.

Schmeltzer, during his lifetime, and his heirs since his death, have paid the taxes on the lots surrounding the two blocks under the impression that they were also paying the taxes on the two blocks, and did not discover, until they undertook to sell the entire property, that Scheid, and not they, had, during all these years, been paying the taxes on two blocks.

Scheid filed suit' praying that his title be quieted under the provisions of § 8921, Pope’s Digest. He was accorded the relief prayed, and Schmeltzer’s heirs, who had been made parties, have prosecuted an appeal from that decree.

The appeal, therefore, involves the construction of this statute, and its application to the facts herein stated.

Legislation of this character had its inception in this state in the passage of act 65 of the Acts of 1899, p. 117, entitled, “An act for the protection of those who pay taxes on land,” and this act appears as § 8920, Pope’s Digest, and reads as follows: ' “Unimproved and unenclosed land shall be deemed and held to be in possession of the person who pays the taxes thereon if he have color of title thereto, but no person shall be entitled to invoke the benefit of this act unless he and those under whom he claims shall have paid such taxes for at least seven years in succession, and not less than three of such payments must be made subsequent to the passage of this act.”

This act was upheld in the case of Towson v. Denson, 74 Ark. 302, 86 S. W. 661. It was there said that Kirby’s Digest, § 5061 (§ 8925, Pope’s Digest), providing, in effect, that no action for the recovery of lands forfeited for taxes “shall be maintained unless it appears that the plaintiff, his ancestor, predecessor, or grantor, was seized or possessed of the lands in question within two years next before the commencement of such suit,” contemplates actual, and not constructive, possession. Here, during nearly a quarter of a century, during all of which time appellee has been paying the taxes on the two blocks in question, appellants and their ancestor have had only the constructive possession attending the ownership of the title. This holding in the Towson case has since been consistently followed: Price v. Greer, 76 Ark. 426, 88 S. W. 985; Cottonwood Lbr. Co. v. Hardin, 78 Ark. 95, 92 S. W. 1118; Hardie v. Bissell, 80 Ark. 74, 94 S. W. 611; Wheeler v. Foote, 80 Ark. 435, 97 S. W. 447; Earle Improvement Co. v. Chatfield, 81 Ark. 296, 99 S. W. 84; Updegraff v. Marked Tree Lbr. Co., 83 Ark. 154, 103 S. W. 606; Wyse v. Johnston, 83 Ark. 520, 104 S. W. 204; Rachels v. Setcher Cooperage Works, 95 Ark. 6, 128 S. W. 348; Paragould Abstract & Real Estate Co. v. Coffman,, 100 Ark. 582, 140 S. W. 730, L. R. A. 1915B, 1006; Fenton v. Collum, 104 Ark. 624, 150 S. W. 140; Brasher v. Taylor, 109 Ark. 281, 159 S. W. 1120; Wells v. Rock Island Improvement Co., 110 Ark. 534, 162 S. W. 572; Reynolds v. Snyder, 121 Ark. 33, 180 S. W. 752, 183 S. W. 979; Union Sawmill Co. v. Pagan, 175 Ark. 559, 299 S. W. 1012.

The act of 1899, by its express terms, applies only to persons who pay taxes under color of title, but its obvious and declared purpose was to encourage the payment of taxes and to protect persons who pay them.

For the same purpose the General Assembly sought to affoi’d protection to persons who, for fifteen or more consecutive years, paid taxes on land without possessing color of title. To that end act 199 was passed at the 1929 session of the General Assembly, volume 2, Acts of. 1929, p. 1001, and appears as § 8921, Pope’s Digest. This act is entitled, “An act for the protection of persons paying taxes on wild and unimproved land,” and, in its entirety, reads as follows: “Payment of taxes on wild and unimproved land in this state by any person or his predecessor in title, for a period of fifteen consecutive years (at least one of said payments being made after the passage of this act), shall create a presumption of law that such person, or his predecessor in title, held color of title to said land prior to the first payment of taxes made as aforesaid, and that all such payments were made under color of title.”

These statutes (§§ 8920 and 8921, Pope’s Digest) deal with the same subject, and have a common purpose, that is, to encourage the payment of taxes, and to protect those who pay them, although the acts are applicable to different conditions, the one to persons who pay taxes under color of title, the other to persons who pay without having color of title, and we are of opinion, therefore, that the holding in the ease of Towson v. Denson, supra, is as applicable to the latter act as it was to the earlier one, which that case upheld. The 7-year statute contemplates that the taxpayer has only color of title, and that neither has the actual title; while the 15-year statute applies' to those cases where the taxpayer has no title at all.

Now, this court has several times said, as, for instance, in the case of Fletcher v. Malone, 145 Ark. 211, 224 S. W. 629, that the mere payment of taxes, however long continued, would not confer title; but the effect of the acts quoted, if any effect is to be given them, is this, that this is no longer the law in the circumstances to which these acts are applicable. One may acquire title by tax payments in the case of the person having color of title by seven consecutive tax payments, and in the case of the person having no color of title by fifteen consecutive tax payments, provided the land paid on is wild, unoccupied, unenclosed, and unimproved during -all the time these payments are being made.

We quote from the case of Union Sawmill Co. v. Pagan, 175 Ark. 564, 299 S. W. 1012: “In Paragould Abstract & Real Estate Co. v. Coffin, 100 Ark. 582, 140 S. W. 730, L. R. A. 1915B, 1006, quoting from Updegraff v. Marked Tree Lbr. Co., 83 Ark. 154, 103 S. W. 606, we said: ‘It will be observed that the act merely declares that the person who pays the taxes on unimproved and unenclosed lands shall be deemed to be in possession thereof if he had color of title. The statute does not undertake to fix the period of limitation, but merely declares the continuous payment of taxes under color of title to be possession, and leaves the general statute of limitations applicable thereto.

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Bluebook (online)
157 S.W.2d 193, 203 Ark. 274, 1941 Ark. LEXIS 310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmeltzer-v-scheid-ark-1941.