Shawler v. Carter

298 S.W. 714, 221 Ky. 248, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 712
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 7, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 298 S.W. 714 (Shawler v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shawler v. Carter, 298 S.W. 714, 221 Ky. 248, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 712 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing in part and affirming in part.

This is the second appeal of this case; the opinion in the first one being reported in 215 Ky. 601, 286 S. W. 779. *249 It will appear therefrom that appellee and plaintiff below, Haynes 'Carter, purchased a tract of land in Hardin county at a tax sale for the amount of taxes due thereon for designated years, and, conceiving that the sale was valid and that he had performed all of the statutory requirements subsequent thereto necessary to vest the title to the land in him, he brought this action in the Hardin cireuit court against appellants and defendants below, the owners, to recover possession of the land. Among the defenses interposed was that the sale was invalid and vested in plaintiff neither the equitable nor the legal title, but only the right to a lien on the land given by section 4036 of the present Statutes, saying:

“Whenever any person shall purchase property sold for delinquent taxes, and the sale shall be set aside because of any irregularity, the purchaser shall have a lien on the property for the amount of taxes and cost paid by him, and for which the property is liable, with legal interest from the time of such payment, which may be recovered from the owner of the property or person owning the same.”

In the first opinion, the latter contention was upheld.

Upon the filing of the mandate from this court, and on October 26, 1926, the court rendered judgment setting aside its former opinion, and which was reversed in the 215 ICy. case, supra, and thereupon adjudged that plaintiff Carter, was entitled to a lien to the amount of taxes, penalty, and cost paid by him, with 6 per cent, interest from the time he did so, and his costs up to the time of the rendition of that judgment. On the next day, and at the same term of court, plaintiff tendered an amended petition setting out the facts that he had fully complied with the statutory requirements as to the giving of notices of his purchase of the land within the time he was required to do so, and also of the filing of the proper certificates by the sheriff with the county court clerk of the sale made by him, as is also required by the statutes, .and that he was therefore entitled to the 10 per cent, interest and the 15 per cent, penalties provided by section 4151-2 of our present statutes relating to the right of redemption by the owner of land sold for taxes when the sale was in every respect valid so as to vest the purchaser with an equitable title to the land, plus the further right *250 to subsequently perfect it into a legal title by complying with other provisions of the statute and which are not necessary to be set out or specifically referred to in this opinion, since they are contained in and discussed in some of the cases hereinafter referred to. There was no motion made at that time to set aside the judgment rendered on the day before such' tender. The court did not pass on the motion to file the 'amended petition at that term, but it was continued until the subsequent March, 1927 term, at which the court sustained plaintiff’s motion to file the amended petition, and it was by order of court controverted of record and the cause submitted, followed by a judgment sustaining plaintiff’s contention as to his right to collect from defendants 10 per cent, interest with the 15 per cent, penalties provided in section 4151-2 supra. Prom that judgment the defendants in the original petition have appealed, and the guardian ad litem for the infants has appealed from the allowance made to him for his services in their behalf.

It is contended on behalf of the owners of the land that the first judgment rendered by the court on October 25,1926, allowed plaintiff all that he was entitled to, and followed strictly the provisions of section 4036 herein-before inserted; while it is the contention of plaintiff that he was entitled to the 10 per cent, interest and 15 per cent, penalties provided by section 4151-2, which, and succeeding sections, relate to and regulate the right of redemption. It is further contended by the landowners that the court lost jurisdiction of the case when it rendered the October, 1926, judgment, and could not set it aside at a subsequent term in the absence of a motion for that purpose being made at the rendition term, and that the tendering of the amended petition, even if the case was one wherein amendments could be filed after a return from this court, did not have the effect of suspending the judgment so as to authorize the court to set it aside at a subsequent term. In answer to the latter contention, plaintiff insists that the tendering of his amended petition was tantamount to a motion to set aside the October, 1926, judgment, and that it had the same effect as a motion made expressly for that purpose. Our view of the case as subsequently expressed renders it unnecessary for us to determine the questions of practice thus raised on this appeal, since we are thoroughly convinced that the first *251 judgment (October 25, 1926) gave to plaintiff all that he was entitled to under the facts disclosed by the record.

Plaintiff relies upon the former opinion in this court, and those in the cases of DeSembly v. Dedman, 161 Ky. 128, 170 S. W. 528, and Hatcher v. Howes, 138 Ky. 464, 128 S. W. 335, in support of the judgment allowing him the 15 per cent, penalties and 10 per cent, interest which the court made in the judgment appealed from. We have examined those cases, and none of them apply to the facts disclosed by this record. In each of them the validity of the sale was not questioned, and in each of them, except the opinion on the former appeal of this case, the right of redemption was sought to be exercised by the landowner, and the oases were strictly under section 4151-2, supra, relating, as we have stated, exclusively to the exercise of such right. The Legislature evidently had in mind that there would be cases where the sale was invalid and the purchaser at it would acquire no sort of title to the land, nor any right to perfect or acquire the title by subsequently complying with any provisions of any statute, upon the ground that, if the sale was void from the beginning, the rights acquired could not be made valid by any subsequent conduct or steps taken by the purchaser at the invalid sale. At the same time it was foreseen by the Legislature that, notwithstanding the sale might be invalid from the beginning, yet the taxes of the landowner might be extinguished by the proceeds of the invalid sale paid by the purchaser thereat, and it would be inequitable for the landowner to retain the land and not remunerate the purchaser for the money he paid in extinguishment of the taxes. Section 4036 was therefore enacted to cover that specific case and to secure the purchaser at such invalid sale. He was given a lien upon the land for the taxes and penalties that he actually paid, with legal interest thereon from the time of payment, followed by his costs incurred in the necessary litigation to enforce it.

The principles as so stated were expressly recognized and applied in the case of White v. McIntosh, 145 Ky. 59, 139 S. W. 1057, and no contrary opinion involving the same facts have we been able to find.

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Related

City of Ashland v. Stevens
83 S.W.2d 516 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1935)
Carter v. Shawler
43 S.W.2d 343 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W. 714, 221 Ky. 248, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shawler-v-carter-kyctapphigh-1927.