Shelton v. Franklin

123 S.W. 1084, 224 Mo. 342, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 21, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 123 S.W. 1084 (Shelton v. Franklin) 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
Shelton v. Franklin, 123 S.W. 1084, 224 Mo. 342, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 16 (Mo. 1909).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This case reached the Court in Banc on an opinion filed in Division One by the writer, which opinion was concurred in by all the judges then present. Motion for rehearing was filed and upon consideration the writer was considerably shaken in the views he had expressed in the divisional opinion and the motion was sustained and the cause sent to the Court in Banc, on account of the grave character of several questions passed upon in the divisional opinion, and to the end- that further light might be gathered from a reargument of the case.

In course of time it was reargued and submitted and after consultation again assigned to the writer for disposition. Since said time, however, several other cases involving similar questions have been argued. The facts necessary to a disposition of the case are brief, although the case is bristling with points. Going to the facts:

The petition up to a certain point is the usual one filed under section 650. By this we do not want to be understood as condemning this form of petition. After alleging that plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the property, and that defendant claimed some adverse interest, the petition then avers:

“That the defendant claims some title, estate or interest in and to said premises, the nature and character of which claim is unknown to plaintiff, and can[352]*352not Tbe described herein; unless it be that defendant claims through a certain sheriff’s deed for taxes, dated the 10th day of September 1897, and recorded in Book A at page 101, of the deed records of Pemiscot county, Missouri.
“Plaintiff further states and avers that said tax deed should be held void and of no effect for the following reasons: Whereas, the law commands the sheriff, when selling lands for taxes, to divide such land and sell only so much thereof, as will be sufficient to satisfy said taxes and costs, the sheriff wholly disregarded his duty in selling said lands, and failed to divide said lands as he was by law commanded, but sold all of the above lands in bulk for the sum of thirty-seven dollars. That the amount of taxes against said lands were only $4.66, and that said lands were susceptible of being subdivided into two divisions of forty acres each, either of which subdivisions would have brought more than said taxes together with the interest and costs of said suit. Plaintiff further states that said lands at date of sale by said sheriff, were reasonably worth the sum of eight hundred dollars, and' had said sheriff complied with the law in making said sale and have sold only one subdivision of said land, there would have been left to plaintiff one-half of said land after the taxes, interest and cost had been paid out of the subdivision so sold.
“That said deed should be held void for the further reason that said deed does not state the amount of taxes for the different years for which the same was sold.
“Plaintiff further states that said deed should be held void for reason that it shows upon its face that no levy was ever made on said lands prior to the date of the pretended sale.
“Plaintiff here and now offers to pay to defendant, J. E. Franklin; by him or his grantors paid for said lands, at said sheriff’s sale, together with whatever [353]*353taxes they have paid on said lands, with interest thereon since the date of said sale.”

Prayer is in nsnal form to ascertain and determine title, save and except that it asks, for the cancellation of the sheriff’s deed mentioned as aforesaid.

By answer the defendant denies generally the charges of the petition and avers the ownership of the land to he in him. There are also specific answers as to the charges made against this sheriff’s deed, and further allegation as to the good faith of the defendant as the purchaser from William Hunter, the purchaser at the tax sale. The answer further pleads estoppel in that great permanent and valuable improvements had been by him made, with the knowledge of plaintiff. The next substantial portion of the answer charges that this suit is being prosecuted under a champertous contract.

Replication, general denial.

The trial resulted in judgment for plaintiff as to the title to the land and specifically as to the cancellation of the sheriff’s deed aforesaid. Also decreed that defendant was entitled to lien for $53.76 taxes paid. From such judgment, appeal was duly taken, and thereby the troubles are here. The evidence so far as required, will be noted in the consideration of the points made. Thus far, this sufficiently states the case.

I. (a) The first question urged by appellant is the invalidity of a legislative act approved March 28, 1901, which act authorized entries made in “Carleton’s Abstracts” to be used as evidence of title in Pemiscot county. This act is challenged as being violative of that portion of section 53, article 4, Missouri Constitution of 1875, which provides: “The General Assembly shall not pass any local or special law . . . changing the rules of evidence in any judicial proceeding or inquiry before courts,” etc. The act complained of [354]*354was passed in strict conformity with, the terms of section 54, article 6, of the Constitution, which prescribes the method of enacting local or special laws. It is urged that the Federal Court of the Eastern Division of the Eastern District of Missouri has held said statute violative of the provision above quoted, and that the bar of Southeast Missouri have so recognized this unconstitutionality and that to obviate this unconstitutionality and recognizing this unconstitutionality, the .Legislature passed a general law in 1907 to meet the emergency of this special law. Laws 1907, p. 271.

The plaintiff offered this special law in evidence and it was admitted without objection. The unconstitutionality thereof was not urged in the court below and is raised for the first time here. The question should have been urged when the law was offered, as objections are made- to other classes of evidence. This local law was but- a link of testimony. For this reason the constitutionality of that act is not before us in this record.

(b) A further sufficient answer would be that the abstract of record fails to show that appellant made any objections to the entries from Carleton’s Abstracts being read as evidence of title in the case. Having been read for the purpose of showing title, and no .objections made or exceptions saved at the time, such objection comes too late when made for the first time in this court. The plaintiff, as appears from the abstract of record, offered in evidence this Act of 1901 and no objection was made as to its admission in evidence. But, be this latter as it may, when appellant permitted the respondent in making his case of title to read seven entries from Carleton’s Abstracts showing a perfect chain of title from the Government to respondent, without objection, he is certainly estopped here. Both sides were then proceeding upon the theory that such entries were evidence of title. By this theory they are bound in this Court.

[355]*355II. Another charge and complaint made by appellant is that the suit is being prosecuted under a cham-pertons contract. There seems to have been some correspondence between respondent and O. E. Bragg concerning this and other lands which he claimed to own in Pemiscot county. Of this correspondence only one letter found its way into the record. This letter reads:

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Bluebook (online)
123 S.W. 1084, 224 Mo. 342, 1909 Mo. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shelton-v-franklin-mo-1909.