Sidlo, Simons, Day & Co. v. Phillips

49 P.2d 243, 48 Wyo. 390, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 42
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 1, 1935
Docket1861
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 P.2d 243 (Sidlo, Simons, Day & Co. v. Phillips) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sidlo, Simons, Day & Co. v. Phillips, 49 P.2d 243, 48 Wyo. 390, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 42 (Wyo. 1935).

Opinion

Riner, Justice.

The defendant in error, Luella Phillips, as plaintiff in the district court of Natrona County, on July 8, 1932, brought suit to quiet her title to Lot 1 in Block 152 in the City of Casper, Wyoming. Walter L. French and any and all heirs at law of Grace W. French and any unknown heirs, assignees or grantees of Grace W. French not of record, W. F. Henning, Lumbermans Securities Corporation, an Oregon corporation, and Sidlo, Simons, Day & Company, a Colorado corporation, were made defendants. From a judgment in her favor against all the defendants, the corporation last mentioned alone instituted these proceedings in error. Briefly the facts presented by the record for our consideration appear to be these:

The premises in question were in the year 1926 owned by Grace W. French, mentioned above, who *394 failed to pay the general taxes assessed against them for that year, and in consequence the property was on July 6, 1927, subject to tax sale and bid in by Natrona County. The certificate of purchase issued by the County Treasurer, relative to the matter, recited that the sale of said lot was had in the manner provided by statute for the delinquent taxes due thereon, in the amount of $108.80, including interest, penalty and the costs allowed by law. The certificate also stated that unless the real estate was legally redeemed the purchaser would be entitled to a deed on and after July 6, 1929. No redemption seems to have been had and no deed was ever issued pursuant to said certificate.

Subsequently and on July 8, 1930, the property was again sold for failure to pay the general taxes for the year 1929, and again bid in by Natrona County. The certificate of purchase issued by the County Treasurer on account of this sale indicated the delinquent taxes, interest, penalty and costs as the sum of $102.74 and the redemption date as July 8, 1933. Again the property remained unredeemed and no deed was delivered to the county in consequence of that fact.

July 6, 1932, for a stated consideration of $810.44, this being the sum total due on said property as general taxes, plus interest, penalties and costs for the years 1926 to 1931, inclusive, the Board of County Commissioners of Natrona County executed and delivered to Luella Phillips, aforesaid, a “County Commissioner’s Deed” to the property, and two days later the suit above mentioned was commenced.

The plaintiff’s petition was in the usual form of a suit to quiet title and described to some extent the adverse claims to the property involved, asserted by the defendants, and prayed that their claims be declared “null and void and of no force or effect.” In its answer, supplementing denials of certain averments in plaintiff’s petition relative to the latter’s asserted *395 right to the lot aforesaid, Sidlo, Simons, Day & Company pleaded that it was the owner of bonds issued on behalf of Paving District No. 17 in the City of Casper, Wyoming, and by virtue thereof and certain alleged proceedings taken for their foreclosure, was the owner of a lien, valid and enforceable against the property in question. The answer, praying that plaintiff’s petition be dismissed, also averred that bondholders of said Paving District were necessary parties to the litigation and that a determination of the issues therein could not be made without their presence before the court. The defendant W. F. Henning filed an answer wherein he denied plaintiff’s alleged rights in the real estate aforesaid and set up in detail his adverse claim as a holder of certain bonds of Sanitary Sewer District No. 2-B of said City of Casper embracing said property, and asked that the lien thereof be adjudged as prior to any claim on the part of the plaintiff thereto. Plaintiff filed replies to these answers, denying each and every allegation contained in that of Sidlo, Simons, Day & Company, and aside from admitting the defendant Henning’s ownership of the bonds and that Casper is a city of the first class in Wyoming, denying also each and all the allegations of his answer.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, with the result hereinabove stated. Other facts will be mentioned as may be necessary in connection with the points required to be decided.

Plaintiff in error argues that its answer asserted a defect of parties defendant in that other holders of bonds of said Paving District No. 17 were necessary to a complete determination of the litigation, and they had not been brought into it. However serious this contention might be under a proper record, the allegations of the defendant’s answer were, as' we have noted, denied by plaintiff’s reply, and the record fails *396 to show that there were any other bondholders whatsoever of Paving District No. 17. In other words, there was no proof of that fact adduced on the trial. It is said that the files of another case, which were pleaded in this wise — “to which defendant hereby refers and makes a part of this defense the same as if fully set out herein” supplied this proof. No exhibits were attached to the pleading and they are not in the record before us indicating the contents of those files. “It is a general rule that a paper or record cannot be incorporated in a pleading by reference to it.” 21 R. C. L. 477, Section 40; 49 C. J. 38; John Deere Plow Co. v. Hershey et al., 287 Pa. St. 92, 134 Atl. 490. See also Hartford Fire Insurance Co. v. Kahn, 4 Wyo. 364 and Section 89-1031, Wyoming Revised Statutes 1931, somewhat modifying the rule of that case. A court ordinarily does not judicially recognize the contents of any of its records except in the proceeding before it. 15 R. C. L. 1114, Section 44; 23 C. J. 113 and cases cited. The point urged is accordingly without merit.

It is additionally insisted that plaintiff’s evidence is insufficient to support her title to the real property involved and in consequence the decree in her favor must fall. It is pointed out that plaintiff’s case rests upon a title derived solely through the tax sales of this property, heretofore mentioned, and we are reminded of our previous decisions, Davis et al. v. Minnesota Baptist Convention, 45 Wyo. 148; 16 Pac. (2d) 48, and Barrett v. Barrett, 46 Wyo. 84; 23 Pac. (2d) 857, wherein it was stated:

“In a suit to quiet title, it is well settled that the plaintiff ordinarily has the burden of proving the facts alleged, on which his right to judgment is grounded, and he must establish that he, himself, ‘has a perfect legal or equitable title regardless of whether defendant’s title is valid or invalid, since plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of his adversary’s.’
*397 “* * * * ‘the burden is upon any person who claims title to land derived from a sale thereof for taxes to prove, affirmatively and by proper evidence, that every mandatory provision of the law under which the sale was effected was strictly complied with, that each step in the proceedings, from the assessment of the taxes to the execution of the deed, was formally and regularly taken by the officers or persons legally authorized, and that he or his grantor was the purchaser at the sale.’ ”

And Brewer v. Kulien, 42 Wyo. 314, 294 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.2d 243, 48 Wyo. 390, 1935 Wyo. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sidlo-simons-day-co-v-phillips-wyo-1935.