Simmons v. Affolter

162 S.W. 168, 254 Mo. 163, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 203
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 3, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 162 S.W. 168 (Simmons v. Affolter) 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
Simmons v. Affolter, 162 S.W. 168, 254 Mo. 163, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 203 (Mo. 1914).

Opinion

WOODSON, P. J.

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of Phelps county, under old section 650, Revised Statutes 1899, to ascertain and determine the title to certain real estate described in the petition.

The defendant Affolter, though duly served by publication, defaulted, and defendant Cowan answered, claiming title to the land, and joined in the prayer that the court, under said section 650, ascertain and adjudge the rights and interests of the parties to the land. A trial was had which resulted in a decree in favor of defendant Cowan, and the plaintiff duly appealed the cause to this court.

The facts are undisputed, and are as follows:

One H. B. Perry was the common source of title.

On July 7,1892, Perry conveyed the land to Affol[167]*167ter by a general warranty deed, recorded July 6, 1897, five years after its execution.

On August 18, 1894, tbe collector of revenues of Phelps county brought a suit against said Perry for back taxes due on said land. He was personally served. Judgment foreclosing the State’s lien for said taxes was duly rendered on March 29, 1895.

Counsel for appellant failed to abstract or set out the petition filed in said tax suit.

The land was described in the judgment as follows: “No. of acres, 80 S. 2, S. W. 4, Section 21, Twp. 36, Range 7,” Phelps county, State of Missouri.

A special execution was issued on this judgment on the-day of May, 1895', and levied July 4, 1895, and a sale of the real estate was made thereunder by the sheriff; and on September 19, 1895, he made and delivered a tax deed to the purchaser, David E. Cowan, the defendant.

The real estate was described in this deed as follows: S. y2 of S. W. % Section 21, Township 36, Range 7, Phelps county, Missouri.

All process in the tax suit and sale were in the handwriting of said Perry, a deputy clerk under said David E. Cowan, clerk of the circuit court of Phelps county.

On January 8, 1896, said Perry, by a general warranty deed, duly conveyed said land to William W. Simmons, the plaintiff, which was duly recorded July 18, 1896.

Neither Cowan nor Simmons had any knowledge of the prior deed mentioned from Perry to Affolter, dated July 7, 1892.

Simmons paid the taxes on the land for the years 1896 to 1898, inclusive.

Simmons was a nonresident of this State.

[168]*168Tax Judgment, I. "While there are several questions presented and discussed in briefs by counsel for both parties, yet there are but three vital legal propositions Jiere presented tor determination, and the first is, was the judgment of the circuit court of Phelps county rendered in the case of the collector of revenue against Perry to enforce the lien of the State for the back taxes mentioned, void because the real estate in question was not properly described therein? In my opinion that question must be answered in the negative.

In passing upon this question it should be borne in mind, that the land in question was described in the tax judgment as “No. of acres 80, S. 2, S. W. 4, Section 21, Twp. 36, Range 7.”

These letters and figures, if standing alone, would be meaningless, but when preceded by the words and figures, “No. of acres, 80,” and followed by the number of the section, township and range, there can be no doubt but what they clearly mean and properly describe the south half of the southwest quarter of section 21, township 36, range 7, Phelps county, State of Missouri.

This identical question has been before this court in a number of cases.

In Miller v. Keaton, 236 Mo. l. c. 706, it is said the deed (tax deed) is not void because of the use of abbreviations which are well understood in describing land, citing State ex rel. v. Vaile, 122 Mo. 33.

In Hector v. Horrell, 248 Mo. 166, l. c. 169, the description of the land involved was, “320 acres, being E. 2 of Sec. No. 13, Twp. No. 20, Range 13 East. 120 acres being W. 2 of NW. 4 and NE. 4 NW. 4 of Sec. No. 15. 40 acres being the NW. 4 of SE. 4 of Sec. No. 10. 160 acres being the S. 2 of NW. of the NE. 4 of NE. 4 and the SW. 4 of NE. 4 of Sec. No. 17, Twp. No. 20, Range 12 E. 80 acres being N. 2 of SE. 4. 40 acres being SW. 4 of NW. 4 and 160 acres be[169]*169ing E. 2 of W. 4 of Sec. No. 18, Twp. No. 20, Range 14 East.”

That was an action of ejectment. The defendant relied upon a sheriff’s deed containing the above description of the land. The contention of counsel for plaintiff was that the description was void for vagueness and uncertainty, and because the numerators of the fractions which designate the subdivisions were omitted from the judgment and sheriff’s deed made them void. In answering this contention the court said: “That position is untenable, because the size of the subdivision is clearly indicated by the figures and the words ‘320 acres,’ which is one-half of a section, and when they are followed by the language ‘being E. 2 of Sec. 13,’ etc., there can be.no doubt but what the abbreviations here used, when written out in full, would be as follows: ‘320 acres, being the east Yo of section No. 13, township No. 20, range 13 east.’ ” And the court further on said: “What has been said of this tract, applies equally as well to the other seven tracts.”

In the case of Burnett v. McCluey, 78 Mo. 1. c. 691, abbreviations very similar to those in question in describing lands in a sheriff’s deed, were held sufficient to describe the land intended to be conveyed.

The Iieetor-Horrell case, which is supported by the other cases cited, is on all fours with the case at bar, and is decisive of this question.

We, therefore, hold that the judgment in the tax suit was not void for uncertainty in the description of the land in question.

II. Counsel for appellant next insist that the tax deed by the sheriff to Cowan is void because the special execution was levied on July 4th, a legal holiday.

Levy on Holiday. This insistence is predicated upon section 8952, Revised Statutes 1889; and Lynch v. Donnell, 104 Mo. 519, l. c. 529, and Decker v. St. Louis & Southern Ry. Co., 92 Mo. App. 50.

[170]*170Said statute reads as follows:

“No person, on Sunday, on the fourth of July, on the first day of January, on any general State election day, on any thanksgiving day appointed hy the Governor of this State or the President of the United States, or on the twenty-fifth of December and the twenty-second day of February, shall serve or execute any writ, process, warrant, order or judgment, except in criminal cases, or for a breach of the peace, or when the defendant is about leaving the county, or in any case of attachment when the debtor is about fraudulently to secrete or remove his, effects; and the service of every such writ, process, warrant, order or judgment shall be void, and the person serving or executing the same shall be as liable to the suit of the party aggrieved as if he had done the same without any writ, process, warrant, order or judgment.”

If a levy of a special execution upon real estate issued upon a judgment for back taxes, is embraced within the provisions of this statute, then it necessarily follows that the tax deed mentioned must be held to be void.

In the case of Decker v. St.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W. 168, 254 Mo. 163, 1914 Mo. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-affolter-mo-1914.