Southern Holding & Securities Corp. v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.

21 F. Supp. 757, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2461
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJanuary 10, 1938
DocketNo. 757
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 F. Supp. 757 (Southern Holding & Securities Corp. v. Kentucky River Coal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Holding & Securities Corp. v. Kentucky River Coal Corp., 21 F. Supp. 757, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2461 (E.D. Ky. 1938).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

The plaintiff, a Delaware corporation, instituted this action at law against the Kentucky River Coal Corporation, a Virginia corporation, and the Swift Coal & Timber Company, a Louisiana corporation, alleging itself to be the owner, seized as of fee “under one title and source of title and not under different titles,” of six specifically described tracts of land lying on Big Leatherwood creek in Perry county, Ky., the possession of which is alleged to have been wrongfully taken by the defendants and unlawfully detained by them from the plaintiff. The plaintiff seeks to be adjudged the owner of and entitled to the immediate possession of the land described and prays for the issuance of an appropriate writ to the end that it may be placed in quiet possession thereof.

The plaintiff claims to have acquired title to the property by a deed executed and delivered to it by the auditor of the commonwealth of Kentucky on the 12th day of May, 1933. Exhibit 14. By this deed, the auditor purports to convey to the plaintiff “all the right, title and interest of the Commonwealth of Kentucky” in and to forty-four specifically described tracts of land in Perry county, Ky., alleged to embrace the [758]*758six tracts of land here in controversy. The deed contains the following recital, relative to the source of the state’s title which it purports to convey:

“All the above described land assessed and listed in the name of The W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Company for the taxes for the year 1923 and sold and forfeited to the State of Kentucky on the 11th day of February 1924, after due advertisement for the non-payment of the. revenue due on said lands for the year 1923 above mentioned as will more fully appear by the records of the Perry County Court.
“The said land not having been redeemed by the owner within two years next after said sale became forfeited to the State. In compliance with and by virtue of an Act of the General Assembly of Kentucky, which became a law March 29, 1902; relating to Revenue and Taxation, and other laws in force regulating the sale of such lands, the above described lands after advertisement by printed notices published in The Hazard Herald a weekly paper of general circulation published in Hazard, Perry County, Kentucky, for four consecutive weeks, next preceding said sale and by posting notices on the court house door and in three other public places in Perry County for more than twenty-eight days previous as required by law was offered for sale publicly at the place and on the day advertised, to the highest and best bidder, at the Court House door on (County Court day) Monday the 8th day of May, 1933, and no one offering to pay the whole tax for a part of the lands it was necessary to sell all of said lands which were sold publicly by' A. B. Rouse, Revenue Agent for the State at Large to Southern Holding & Securities Corporation, party of the second part herein, it being the highest and best bidder, at the sum of three thousand, three hundred and thirty-three and 33/100 ($3,-333.33) dollars, that being the sum required to be raised at the sale of said lands hereinabove described.”

It is the contention of the plaintiff that prior to the execution of this auditor’s deed, the state of Kentucky had acquired title to the six tracts of land involved in this action by three separate processes: (1) Through the tax sale referred to in the deed made by the sheriff of Perry county on the 11th day of February, 1924, by which the sheriff sold to the state 33,800 acres of land assessed for taxes for the year 1923 in the name of the W. C. Belcher Land Mortgage Company; (2) through a tax sale made by the sheriff of Perry county on the 13th day of January, 1908, by which the sheriff sold to the state 56,000 acres of land assessed for taxes for the years 1903, 1904, 1905, 1906, and 1907, in the name of E. N. Yelland’s heirs; (3) by virtue of a judgment of forfeiture made and entered by the Perry circuit court on January 4, ,1932, in an equity action styled Commonwealth of Kentucky, by John H. Asher, Commonwealth’s Attorney v. Smith and Baum and others, the effect of which was to vest in the state the title to the lands involved in that action which embraced the lands here in controversy. The source of the auditor’s authority to convey the title acquired by the state under this judgment of forfeiture, as well as under the forfeiture alleged to have resulted from the failure to redeem after the sheriff’s tax sales referred to, is claimed by the plaintiff to be found in section 4154 of the Statutes.

The defendant Swift Coal & Timber Company filed an answer disclaiming any interest in the lands in controversy, and the action was dismissed as to it.

The defendant Kentucky River Coal Corporation challenges the claim of the plaintiff with reference to the state having acquired any title by virtue of the sheriff’s tax sales of February 11, 1923, and January 13, 1908, and asserts that both sales are void by reason of irregularities in the tax assessments upon which they are based and in the procedure followed by the sheriff, and hence they are ineffective to vest any title in the state. It challenges the validity of the auditor’s deed to effect conveyance to' the plaintiff of the title vested in the state by the judgment rendered in the forfeiture action on the ground that the auditor was without legal power or authority to divest the state of the title so acquired.

Numerous other defenses are set up by defendant’s answer and its several amendments, but, in view of the conclusion reached, it is deemed unnecessary to consider or discuss them.

By agreement of the parties, a trial by jury was waived and the case was heard by and submitted to the court for judgment upon the law and facts.

Upon the principle that the plaintiff,. i-f entitled to recovery, must recover on the [759]*759strength of its own title, we consider the vital question as to whether, under the deed from the auditor of the state of Kentucky of May 12, 1933, the plaintiff acquired any title whatever to the land in controversy.

Section 4030 of the Kentucky Statutes provides, in substance, that in all suits involving the title of lands claimed or held under a deed made in pursuance of a sale for taxes, the deed shall be prima facie evidence of the regularity of the sale and of all prior proceedings and title in the person to whom the deed was executed. This section has been held to apply to an auditor’s deed. The effect of the statute is that the burden to show that there was some fatal irregularity in the proceedings upon which the -auditor’s deed was based is upon the defendant and we must determine from the record whether that burden has been sustained. Alexander v. Aud, etc., 121 Ky. 105, 88 S.W. 1103; Husbands v. Polivick, 128 Ky. 652, 96 S.W. 825; Kentucky Lands Investment Co. v. Simmons, 146 Ky. 588, 143 S.W. 43; Kypadel Coal & Lumber Co. v. Millard, 165 Ky. 432, 177 S.W. 270.

With reference to the tax sale made by the sheriff of Perry county on February 11, 1924, for 1923 taxes, the record contains a copy of the proceedings of the Perry county board of supervisors in which it is shown that at a meeting of that board held on the 18th day of April, 1923, the following assessment of taxes was made for the year 1923:

“Supervisors revised assessment list for the year 1923 Book 2 page 17-18

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 F. Supp. 757, 1938 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-holding-securities-corp-v-kentucky-river-coal-corp-kyed-1938.