State ex rel. Longfellow v. Wimer

77 N.E. 1078, 166 Ind. 530, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 133
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1906
DocketNo. 20,790
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 N.E. 1078 (State ex rel. Longfellow v. Wimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Longfellow v. Wimer, 77 N.E. 1078, 166 Ind. 530, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 133 (Ind. 1906).

Opinion

Jordan, C. J.

—Appellee, as plaintiff below, commenced this suit to quiet title to certain described real estate situated in Tipton county, Indiana. Thomas W. Longfellow, auditor of Tipton county, the board of commissioners and Erancis H. Wheatley' were made defendants to the suit.

Briefly stated, the first paragraph of the amended complaint alleges that the plaintiff is the owner in fee simple of the real estate described, which had been formerly sold as school lands, and a certificate of such sale issued to the purchaser; that the defendant Erancis H. Wheatley had paid in full the purchase price to the treasurer of said county and that the auditor thereof had executed a deed of conveyance to him for the premises; that this deed had been lost, or mislaid, and that the defendants claim an interest in and to said lands.

The second paragraph of the complaint is in the statutory form, and thereunder plaintiff seeks to quiet his title.

[532]*532By the third paragraph he claims title hy reason of adverse possession for more than twenty years.

Part of the relief demanded by the first and second paragraphs is that the auditor of the county be ordered to execute a deed to the plaintiff.

The appellant in this appeal appeared to the action and filed a cross-complaint, making the plaintiff, Wimer, the sole defendant thereto. The cross-complaint alleges that the balance of the purchase money due the school fund in the sum of $500 is unpaid and that plaintiff had notice of this claim at the time he purchased said lands, and that the relator brings into court and tenders to plaintiff a deed to said real estate, duly executed in all things in accordance with the law regulating the making of deeds for school lands, which deed of conveyance had been duly entered and recorded in the records of the Board of Commissioners of the County of Tipton by the county auditor prior to the tender thereof. Wherefore the relator says there is due him as auditor, to the benefit of the school fund of congressional township twenty-one, the sum of $500 as the unpaid balance of the purchase price of said lands and interest thereon, and the demand is that said amount be adjudged the first lien on said real estate, and upon failure to pay the amount so found due within thirty days the land be ordered sold to pay the same, and upon the payment of the purchase price the sheriff of Tipton county shall execute to the purchaser a good and sufficient deed, etc.

The issues were duly joined between the plaintiff on his amended complaint and the defendants Thomas W. Longfellow, auditor of Tipton county, and the board of commissioners of said county. Plaintiff, as the sole defendant to the cross-complaint filed by the State, on relation of the auditor, answered the same (1) by a general denial, and (2) by plea of payment; and upon these pleadings the issues tendered . were joined between the parties on the cross-complaint. There was a trial by court and a special [533]*533finding of facts. Among others, the following are the facts disclosed by the special findings: The auditor of Tipton county, Indiana, on March 28, 1857, at private sale sold to John Peterson for the price of $210 the lands described in the amended complaint and the cross-complaint of appellant herein. The auditor issued to Peterson a certificate of purchase, which is set out in full in the finding. At the time of the sale Peterson paid the sum of $52.50 as part of the purchase price. The certificate of purchase provided that "if said Peterson shall pay, or cause to be paid, the interest in advance on the unpaid purchase money as it annually accrues, and the principal by the time it becomes due and payable, then said Peterson, or his assigns or legal representatives, shall be entitled to a deed in fee simple for said lands, to he executed by the county auditor according to law; hut on failure of said Peterson to pay, or cause to he paid, the interest as it annually accrues, or the residue of the purchase money by the time same becomes due, the contract shall be forfeited and the land may be sold by the county auditor according to law.”

Peterson, in 1859, assigned his certificate of purchase to John Puckett. The latter, in 1860, assigned it to Benjamin F. Brown and he, in 1865, assigned it to Francis Wheatley. All of these several assignments were duly acknowledged and recorded in the office of the county recorder. Wheatley and his wife, on April 6, 1896, conveyed the land by warranty deed to Oliver P. and Susan Campbell. On December 16, 1901, the latter parties received a deed of conveyance to the lands, which deed was executed by the auditor of Tipton county. The Campbells thereafter, in 1902, sold and conveyed the lands to one Hinkle, who, in 1903, sold and conveyed the premises to the plaintiff, Wimer. After the Campbells purchased the land, Oliver P., on May 4, 1901, appears to have filed a petition before the Board of Commissioners of the County of Tip-ton, alleging therein that the purchase price of said lands [534]*534had been fully paid by said Erancis Wheatley, but that the county auditor had failed to execute a deed for said real estate, and the petition prayed that.a deed be executed.

The board of commissioners appears to have granted the petition, and on December 10, 1901, the county auditor executed to said Oliver P. Campbell a deed conveying to him said real estate. This deed was not recorded in the commissioners’ records of said county before the delivery thereof, nor has it since been so recorded, but has been recorded in the recorder’s office of Tipton county. The records in the auditor’s and treasurer’s offices of Tipton county contain no entry, or credit, of any payment on either principal or interest since 1880, nor do they disclose the execution of any deed to the land. Erom and after the year 1880, until the commencement of this suit, there has been no demand for payment of either principal or interest by any one having charge of said auditor’s and treasurer’s offices, but the same has been at all times treated as fully paid and settled.

The court further finds that Erancis Wheatley' did, on or about the year 1880, pay the balance of the purchase money due for said lands, with accrued interest thereon at that time, to the proper officer of Tipton county, Indiana, who was authorized by law to receive the same, but if any deed was executed to him for the land at that time the same was never recorded in the office of the county auditor of Tipton county, Indiana. The court further finds that the alleged claims set up in the cross-complaint have been settled and that there is nothing due thereon. The court, on the foregoing findings, stated its conclusions of law favorably to appellee on the complaint, that he is the owner of the lands in question, and is entitled to have his title thereto quieted as against all of the defendants. The court also stated its conclusions upon the issues joined between appellee and appellant upon the cross-complaint favorably to appellee.

[535]*535The record shows that the defendant, the State of Indiana, ex rel. Thomas W. Longfellow, as auditor of Tipton county, Indiana, separately and severally excepted to each of the conclusions, and, so far as the record discloses, these are the only exceptions reserved to the conclusions of law. The record also shows that the State of Indiana, ex rel. Thomas W. Longfellow, auditor of Tipton county, moved for a new trial on the complaint upon the grounds assigned in the motion.

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Bluebook (online)
77 N.E. 1078, 166 Ind. 530, 1906 Ind. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-longfellow-v-wimer-ind-1906.