State Ex Rel. Wooten v. White

34 S.E. 508, 125 N.C. 403, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 5, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 34 S.E. 508 (State Ex Rel. Wooten v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Wooten v. White, 34 S.E. 508, 125 N.C. 403, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 228 (N.C. 1899).

Opinions

The purchaser of the land, 31 acres, was afterwards made a (404) party and filed his answer. The plaintiff complained, that he was the owner of two parcels of land in Statesville Township — one a house and lot in the town of Statesville, and the other 31 acres outside of the town. That in December, 1895, his agent went to M. A. White, sheriff, to pay the taxes of plaintiff, was told the amount, and paid it to the sheriff, and took his receipt, general in form, and both the plaintiff and his agent supposed all the taxes were all paid; that the sheriff without giving notice to either of them, advertised the 31-acre tract and sold it to the defendant Conger in May, 1896, and in May, 1897, made him a deed.

The defendants answered, that the tax on the 31-acre tract had not been paid, and that the land had been sold according to law, and a deed made to Conger in May, 1897.

In the complaint was an allegation that the plaintiff was seized and possessed of the 31 acres. The answer conceded that plaintiff was possessed thereof. As a part of the plaintiff's evidence these paragraphs *Page 284 of the complaint and answer were read to the jury upon the question of title.

The defendants introduced no evidence. The defendant Thomas J. Conger moved, so far as he was concerned, for judgment as of nonsuit, under the Act of 1897.

His Honor allowed the motion. Plaintiff excepted and appealed. This action was originally begun against M. A. White, sheriff of Iredell County, and Leroy Morrow, W. W. Houpe and S. A. Sharpe, the sureties on his official bond, to recover of (405) them damages for the alleged unlawful sale of the relator's land for taxes listed in the year 1895. Afterwards, in the same action, the summons was issued against Thomas J. Conger, the purchaser of the land at the sheriff's sale for taxes, and a complaint filed for the recovery of the possession of the land — Conger having taken possession under the sheriff's deed. He appeared and demurred to the complaint on the ground that the causes of action set out in the complaint were improperly joined. The record is silent as to what became of the demurrer, but Conger answered, and it must be therefore that the demurrer was overruled without exception having been made. After the plaintiff had produced his evidence, and rested, the defendant Conger moved for judgment as of nonsuit under the Act of Assembly. The motion was allowed and the plaintiff excepted. The defendant Conger contended that the plaintiff made no proof of his title to the land at the time it was sold for taxes, as he was required to do under section 66 of chapter 119, Laws 1895. If that is true, the plaintiff was properly nonsuited. It must be examined.

In the third allegation of the complaint the relator alleged that he wasseized and possessed of the tract of land at the time of its sale on the 4th of May, 1896, by the sheriff for taxes. In the third paragraph of the defendant's answer he admitted that the relator was possessed of the land at the time of its sale; and in this connection he further said that he had no knowledge or information sufficient to form a belief as to what interest the relator was seized of in the land. That paragraph of the answer was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff to show title in the plaintiff. We think that when the defendant admitted that the plaintiff was possessed of the land at the time of the sale, that was such an admission of title in the plaintiff as the statute required. Possession in law may be either lawful or unlawful, but when one *Page 285 is said to be possessed of land, his possession is deemed to be (406) lawful. Webster defined possessed — "held by lawful title." It makes no difference with the defendant whether the plaintiff held the land in fee, or for life, or for years, if it was unlawfully sold by the sheriff for taxes, for the estate, whatever it was in the land, could be recovered by the plaintiff to the end that he might enjoy that interest during its continuance.

The other evidence in the case upon the plaintiff's appeal ought to have been submitted to the jury under proper issues and instructions, for if it had been and the jury had believed it, the plaintiff would have been entitled to recover possession of the land. The land was situated in Statesville Township, Iredell County. The plaintiff relator lived in Wilmington at the time of the sale. George H. Brown was the agent of the plaintiff at Statesville to pay his taxes there, and when he called upon the sheriff or his deputy to pay the taxes he asked that officer "what taxes were due by Mr. Wooten." That officer gave him the amount, which Brown paid, and took a receipt therefor. The relator owned a house and lot in the city of Statesville, and also the tract of land which was sold for the taxes, and the subject of dispute in this action, in Statesville Township, but outside of the city. The sheriff's receipt for taxes made no specification of the property. It seems that in the listing of the taxes, separate list takers were appointed in the year 1895, one set for Statesville Township, "inside," and another set for Statesville Township, "outside." Neither the relator nor his agent, Brown, knew of that arrangement. The receipt of the sheriff, when it was produced on the trial, showed that the word "inside" which was in parenthesis, and between the printed words "Statesville Township," had been stricken out by two distinct marks through it, made by pen and ink. The relator testified that he had never noticed the partial erasure of the word "inside" until it was shown to him on the (407) trial. The witness Brown said that he had never been asked for any further taxes claimed to be due by the relator, and the relator testified he had never had notice of any further taxes for that year. On cross-examination, however, the witness Brown testified that he did not pay the taxes due for the year 1895 upon the tract of land of the relator lying outside of the city of Statesville and in Statesville Township, and which was bought by the defendant Conger at the tax sale. So far then as the plaintiff's appeal is concerned, the case states that when the plaintiff's evidence was in, it appeared that the relator, through his agent, Brown, had called upon the sheriff for the taxes due by the relator; that a receipt for the taxes had been given, generally, for Statesville Township in which the land sold for taxes was situated, *Page 286 for there was no evidence offered, so far as the plaintiff's appeal is concerned, to show that the word "inside" had been erased by the relator, and he had testified that he did not make the erasure. The relator then had a receipt for his taxes signed by the officer authorized by law to collect the taxes, and a receipt for them given upon an inquiry made by the agent of the taxpayer as to what taxes were due by the relator, and no further demand had ever been made, and no notice that any further taxes were due. Under the facts testified to in this case, if true, does the deed of the sheriff to the defendant Conger convey a good title to the land? It can not be so. We can not believe that any such effect can proceed from a proper construction of the Revenue Law of 1895, on the subject of the sale of land for taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
34 S.E. 508, 125 N.C. 403, 1899 N.C. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-wooten-v-white-nc-1899.