Taylor v. Phelan

69 N.E.2d 145, 117 Ind. App. 40, 1946 Ind. App. LEXIS 182
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1946
DocketNo. 17,494.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 69 N.E.2d 145 (Taylor v. Phelan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Phelan, 69 N.E.2d 145, 117 Ind. App. 40, 1946 Ind. App. LEXIS 182 (Ind. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

Draper, J.

On August 9,1943, the appellant sued the appellee Phelan and others to quiet title to a city lot owned by Phelan, but which appellant had acquired by an Auditor’s tax deed dated April 19, 1942. Service was had on Phelan, a non-resident, by publication. Default *43 judgment quieting the title was entered on November 24, 1943.

On September 29, 1944, Phelan filed an action against the appellant and others, alleging the existence of certain statutory insufficiencies in the course of the sale and issuance of the deed to the appellant, and praying that said deed be held invalid to convey title.

Later, on March 16, 1945, Phelan filed in the original action (the quiet title suit) a verified petition asking that the judgment be opened and that he be allowed to defend, for the reason that the only notice given him in that action was by newspaper publication and that he received no actual notice thereof in time to appear and. object to said judgment, and with that petition he tendered his answer to the original complaint.

The appellant resisted the application to open the judgment quieting title, asserting that Phelan was deprived of such relief by the provisions of ch. 72 of the Acts of 1941, being § 2-1068, Burns’ 1946 Replacement.

The petition to open the judgment was sustained and the judgment quieting title was vacated and Phelan permitted to defend. Thereupon, Phelan’s action to have the tax déed declared invalid was consolidated with the appellant’s action to quiet title, the issues were closed, and a trial of the consolidated cases resulted in a judgment voiding appellant’s tax title deed, quieting Phelan’s title as against the appellant, granting Phelan possession of the real estate and according appellant a lien for the amount she had disbursed on account of the tax certificate and her expenditures for permanent improvements on the property.

The appellant first asserts error in the vacation and setting aside of the default judgment in the quiet title suit, it being her position that under ch. 72, Acts of 1941, § 2-1068, Burns’ 1946 Replacement, when a default *44 judgment quieting title to real estate is entered, that judgment becomes final and irrevocable after the lapse of one year, whether service was personal or by publication, and notwithstanding the defendant had no actual knowledge of the pendency of the action before he filed his application to vacate the judgment.

The Act in question, upon which appellant relies, took effect March 1, 1941. The tax deed was issued April 19, 1942; the suit to quiet title was filed August 9, 1943; the default- judgment was therein rendered November 24, 1943. Phelan’s petition to open the judgment was filed March 16, 1945.

Section 2-2601, Burns’ 1933, is § 64 of ch. 38, Acts 1881, as originally passed, and we shall hereinafter refer to it as § 64. It reads as follows:

“Parties against whom a judgment has been rendered without other notice than the publication in a newspaper as herein required, except in cases of ' divorce, may, at any time within five (5) years after the rendition of the judgment, have the same opened, and be allowed to defend.”

Section 2-1068, supra, is § 135 of ch. 38, Acts 1881 as amended and we shall hereinafter refer to it as § 135 as amended. The pertinent part is as follows:

“The court shall relieve a party from a judgment taken against him through his mistake, inadvertance, surprise, or excusable neglect, on complaint filed and notice issued, as in original actions within two years from and after the date of the judgment, except where judgment on default has been rendered in a suit to quiet title to real estate in which case the complaint for relief from judgment on default shall be filed within one year from and after the date of judgment quieting title, and if the complaint is not filed within the period of time herein prescribed, then the action shall forever be barred: *45 Provided, That the provisions of this act pertaining to relief from judgment taken on default in a suit to quiet title to real estate shall apply to any judgment taken on default which is of record at the time of the passing of this act, and which judgment was obtained in a suit to quiet title to real estate, and shall apply to any and all persons whether service of process be by summons or by publication.”

It has been held that the provisions of § 64, as implemented by §65 (§2-2602, Burns’ 1933) are mandatory, and when a party brings himself within the terms of these sections the court has no discretion in the matter of granting the relief prayed. Gary Hobart, etc., Co. v. Earle (1922), 78 Ind. App. 412, 135 N. E. 798. Section 64 applies to a case like the present, for by its very terms it applies to all except divorce cases. Unless, therefore, its efficacy has been destroyed or impaired by § 135 as amended, Phelan must prevail on the question of opening the judgment and allowing him to defend.

Section 135 as amended did not expressly repeal § 64 and the appellant does not claim a repeal by implication. She insists that the effect of § 135 as amended was to amend, not repeal, § 64. A sufficient answer is the fact that a statute may not be amended by implication. Const. § 21, Art. 4, Wiley v. Wiley (1921), 75 Ind. App. 456, 123 N. E. 252, Northern Indiana Power Company v. West, Admx. (1941), 218 Ind. 321, 32 N. E. (2d) 713.

But the appellant also insists that § 135 as amended must be considered to have created a modification of, or an exception to § 64, so that although § 64 can stand with § 135 as amended, it can stand only to the extent that § 135 as amended creates no conflict. The appellant relies upon such cases as State, ex rel. v. Greenwald (1917), 186 Ind. 321, 116 N. E. 296; Taelman v. Bd. of Fin. of School City of South Bend (1937), 212 *46 Ind. 26, 6 N. E. (2d) 557, and Northern Indiana Power Company v. West, Admx., supra.

Conceding that the enactment of a law specifically and fully covering the .same subject matter that is covered or embraced in a general law, or any part of a general law, creates an exception to the general law, and operates to suspend or repeal to the extent of the conflict between the two, we still find no room for the application of that principle here. It was said in Board, etc. v. Garty (1903), 161 Ind. 464, 469, 68 N. E. 1012 that:

“It has been repeatedly affirmed by the decisions of this court that implied repeals are only recognized and upheld when the later act is so repugnant to the earlier as to render the repugnancy or conflict between them irreconcilable. A court .will always, if possible, adopt that construction which, under the particular circumstances in a given case, will permit both laws to stand and be operative.”

If that is true of repeals by implication generally, it must be true of possible modifications or exceptions to an existing law.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.E.2d 145, 117 Ind. App. 40, 1946 Ind. App. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-phelan-indctapp-1946.