Williams v. Conroy

35 Colo. 117
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1905
DocketNo. 4691
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 35 Colo. 117 (Williams v. Conroy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Conroy, 35 Colo. 117 (Colo. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the eonrt.

[119]*119Both parties claim ownership and right to the possession of certain lands in Las Animas county of which Richard L. Survant, is the patentee. Plaintiff’s title is evidenced by tax deeds. Of the defendants all have suffered default except Asa Plaines, and as he has succeeded to the title of the others the case will be discussed as if he were the only defendant. Haines’ title is twofold: One is evidenced by tax deeds issued in pursuance of a tax sale at a later time and for a later year than were the tax deeds under which plaintiff claims; the other of defendant’s titles is evidenced by a quitclaim deed from the patentee obtained after this action was begun but before the answer was filed. Defendant Haines was in actual possession of the land under his tax deeds at the time the complaint was filed. This action was brought by plaintiff to recover possession and to have defendant’s tax deeds canceled because they are void.

In the amended answer, by way of cross-complaint defendant Haines sets out his two titles just mentioned, and as he was in' actual possession when the action was brought he asks to have his title quieted, his possession confirmed, and for a cancellation of plaintiff’s tax deeds.

The cause was tried to the court without a jury upon an agreed statement of facts, and resulted in a decree for defendant in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint. Prom this statement it appears that R. L. Survant, the patentee, allowed the taxes on the lands for the year 1889 to become delinquent, for which they were sold and tax deeds, now held by plaintiff, issued under the sale, which were recorded in June, 1893. The land was vacant and unoccupied, no one being in actual possession of the same after the tax sale and before the tax deeds were recorded and not until some time in January, 1900, when defendant entered under the tax [120]*120deeds hereinafter mentioned. The original owner, though cognizant of the tax sale and the execution and recording of the tax deeds, never took any steps to recover possession, apparently abandoning all his rights thereto. Plaintiff’s tax deeds are regular and valid on their face, though because of informalities in the sale they are, as a matter of law, void.

After plaintiff’s purchase at the tax sale referred to he neglected to pay the taxes on the land for the year 1891, and for such delinquency the land was again sold and tax deeds issued therefor, which were recorded December 18, 1896, and it is these tax deeds upon which the defendant Haines relies for his tax title. He took possession of the land thereunder January 1, 1900, and was so holding at the time of the beginning of this action. These tax deeds, though valid on their face, are void for the same irregularity which affects the plaintiff’s earlier ones.

Prom this statement it appears that plaintiff relies upon tax deeds which were recorded, and under which he held for more than five years thereafter without any action by the original owner, or any other person, in any way questioning that title. The defendant claims title: First, under tax deeds which were recorded less than five years, but under which actual possession was not taken by him for more than five years, after the date of the recording* of plaintiff ’s tax deeds; and second, by virtue of a quitclaim deed executed and delivered by the original patentee owner in February, 1902, and which was after this action was begun and before the amended answer was filed.

1. The defendant obtained nothing by his quitclaim deed; for section 3904, Mills’ Ann. Stats., says that no action for the recovery of land sold for taxes shall lie unless the same be brought within five years [121]*121after tlie execution and delivery of a deed therefor by the treasurer, any law to the contrary notwithstanding. More than the full period of five years prescribed by this act of limitation had expired without any act of any sort by the patentee owner to recover possession or to question plaintiff Is title under his tax deeds. The quitclaim deed gave to the defendant such rights, and such only, as the grantor himself had. The patentee owner’s title, under section 3904, Mills’ Ann. Stats., was completely extinguished and barred; hence the patentee had nothing to give when he executed his quitclaim deed, and the defendant received nothing thereby. Express authority for this conclusion is found in Crisman v. Johnson, 23 Colo. 264; De Foresta v. Gast, 20 Colo. 307, and Bennet v. N. C. S. L. & I. Co., 23 Colo. 470, which hold-that a void deed taken in good faith constitutes sufficient color of title under out statute of limitations. See also Desty on Taxation, § 149. That the patentee’s title was extinguished, and the same vested in the plaintiff under the facts of this case, see also Lebanon Mining Co. v. Rogers, 8 Colo. 34; Moingona Coal Co. v. Blair, 51 Iowa 447; Harris v. Curran, 32 Kan. 580; Griffin v. Turner, 75 Iowa 250; Black on Tax Titles (2d ed.), § 284; Shawler v. Johnson, 52 Iowa 472.

Morris v. St. Louis Nat. Bank, 17 Colo. 231, is not opposed to this conclusion. There are some obsérvations in the opinion, in the nature of dicta, which might seem pertinent, but the holding was that the statute of limitations we are considering was not applicable to that case, as the action was not “for the recovery” of land, and the deed had not been on record for five years before the action was brought.

2. The remaining question, then, is as to which of the titles obtained under the tax deeds shall pre^ va.il. Let us again consider the respective claims of [122]*122the parties at the time the action was begun. By the tax deeds which plaintiff held the former owner’s title was extinqnished. This result was effected before defendant’s tax deeds were executed. When these later deeds were recorded, though the'patentee owner’s title was vested in plaintiff by the earlier deeds, it was a defeasible, not an absolute, title, because the full period of limitation had not then run; but afterwards, and before this- suit was instituted, plaintiff’s title had become absolute by the lapse of the full period. When defendant’s tax deeds were subsequently recorded the title, as to the patentee, the original owner, and all the world, was absolute in plaintiff. Whatever effect the recording of defendant’s tax deeds had on the title, it was merely and nothing more than that which the record of tax deeds has on the rights and title of an owner whose lands are sold for delinquent taxes. These deeds of the defendant, then, operated to divest plaintiff’s title and vest it in the defendant and they are prima facie evidence in this suit of defendant’s ownership and right of possession. But the defendant’s title thereunder was, when the plaintiff filed his complaint, merely defeasible, because the full period of limitation had not expired within which the plaintiff, as the owner, might attack it. Since the plaintiff thus questioned its validity within this period, and as the defendant concedes his deeds are void because of certain irregularities preceding the sale, they must be canceled, and his possession thereunder deemed a trespass.

The defendant concedes that such would be the law were it not for the fact that the recording of his tax deeds has introduced into the case another element that changes such rule.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Colo. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-conroy-colo-1905.