Wilson v. United States

21 Ct. Cl. 135, 1886 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1800 WL 1458
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 1, 1886
DocketNo. 15
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 Ct. Cl. 135 (Wilson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. United States, 21 Ct. Cl. 135, 1886 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1800 WL 1458 (cc 1886).

Opinion

Nott, J.,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

The facts in this case are of two kinds: first, those which are established by competent evidence; second, those which are hypothetical.

As to the former, we remark that the only competent evidence in the case consists of the title bond bearing date December 31, 1859, from Williams, trustee, to Wilson and Boss; the deed bearing date April 8, 1861, from Ross to Wilson, and the subsequent conveyance, bearing date July 7, 1866, from Williams to Wilson.

As to the latter, and the evidence by which they are presented, the court notes the following defects:

1. The decree of the court of chancery, entered April 1,1870, which is relied upon to show that the title of Reuel Hough to a tax-sale certificate was divested and passed to Nortrop & De Bevoisse, does not show that the court had jurisdiction of Reuel Hough, nor even that he was a party to the suit. It is, moreover, as it stands, contradictory, the body of the decree reciting that the tax certificate was assigned and set over by certain commissioners to be the property of Nortrop & De Bevoisse, while the report itself, which is confirmed' by the decree, shows that it was assigned and set over to Hough, Nortrop & De Bevoisse.

2. The parol evidence relied upon to establish the contents of the deeds or conveyances from Wilson to Chew, from Chew’s executor to Kelly, and from Kelly to the claimant is incompetent, it appearing that all of those deeds are of record if not in existence.

3. The testimony of Wilson, stating that he, “representing the executor of R. B. Chew, deceased,” sold an undivided interest in the property to "Martin Kelly is incompetent to show that he was executor, or that he had authority to represent the executor, or that the executor had authority to sell and convey.

4. The testimony of the same witness to the effect that possession was given by Williams at the time of sale in 1859, and that the claimant has been in undisturbed possession ever since, is insufficient to establish either the possession of Williams or the possession of his grantees. What is possession is a question of law, and the acts constituting it must be shown.

[137]*137The facts established by competent evidence and the facts indicated by parol, that is to say, the facts which probably exist and those which it is supposed the claimant will be able to establish by, proper documentary evidence, when taken together, are correctly stated by the defendants’ counsel, as follows:

“ In December, 1859, Joseph R. Williams, one of two surviving trustees, bargained and sold by quitclaim to W. B. Ross and W. P. Wilson, the claimant, part of lot 204, being the property which was subsequently sold for the direct tax.
“ On March 7,1800, Wilson, the claimant, conveyed by deed all of his interest acquired by reasou of said title bond to R. E. Chew, which divested him of all interest whatever acquired by him in said property under the title bond of Williams, trustee.
“In April, 1861, W. B. Ross conveyed to Wilson the interest acquired by him under the original title bond of Williams, trustee.
“ The interest to that part of the lot conveyed by the claimant to Chew did not become reinvested in Wilson until October 30, 1866, subsequent to the direct tax sale, which occurred June 21, 1864.
“ In July, 1866, Williams, trustee, executed and, delivered to the claimant a quitclaim deed for the lot.”

When this statement is analyzed the following ultimate facts appear:

1. At the time of the tax sale Wilson, the claimant, owned an undivided half of the equity of redemption under the title bond of Williams, trustee, and R. E. Chew the other half.

2. After the tax sale the grantor, Williams, conveyed to the claimant the whole of the legal title.

3. Still later the other half of the equitable estate held by Chew was conveyed by Chew or his grantee to the claimant; so that if the foregoing conveyances were good and valid, the claimant then became invested with the entire legal and equitable estates in the land.

But in this connection the following absence of material facts should be noted :

1. It does not appear that the original grantor at the time of sale was in actual possession of the demised property, apparently a vacant, unoccupied, uninclosed town lot, or that he was seized of it by a good and valid title.

2. It does not appear that the grantees under the title bond of Williams acquired an actual or legal possession pf the prop[138]*138■erty, nor that they paid State, county, or municipal taxes upon it, nor that they exercised any acts of ownership.

3. It does not appear that the claimant was ever dispossessed under the direct tax sale, nor that the purchaser, Eeuel Hough, has ever released the estate acquired by him or parted with the tax-sale certificate.

But inasmuch as it is manifest to the court that competent evidence can be supplied and substituted for that which is incompetent, the case will be remanded; and to the end that ■counsel on both sides may more intelligently deal with legal ■questions involved, which, in the judgment of the court, go to the merits, the court will declare its opinion upon the case that was argued and submitted.

The Direct Tax Act, 1861 (12 Stat. L., §36, p. 292), does indeed provide that in the case of a sale of land the “ surplus shall be deposited in the Treasury,” “ to be there held for the use of the owner or his legal representativesBut this term “ ownerf when applied to realty, is necessarily a term of wide and varied meaning, and in administering the statute the court, when construing the term, must be guided and restricted by the law of real property.

In the case of Franklin B. Bodgers, just decided, we have examined the law of Tennessee and have found that the instrument termed a title bond places the contracting parties in the positions of mortgagor and mortgagee, and that the obligation of keeping down the taxes, as in the case of a tenant for life, rests upon the mortgagor in possession. In the present case that obligation is all the more apparent because the title bond ■expressly provides that existing taxes shall be paid by the grantor, and by implication casts the obligation of paying-subsequent taxes upon the purchasers.

The claimant therefore at the time of sale was simply one of two mortgagors who had not discharged the mortgage by paying the installments of purchase-money according to the obligations of the title bond; and if the case stopped at that point we should be compelled to hold that the mortgagee, that is to say the original grantor, was the owner within the meaning of the statute, or at least a necessary party to this action.

But the case does not stop at that point. The grantees under the title bond must be regarded as in possession as against their grantor, though they may not have been in possession as [139]*139against all tbe world. Taking as joint purchasers under a common instrument, possession of one was possession for both.

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Related

Wilson v. United States
24 Ct. Cl. 227 (Court of Claims, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 Ct. Cl. 135, 1886 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 90, 1800 WL 1458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-united-states-cc-1886.