Wright v. Jones

135 N.W. 1120, 23 N.D. 191, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 81
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 135 N.W. 1120 (Wright v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Jones, 135 N.W. 1120, 23 N.D. 191, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 81 (N.D. 1912).

Opinion

Burke, J.

About the year 1882 one Margaret J. McGibbney, then unmarried, made homestead entry for a quarter section of land in Grand Forks county, North Dakota, and took up her residence thereon. Shortly thereafter she married one John Wright, by whom she bore two sons, Arthur W., plaintiff herein, and a younger son, whose first name we do not know. Arthur was born in 1884, and the younger son in February, 1887, at which time the mother died. The infant [194]*194child was given away by its father to a mother who had lost her own child, a stranger to him, and so far as we can learn this child has never been heard of since. The husband continued to reside upon his dead'wife’s homestead, and two years thereafter a patent was issued to the heirs of Margaret J. McG-ibbney, deceased.

After a short time, Wright placed the son Arthur with the family of the defendants, the Jones, neighbors of his family. Wright was to pay $6 per month in cash and furnish the material for the boy’s clothes. While this arrangement was in effect, and in the fall of the year 1890, Wright suddenly disappeared from that neighborhood, leaving many debts. He did.not notify the defendants, or anyone, of his intended departure. The defendants continued to care for the boy Arthur, and finally legally adopted him as their own son, about the year 1898.

The elder Wright was soon heard from at Fairhaven, Washington state, where he had gone apparently in quest of a widow who had removed from the Dakota neighborhood to the Pacific coast. Whatever induced his change of residence, he never returned to Dakota, but continued to reside upon the coast. His Dakota creditors took what little property -was left by him, excepting his interest in the homestead of his late wife. This land belonging to the father and the two sons in undivided one thirds, under the grant from the government, but not in any manner inherited from Mrs. Wright. However, the said land was soon sold for taxes and a tax deed issued to one Lindwell, a banker in a near-by town. This tax deed caused some talk in the neighborhood, and some of those interested decided to have a guardian appointed for the boy, who would redeem from the tax sale and keep the-land for the boy. One Christian was proposed as guardian, but he consulted the Jones before he would consent to act, and shortly thereafter the Jones adopted the boy, and Mrs. Jones obtained a quitclaim deed from Lindwell, for which she paid $126.51, the exact amount due to Lindwell for taxes upon the land. Three years later, when the boy Arthur was seventeen years of age, he ran away and did not return until he had reached his majority and came back to claim the land.

1. The first question arising is the validity of the title which the Jones now assert to the land. They claim under the tax deed to Lind-well, his quitclaim ■ deed to Mrs. Jones, and ten years’ adverse pos[195]*195session. We will examine the tax deed first. It is based upon tbe taxes for the year 1889, and tbe assessment roll shows that tbe land was listed as follows:

Name Sec. Twp. Kange Acres. Margaret J. McGibbney, N. W. J 35 149 56 160

An examination of tbe sixth line of tbe Ex. 4 at page 113 of tbe case of Power v. Bowdle, 3 N. D. 107, 21 L.R.A. 328, 44 Am. St. Rep. 511, 54 N. W. 404, will show that tbe description in said case is almost exactly like this one, and sncb case will be controlling here, unless overruled. We are now asked to overrule tbe earlier case. We are well aware of tbe severe criticism accorded tbe Power-Bowdle Case, but we feel that after twenty-one years it would be a mistake to change the rule which has long since become a rule of property in this state. This court has followed tbe said case too often to repudiate it now. See Iowa & D. Land Co. v. Barnes County, 6 N. D. 601, 72 N. W. 1019; Betts v. Signor, 7 N. D. 399, 75 N. W. 781; State Finance Co. v. Trimble, 16 N. D. 199, 112 N. W. 984; State Finance Co. v. Mulberger, 16 N. D. 214, 125 Am. St. Rep. 650, 112 N. W. 986; State Finance Co. v. Beck, 15 N. D. 374, 109 N. W. 357; Nind v. Myers, 15 N. D. 400, 8 L.R.A.(N.S.) 157, 109 N. W. 335; Beggs v. Paine, 15 N. D. 436, 109 N. W. 322. In tbe last-mentioned case this court announced that it would not extend tbe rule, but say “those decisions have established a rule of property in this state from which we cannot now depart.” That, being true then, is even more effective now. We must bold tbe tax deed absolutely void.

2. It therefore follows that neither Lindwell nor bis grantee has any interest in tbe land unless acquired under § 4928, Rev. Code 1005, designated by appellant as the short statute of limitations. This section has been construed by this court several times, J. B. Streeter, Jr. Co. v. Fredrickson, 11 N. D. 300, 91 N. W. 692; Power v. Kitching, 10 N. D. 254, 88 Am. St. Rep. 691, 86 N. W. 737; Stiles v. Granger, 17 N. D. 502, 117 N. W. 777. Under these decisions these defendants, to recover, must show that for tbe full period of. ten years they were in the open, adverse,, and undisputed actual possession of tbe land under color of title, and bad paid thereon all taxes [196]*196and assessments. In this, order of proof it will be necessary to. consider whether the Jones took the land from Lindwell, “openly adverse” to Arthur Wright, and whether for a period of ten years such possession was undisputed by Arthur. We will preface our answer to the said questions with some of the testimony from the record. Walter Christian was the neighbor mentioned by the neighbors as a guardian for the boy.

We quote from his testimony:

Q. For what purpose were you to be appointed ?
A. Why, it was for Arthur.
Q. And was this question of this land discussed in that connection ?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And what about it?
A. I believe it had been sold for taxes then, and it was to see to the boy and to the property— ■. . .it was to get the taxes cleared up and keep it clear for the boy.
Q. . . . Just what. conversation did you have with the Jones on this subject . . . ?
A. I told them that the neighbors were going to have a guardian appointed and that they wanted me appointed, but I wouldn’t accept unless they were willing, and he said if anyone was going to be appointed, he would just as soon have me as anyone else, and Mrs. Jones said the same, and then they called Arthur and he agreed to it.

When Mrs. Jones was on the stand to explain the matter she said:

“After a number of years we found that this quarter of land that was his mother’s had been sold for taxes. . . ■ . It came into my mind that perhaps I might in some way raise the money to pay the taxes on this place, and we could keep it to help support the boy and to pay us back a little bit; . . so I went to Mr. Lindwell and asked him if he would turn the land' over to me, and he did.”

Again, she was asked:

Q. Did you ever agree with him (Arthur) to deed the land to him or convey it to him or anything of that kind?
A. I may have said that if he was a good, good boy until he was [197]*197twenty-one years and helped us to get along so we would have a home of our own, that we would turn the quarter over to him.
Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.W. 1120, 23 N.D. 191, 1912 N.D. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-jones-nd-1912.