Yeaman v. Lepp

66 S.W. 957, 167 Mo. 61, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 19, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 66 S.W. 957 (Yeaman v. Lepp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yeaman v. Lepp, 66 S.W. 957, 167 Mo. 61, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 102 (Mo. 1902).

Opinion

MARSHALL, J.

This is a bill in equity to set aside a sheriff’s deed to the defendant, made under a special fi. fa. issued upon a judgment for taxes, amounting to $9.75, and costs $15.18, assessed against the south half of the northwest quarter, and southwest quarter, and west half of the southwest quarter of the. northeast quarter, of section 28, township 39, [65]*65range 4 east, in Jefferson county, containing two hundred and sixty acres, being the property of the plaintiffs. The petition alleges that in June, 1897, the plaintiffs were made defendants in a tax suit filed in Jefferson county by the tax collector of that county to recover said taxes assessed against said, land; that at the September term, 1897, a judgment was rendered for said taxes and costs and foreclosing the lien of the State upon said land therefor; that on October 7, 1897, a special execution was issued to the sheriff commanding him to sell said land, or so much thereof as-was necessary, to satisfy the debt and costs; that the sheriff sold the said land to defendant for one hundred and ninety dollars and made him a deed thereto, under which the defendant now claims the land. The petition then alleges the following:

“Plaintiffs claim that said land is reasonably worth the sum of $800, and that at said sale of said land the sheriff wholly violated the law and the commands of the execution in this respect, that he did not offer for sale the said land in its subdivisions, or in any natural or artificial subdivision of the same; and plaintiffs allege that any one of said natural subdivisions would have sold for more than enough to pay said debt and costs, leaving remaining for these plaintiffs the larger part of said 260 acres of land, but that unmindful of his duty to these plaintiffs the said sheriff, at the request of parties interested in the sacrifice of plaintiffs’ land, and wholly unmindful of the commands of the execution and his dutv to the plaintiffs, never once offered said land in smaller divisions than the whole; whereas the land has three natural subdivisions, one of 20, one of 80, and of one 160 acres, and that the said 80-acre and 160-acre subdivision of the whole could have been conveniently divided into at least six subdivisions of 40 acres each, and so sold, but the said sheriff proceeded to sell the whole, thus attempting in the interest of parties interested in acquiring all of said land, to confiscate the whole of [66]*66the property of the plaintiffs in an unlawful and illegal way, for about one-quarter of its reasonable value, but for which he realized on said illegal sale the sum of $190, or about seven times the taxes and costs, or the amount of said judgment.
“Plaintiffs show that there is now in the hands of the sheriff of said county the sum of $146.57, the proceeds in excess of the amount of said judgment, and that these plaintiffs have refused to receive the same, but they here now request that this honorable court, by its order have the same paid into this court to await the final disposition of this suit; that plaintiffs have offered before the institution of this suit to reimburse and pay the said defendant Lepp his money, costs and expenses, if he would reconvey said property to plaintiffs, but he has refused so to do, thus persisting in carrying out the conspiracy to confiscate the whole of plaintiffs’ land to pay a small judgment for taxes, and showing his disposition to retain an illegal and unjust advantage of plaintiffs. A plat of said land is hereto attached, marked ‘Exhibit A,’ showing the position of said land, and the subdivisions of the same, any one of which would have sold, as plaintiffs believe, for sufficient to satisfy and discharge said debt and costs. Plaintiffs here now offer to pay to said defendant Lepp the said amount of money by him bid for said land, or so much thereof as will be necessary in addition to said $146.57 to equal the amount of his bid, $190.
“Plaintiffs show that they had no knowledge of. said sale, nor as to the time or place when the same was to be sold, until some months after the sale. That they never consented to nor requested that said land be sold in a body. That had they known of the contemplated sale of said land they would have directed the sale of said land in tracts or subdivisions as the law directs and contemplates. That plaintiffs employed attorneys to institute these proceedings to have said sale set aside as soon as they became aware of the facts.
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray that said sale be set aside; [67]*67that said deed be cancelled, and held for naught, and for such other orders and decrees as to the court may seem equitable and just in the premises.”

The defendant demurred to the petition, generally, because it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or to entitle the plaintiffs to the equitable relief sought, and specially, because it did not allege that the plaintiffs had tendered to the defendant, before the institution of the suit, the amount of the purchase price paid by the defendant. The circuit court sustained the demurrer, the plaintiffs refused to plead further, a final judgment was rendered for the defendant on demurrer, and the plaintiffs appealed.

I.

The question presented for adjudication is whether the petition states a cause of action. The plaintiffs’ contention is that “the property being susceptible to division and being one tract, a portion of one section, all connected, and sued on as one tract, it was the duty of the sheriff to subdivide the land and sell only so much as was necessary to satisfy the judgment and costs.” On the contrary the defendant’s contention is that the provision of the statute requiring a sheriff to subdivide real estate offered for sale under execution is only directory, and, further, that “there being no allegation in the petition that the real estate was assessed and sued on as one tract or that the lands were owned by the plaintiffs” [the plaintiffs are Stephen M. Yeaman and Alice A. his wife] “as tenants in common or by the entirety, each forty acre tract was liable for its own taxes and no parcel was liable for the taxes of any other.” And in support of the special demurrer the defendant claims that the petition does not state that the plaintiffs tendered to the defendant the cost of the sheriff’s deed, amounting to two dollars and fifty cents.

In other words, the plaintiffs contend that the land con[68]*68sisted of three legal divisions, of one hundred and sixty acres, eighty acres, and twenty acres, respectively, and that it was assessed as one tract, and was sold as one tract, when, according to the command of the special fi. fa. and of the statute, the sheriff should have sold each-legal division separately and should have sold only so much as was necessary to satisfy the debt and costs, while on the other hand the defendant contends that there is no allegation in the petition that the land was assessed as one tract, that each forty acres was liable for its own taxes and that no parcel was liable for taxes assessed against any other parcel.

In either view the result is that the circuit court erred in sustaining the demurrer. If the land was assessed as one tract and sold as a whole, the sheriff did not obey the command of the fi. fa. nor the provision of the statute,- and sell only so much as was necessary to satisfy the debt and costs, and this being a direct attack in equity, the sale must be set aside.

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 957, 167 Mo. 61, 1902 Mo. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yeaman-v-lepp-mo-1902.