Bagley v. Sligo Furnace Co.

120 Mo. 248 | Mo. | 1894

Gantt, P. J.

This was a proceeding under section 2217, Revised Statutes, 1889, by Marcus E. Bagley to set aside a judgment for taxes under which his land had been sold. At the sale of - the land, the appellant, Sligo Furnace Company, was one of the purchasers, • without notice of the irregularity alleged. The causes alleged by the petitioner for setting aside the judgment were that he had paid the taxes for which judgment was rendered, and that the tax book had never been certified, as required by section 6723, Revised Statutes, 1879. The defendant, Sligo Furnace Company, was *250made a party to the suit by Bagley, and filed its answer setting forth that it had bought the land in good faith, believing that the judgment was regular and valid in every respect, and that it would get a good title by such purchase, and that it had no knowledge of any of the facts alleged in the petition. The evidence sustained the plea- of the Sligo Furnace Company.

The court refused the declarations asked by the Sligo Furnace Company, that the petitioner was not entitled to any relief against it, but gave a declaration on its own motion, number 3, hereafter copied, and rendered judgment setting aside the judgment for taxes. The court found that the defendant, in the tax suit, was notified of the action by publication • and never appeared thereto. It also found that he had paid the taxes that were sought to be recovered in said action, and that the tax book upon which said tax was entered was not certified as required by law. It, therefore, ordered and adjudged that the said judgment be set aside, and that the petitioner be allowed to answer in said cause. It is further found by the court that the Sligo Furnace Company and Thomas R. Gibson were the purchasers of the land described in plaintiff’s petition under said judgment for taxes, cmd that they purchased said land without any actual Imowledge of the causes herein specified for setting the same aside. Wherefore said judgment by default was by the court set aside, and leave was given to the said Marcus E. Bagley to file answer.

The court gave this instruction as indicating its views of the law:

“3. The court declares the law to be that in this proceeding the validity of the title of Sligo Furnace Company to the land sold under the judgment sought to be set aside can not be inquired into or passed upon, but that said Sligo Furnace Company has, by virtue of its purchase, the right to make any defense which the *251plaintiff in the judgment has to the granting of the prayer of the petition, and the further right, in the event the judgment should be set aside and the defendant permitted to answer, to prosecute the original suit to final judgment.”

To which action of the court in giving said declaration on its own motion, the said Sligo Furnace Company, by counsel, objected and excepted at the time.

Whereupon the said Sligo Furnace Company prayed for the following declarations of law:

“1. The court declares that if, under the evidence, it appears that the respondent, Sligo Furnace Company, was an innocent purchaser' under the sale .under the judgment sought to be set aside, then the petitioner is not entitled to any relief against the respondent, Sligo Furnace Company.
“2. The court further declares that under the evidence in this cause the petitioner is not entitled to any relief, and judgment will be for the respondent.”

Both of these declarations were refused by the court; to which action of the court in refusing each of said declarations of law the said Sligo Furnace Company, by its counsel, objected and excepted at the time.

We do not see how the appellant is aggrieved. The title it acquired under the tax . judgment was not in issue in this case. The sole question was whether the judgment to which it was not a party should be set aside. Had the court found that it had notice of the irregularities, it might have been concluded thereby in the suit for the land, but as no adverse finding was made against it, the mere setting aside of the judgment could not injuriously affect its title. Jones v. Driskill, 94 Mo. 191; Schmidt v. Niemeyer, 100 Mo. 207; Gibbs v. Southern, 116 Mo. 204; Reeve v. Kennedy, 43 Cal. 649; Stokes v. Geddes, 46 Cal. 17. No costs were, adjudged against defendant, and none could have been.

*252Our conclusion is that upon the finding made, the judgment in the tax suit must necessarily he for the defendant, and that it is not aggrieved and for these reasons the judgment is affirmed.

All concur.