Beuthien v. Dillon

160 Mich. 396 | Mich. | 1910

Brooke, J.

(after stating the facts). At the hearing, the complainant offered in evidence the deeds from the auditor general to the State, dated May 15, 1896, and the deeds from the commissioner of the State land office to himself, dated- October 25, 1905, and rested. The defendants offered in evidence the proceedings of the board of supervisors of Roscommon county, the sales book, the tax records, and the several files in the original proceedings on the petition of the auditor general, for the sale of the lands in question, for unpaid taxes, together with the circuit court journal of Roscommon county, so far as it related to such proceedings. This testimony tended to show that the taxes had been irregularly levied, and that *399the circuit court proceedings were in some particulars defective. It should have been considered by the circuit judge, if these defendants are now in a position to urge such irregularities and defects.

Act No. 211, Pub. Acts 1905, provides:

“ All deeds heretofore or hereafter made by the commissioner of the State land office upon sales of land, reserved and withheld from entry under the homestead right in pursuance of section 131 of Act No. 206 of the Public Acts of 1893, and acts amendatory thereto, shall be prima facie evidence of title in fee, in the grantee named in such deeds of the lands described therein.”

Act No. 84, Pub. Acts 1903, provides:

“ After the expiration of six months from and after .the time when any deed made to the State under the provisions of section 127 of Act No. 206 of the Public Acts of 1893, being the general tax law, and acts amendatory thereto, shall have been recorded in the office of the register of deeds, for the county in which the land so deeded shall be situated, the title of the State in and to the same, shall be deemed to be absolute and complete, and no suit or proceeding shall thereafter be instituted by any person, claiming through the original or government title to set aside, vacate or annul the said deed or the title derived thereunder: Provided, That as to all lands heretofore deeded to the State under the provisions of said section 127 of said Act No. 206 of the Public Acts of 1893, the title of the State thereto shall be deemed to be absolute and complete, after a period of six months from the taking effect of this act, and no suit or proceeding shall thereafter be instituted by any person, claiming through the original or government title to set aside, vacate or annul said deed or deeds or the title derived thereunder.”

If the foregoing act is constitutional, the appellants have no standing. This statute received consideration by the court, in People v. Christian, 144 Mich. 247 (107 N. W. 919), when Mr. Justice Grant, speaking for the court, said:

“The statute (Act No. 84, Pub. Acts 1903) imposes a limitation to the right to bring suit to six months from the time the act took effect. The act took effect in September, 1903. A like statute of limitations was held valid by this *400court. Semer v. Auditor General, 133 Mich. 569 (95 N. W. 732).”

See, also, Griffin v. Kennedy, 148 Mich. 583 (112 N. W. 756), and Jackson, etc., R. Co. v. Lumber Co., 146 Mich. 204 (109 N. W. 257). Again, in the case of Owens v. Auditor General, 147 Mich. 688 (111 N. W. 356), the court said:

“ Counsel contend that by reason of the provision of Act No. 84, Pub. Acts 1903, all laches are excused, and the owner of the original title is given six months after said act took effect in which to attack the sales. We do not so interpret said act, but think that it was intended to fix a period limiting a time after which certain sales cannot be attacked.”

It is urged on behalf of defendants that these statements of the court are mere dicta. We do not so construe them. Whatever may be said of the language upon this particular point in Owens v. Auditor General, supra, we think it can scarcely be claimed that the statement of Mr. Justice Grant, in People v. Christian, supra, does not, in effect, pass upon the constitutionality of the act. In any event, the decision and reasoning in the case, Semer v. Auditor General, supra, where a similar statute of limitations was held constitutional, is conclusive. Defendants rely upon the decision in O'Connor v. Carpenter, 144 Mich. 240 (107 N. W. 913). There, the defendant was in possession, the plaintiff brought ejectment, and the court was called to pass upon section 140, Act No. 229, Pub. Acts 1897 (1 Comp. Laws, § 3959). The court held the section under consideration bad, as not being “due process of law.” Further:

“It is an attempt to compel one who is in full possession of his property and who thereby makes the most positive assertion of his rights, to resort to a court, not to gain his own, but to restrain another from asserting an unwarrantable claim.”

No such situation is presented by the case at bar. The defendants, both nonresidents, paid no taxes for 24 years. After default of 15 years, and in 1896, the auditor gen*401eral and the commissioner of the State land office, at the request of the township board of the township of Markham, caused the lands to be examined under the provisions of section 12?, Act No. 206, Pub. Acts 1893 (1 Comp. Laws, § 3949), and a certificate was filed, declaring them to be barren, swamp or worthless, and abandoned by the owner. For nine years this determination has stood unchallenged by these defendants, during which time the lands have been withdrawn from taxation. Under the decision in Griffin v. Kennedy, supra, this determination is conclusive, not having been assailed by suit within six months. In the case of Owens v. Auditor General, supra (to which particular attention is directed), this court refused to entertain a petition to set aside a decree, made ten years before, solely upon the ground of laches. Leaving out of consideration the statutes, and examining the appellants’ cross-bills alone, we are of opinion that relief should be denied because of their laches.

Appellants urge that the record shows that it is admitted they are in possession, because of the averment of possession in the cross-bills, and the answer of the complainant above quoted. We cannot agree with this contention. The original bill of complaint averred that the lands were in a wild, uninclosed state. This the cross-bills deny, and thus an issue was raised, but no proof was offered by defendants to show possession, either at the time the determination of abandonment was made or at any time since.

Under these circumstances, we do not think it can be said that, because complainant did not specifically deny the averment of possession in his answer to the cross-bills, he thereby admitted it. The entire course of action of defendants, as disclosed by the record, negatives the fact.

The judgment is affirmed.

Blair and Stone, JJ., concurred with Brooke, J. McAlvay, J., I concur on the ground of laches. Montgomery, C. J., concurred with McAlvay, J.