delivered the opinion of the court:
On October i, 1867, one Matilda Miller was the owner in fee of the lot 10 here in controversy, and on October 2, 1867, made her will, and therein devised to her husband, the appellee, James H. Miller, said lot 10 upon the following terms and conditions, namely: “To be by him held and used for his personal benefit during his natural life, and at his death I desire that said last mentioned lot with its appurtenances be sold, and the proceeds thereof be equally divided between George G. Booker and his "heirs and Matilda McHenry and her heirs.” George G. Booker was a nephew, and Matilda McHenry was a niece of the testatrix. Matilda Miller died before February 22, 1870, and on that day her will was admitted to probate, and her husband, James H. Miller, was appointed executor of her will, but has never made final settlement of her estate, or. been discharged from his duties as executor. James H. Miller, being a life tenant .under the will of his deceased wife, Matilda Miller, entered upon the possession of the lot as such life tenant. After the death of Matilda Miller, James H. Miller married one Eliza Johns, who was one of the witnesses to the will of Matilda Miller, and lived with said Eliza Miller until her death.
On June 15, 1887, the west fourteen-fifteenths of said lot 10, then assessed to Matilda Miller, were sold at tax sale to one Will Beckwith for $30.30 for non-payment of the taxes of the year 1886. The certificate of purchase, issued to Will Beckwith at the sale, was assigned to said Eliza Miller, the wife of said James H. Miller, and thereafter on June 13, 1890, W. C. Tuttle, county clerk of Vermilion county, executed a tax deed to Eliza Miller, conveying to her the west fourteen-fifteenths of said lot.
On June 19, 1894, James H. Miller, and Eliza Miller, his wife, conveyed said lot 10 by quit-claim deed to one Charles J. Palmer of Dánville, who entered into possession of said lot. On September 29, 1896, Charles J. Palmer, and his wife, for an expressed consideration of $1700.00, conveyed all their interest in said lot 10 by quit-claim deed to the appellant, Samuel Blair of Vermilion county, who thereupon entered into the possession of said lot, and made certain improvements thereon. On September 26, 1896, one Edwin Winter, who had obtained a tax deed upon said premises, conveyed such interest, as he had under said tax deed, to the appellant, but said deed was without consideration.. The appellant, Samuel Blair, claims to be the owner in fee of the whole of lot 10 here in controversy. His claim, as such owner in fee, is based upon the tax deeds' of June 13, 1890, to Eliza Miller, the deed of June 19, 1894, from James H. Miller and Eliza Miller, his wife, to Charles J. Palmer, and the deed of September 29, 1896, from Charles J. Palmer and wife to the appellant, Samuel Blair, and upon the payment of taxes and possession for more than seven years under one or more of these deeds as color of title.
Leaving for the moment the question as to what title, if any, the appellant acquired through the deeds last mentioned, as his color of title, and through possession and payment of taxes thereunder, we will consider the interest, which appellant obtained, in addition to and outside of the tax title. When James H. Miller, and his wife, executed the deed to. Charles J. Palmer on June 19, 1894, James H. Miller was the owner of a life interest in the property under the will of his deceased wife, Matilda Miller. Without doubt, by that conveyance Palmer became the owner of the life interest of James H. Miller, that is, of an interest in the lot for the life of James H. Miller, and, by the subsequent deed of September 29, 1896, appellant was the owner of an interest in the lot for the life of James H. Miller. Inasmuch as the lot was to be sold at the death of James H. Miller, and the proceeds were to be equally divided between George G. Booker and his heirs and Matilda McHenry and her heirs, and inasmuch as Marguerite Hobart Schwartz, the only heir of Matilda McHenry—who married one Hobart and died on February 13, 1887—with her husband quit-claimed all her interest in said lot to appellant by deed of November 8, 1902, appellant is the owner of such interest, as the heir of Matilda McHenry had under the will of Matilda Millet as remainder-man in said lot, or in the proceeds of the sale thereof. At any rate, when, upon the death of James H. Miller, the property is sold, one-half of the proceeds will belong to the appellant as the grantee from the sole surviving heir of Matilda McHenry Hobart. We pass no opinion upon the question whether the interest of the remainder-men under the will of Matilda Miller is realty or personalty.
A purchaser from the life tenant takes no greater interest than the interest of the life tenant. (Rohn v. Harris,
But it cannot be said that the interest which appellees, who are the heirs of George G. Booker, had in the premises, or in the proceeds of the sale of the premises as remainder-men, has in any way passed out of them, or become vested in the appellant. It is not seriously contended, nor can it be, that the tax deed to Eliza Miller, or the tax deed to Winter, passed the paramount title. Those deeds were invalid as attempted conveyances of the parmount title. Aside from the insufficiency of notices, no tax judgment was introduced as a basis for the sales, under which the tax deeds were issued. A tax deed without the judgment and precept upon which it is based is no sufficient proof of paramount title. (Gage v. Thompson,
Nor can it be said that the tax deed to Eliza Miller, dated June 13, 1890, or the deed from Miller and wife to Palmer, dated June 19, 1894, can either of them be regarded as color of title made in good faith. James H. Miller was not only the executor of the will of lii§ deceased wife, Matilda Miller,, but he was life tenant under the provisions of the will, and, therefore, it was his duty to pay the taxes upon the property. Instead of doing so, he suffered the property to be sold for taxes, and procured a tax deed to be executed to Eliza Miller, his second wife. As life tenant, he could not become the purchaser of the property at the tax sale. The purchase of the property at a tax sale by a life tenant, whose duty it is to pay the taxes, amounts only in law to a payment of the taxes. In Oswald v. Wolf,
The fact, that the deed was made to Eliza Miller, the wife of James H. Miller, instead of James H. Miller himself, makes no difference. James H. Miller was in possession of the premises as life tenant when he married Eliza Johns, and the latter went into possession under him, or with him, when she married him. The proof shows that the affidavit for the tax deed to Eliza Miller was made by James H. Miller himself, wherein he recites that a tax sale was had of the property on June 15, 1887, for the taxes of the year 1886, and that the lot was sold .to Will Beckwith, and the certificate assigned by the latter to Eliza Miller, and that he, James H. Miller, served notice upon Charles Pond, the tenant in possession, and upon himself, James H. Miller, as the person, in whose name the property was taxed, and that Matilda Miller, in whose name the lot was assessed as the owner or party in interest, upon diligent inquiry made by him, James H. Miller, could not be found in Vermilion county, and did not reside therein from June 15, 1887, to March 15, 1889, he well knowing that said Matilda Miller, his first wife, was then dead. Pie was the agent of Eliza Miller if he was not actually acting for himself, and notice to him as such agent amounted in law to notice to Eliza Miller, his wife. “The policy of the law, which prohibits a person occupying a fiduciary relation from purchasing at his or her own sale of the trust property, equally forbids such purchase by the wife or husband of the seller.” (Lagger v. Mutual Union Loan Ass.
Palmer stands in no better position than Eliza Miller, or James H. Miller, because he purchased with full notice that James H. Miller was merely a life tenant. He swears that he knew what the will of Matilda Miller was, and knew that James PI. Miller had only a life tenancy in the property. He received possession of the property from James H. Miller, not from Eliza Miller. He paid the consideration to James H. Miller, and took a deed of the property from the latter.
In Lewis v. Ward,
The appellant went into possession of the property under the deed obtained by him from Palmer on September 29, 1896-. It is unnecessary to inquire, whether he had or had not notice of the same matters, which the proof shows that Palmer had notice of. The possession and payment of taxes under their respective deeds by Eliza Miller and Palmer can not operate in favor of appellant, because such payment of taxes and possession were under color of title made in bad faith. Consequently, appellant’s possession and payment of taxes must begin with September 29, 1896, the date of the deed executed to him by Palmer. Appellant’s bill in this case was filed on February 26, IC503, and seven years had.not elapsed after he obtained his deed on September 29, 1896, before the time of filing this bill. The oral testimony shows that the first payment of taxes, which appellant made, was about the first of September, 1896; and the first tax receipt introduced is dated April 15, 1897, being a tax receipt for the payment of the taxes of 1896. Seven years did not elapse between appellant’s first payment of taxes—even if his deed from Palmer be regarded as color of title made in good faith —and the time of the filing of his bill. “In order to create a bar under * * * section 6 of the present Limitation law, seven years must elapse between the date of the first payment, when the statute begins to run, and the commencement of the suit.—McConnell v. Konepel,
Appellees, as heirs of George G. Booker, deceased, were remainder-men, and were entitled to one-half- of the land, or to one-half of the proceeds of its sale, -after the expiration of the life estate. This being so, appellees were not obliged to pay the taxes, but the duty of paying the same devolved upon James H. Miller, the life tenant. In addition to this, the possession of James H. Miller was the possession of the remainder-men. The possession of the life tenant, or of those holding under him, cannot be hostile to the remainder-men until the life estate has ended. Nor does the Statute of Limitations run against the remainder-men until the death of the life tenant. (Orthwein v. Thomas,
As the bill, filed by the appellant in the present case, proceeds upon the theory that he became the owner in fee of the interest, vested in appellees as remainder-men under the will of Matilda Miller, by virtue of color of title, and payment of taxes, and possession thereunder for seven years as above stated, and as the claim thus set up by the appellant is not sustained for the reasons already mentioned, we are of the opinion that the decree of the circuit court, granting the relief prayed by the cross-bill, and dismissing the original bill for want of equity, is correct.
Accordingly, the decree of the circuit court is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
