88 Va. 259 | Va. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the court.
The record discloses the following case : On the 19th day of December, 1887, W. W. Brand, treasurer of Roanoke county, sold a certain tract or parcel of land described as two acres and forty poles near Salem, assessed in the names of J. W. Shell, T. D. Shell and E. A. Shell, as delinquent for payment of taxes due and unpaid for the year 1886, to the amount of $2.47, which said lands at said sale were purchased by Walter Z. Boon, appellant, for the sum of $2.72.
This sale, and all the proceedings were under an act of the general assembly passed February 26th, 1886 (Acts 1885-’86,
It appears from copy of the record of the circuit court of Roanoke county, that under attachment proceedings in the said court against • the said Shells, owners of the said lots, they, the said lots, were sold and purchased on the 22d day of May, 1888, by Sparrel F. Simmons, the appellee, for the sum of $801, which he paid, and the sale was confirmed, and a deed was made to the said Simmons in pursuance of the order of the said court by F. C. Shell, J. W. Shell, T. D. Shell and W. Lee Brand, deputy sheriff of Roanoke county; and the said Simmons was put into possession of the said lots, which possession he has held uninterruptedly to this time. It no where appears that the said Boon has ever had possession of any part of the said lots in controversy.
In May, 1890, Sparrel F. Simmons (the appellee) instituted this suit in the circuit court of Roanoke county to have the aforesaid sale of the said lots made December 19th, 1887, by the said treasurer, W. "W. Brand, and the deed for the same made to the said "Walter Z. Boon by the aforesaid McCauley, clerk of the county court of Roanoke county, February 13, 1890, declared to be illegal, null and void, and to vacate the same, as a cloud upon his title to the aforesaid land in the controversy ; and the said circuit court rendered the decree of April 6th, 1891, declaring the said sale to be illegal, null and void, and vacating and annulling the said deed of February 13th, 1890, made by the said clerk, McCauley, of the county court of Roanoke county, to the said Walter Z. Boon, the appellant.
We are of opinion to affirm the said decree appealed from, for the reasons given in writing by the judge of the circuit court, filed with the decree and made part of the record, in an elaborate and able opinion.
The record shows sundry defects and irregularities in the proceedings attending the sale of the real estate in controversy
Section 5th of the act of February 26th, 1886, under which the sale was made and all the proceedings were had, is as follows :
“ 5. 'Within thirty days after the sales have been completed, the treasurer shall report all the sales to the county court of his county, or corporation court of his city. * * * The court, if in session, if not in session, then at its next term, shall enter on record the fact of the return of the report of said sales, and shall continue the matter until the next term, for exceptions to be fled by any person affected by said report; and if no cause be shown to the contrary, or in so far as the said report appears to be proper, and the sales to have been regularly made, the court shall confirm said sales, and make the same binding upon the parties in interest, subject to the limitations and exceptions hereinafter described; and writs of possession may in all cases be granted to the said purchasers during term, or at any time thereafter on demand, whether said purchaser shall be a person, company, firm, or corporation, or the auditor of the state.”
Though positively and peremptorily commanded to continue the matter reported at the January term of the sale made of this land in controversy by the treasurer, until the next term for exceptions to be filed by any persons affected by the said report and proceedings of the treasurer, and thereafter, at the next succeeding February term, or at some subsequent term, to confirm the said sales and make the same binding upon the parties in interest; the county court. failed to continue the matter of the treasurer’s report of the said sale at its January term, 1886; and did not make an order confirming the sale of the land in controversy to Boon to make it binding upon the parties in interest, at that January term, nor at any subsequent term of the said court. Without such order of confirmation the sale to Boon was null and void; the essential
“ The power to sell land for non-payment of taxes is not a common law power, but arises entirely from statute, and therefore exists only when .the conditions prescribed by the statute are fulfilled ; and since the statutes are peual, and the proceedings under them ex-parte, summary, executive rather than judicial, and an infringement of the rights of property only tolerated by reason of necessity, great strictness and exactness in following the law is required in favor of the land owner. All acts prescribed by the statute must be performed in the place, manner, form, and time therein named; every provision in which the owner can possibly have an interest must be strictly obeyed, or the resulting tax-title will be void.” (Blackwell on Tax-Titles, section 121.) In section 126, the same writer says : “ The proceedings are adverse, ex-parte, and statutory, and have nothing to stand upon but the statute, from which if they vary, they can lay no claim to its support, and are therefore wholly without support. The purchaser claims under the statute; by that let his pretensions be judged. The consideration is grossly inadequate; the maxim . caveat enyptor applies with great force to the purchaser. If the forms of law can be departed from at all, a dangerous power is put in the hands of the officers, and great difficulty will be found in deciding how
The record shows that the sale made and reported by the treasurer to the January term, 1888, of the county court of Roanoke county, of “ two acres and forty poles near Salem,” to the appellant, Boon, was not continued as the law required; that no order of confirmation by the said court of the said sale was ever made so as to make the same binding upon the parties in interest; and that Boon never sued out a writ of possession, or took possession of the land in controversy which he was reported to have bought at a sale of lands delinquent for taxes, for $2.72, but which sale was never confirmed so as to consummate his tax-title, or to bind or divest the title of the owners of the land delinquent. The appellee, Simmons, is not a delinquent owner failing to pay the taxes upon his land; but an innocent purchaser, for value $801 cash, without notice, actual or constructive, of the claims of a tax-sale purchaser-
This is not a suit for the -possession' of the land, but is a suit by the purchaser at a judicial sale who has paid the purchase-money and been in possession since July 7th, 1888, under a decree of the circuit court of Roanoke county, to remove the cloud upon his title by the tax-title claim of the appellant as purchaser at a sale made by the treasurer of Roanoke for delinquent taxes on the 19tli of December, 1887, which sale was never confirmed or consummated according to law. The deed of February 13th, 1890, from the clerk of the county court of Roanoke county was illegal and vend, because the county court had never confirmed the sale, nor in other essential and material prescriptions of law proceeded properly and regularly; and, while the sale reported described the land sold as “ two acres and forty poles near Salem,” the deed describes and conveys “ ten lots in the town of Salem, near the depot, of the Norfolk & Western Railroad — now contends that it is the 'same land.”
For the foregoing reasons we are of opinion, that there is no error in the decree of the circuit court of Roanoke appealed from, and that the same must be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.