74 W. Va. 115 | W. Va. | 1914
To whom belongs a fund in the hands of the court arising
The right of way was condemned through what was originally a tract of 100 acres. In 1880 the tract was conveyed by Preston Beavers to Mary and Sarah Jane Farley jointly. Each of the parties to this controversy claims title from this common source. By regular chain of conveyances defendant "W. F. Harman has a deed for the undivided one-half interest of Sarah Jane Farley. If that interest is not affected by forfeiture or tax sale, his claim is good. But plaintiff claims that by certain conveyances of undivided interests reaching from Mary Farley to its immediate vendor, and tax deeds for undivided interests under which title came to its immediate vendor, it now has title to the whole of the land, and that the title of Sarah Jane Farley to an undivided one-half therein has been extinguished or passed over to it.
No assessment of the land ever mentioned Sarah Jane Farley, or the name of any vendee of her .interest. For several years after the conveyance of the land to Mary and Sarah Jane Farley the tract appeared on the land boobs in the name of Mary Farley as 100 acres by proper local description, and the taxes presumably were paid. Later, however, after Mary Farley had by a deed, void because her husband did not join therein, attempted to convey to Gross an undivided one-third of her undivided one-half, the land was assessed as 16 acres to Gross and 66 acres to Mary Farley. Here was plainly a misstatement of the quantity as to the assessment in the name of Mary Farley. The 16 acres off to Gross, left 84 acres that should have continued in her name. Then, later, after Mary
The titles of Johnson, Straley, and D. H. Harman, Jr., passed by conveyances to the Yirginia-Poeahontas Coal Company, and under a conveyance from that company plaintiff claims. Its claim of ownership of the undivided interests which came through Johnson and Straley is in no wise inconsistent with the claim of defendant W. F. Harman to an undivided one-half of the land; for, the Gross and Ellen Beavers interests which were set over to Johnson and Straley, respectively, make up just the other undivided one-half. But plaintiff’s claim of ownership through the tax purchase and deed is wholly in conflict with defendant W. F. Harman’s claim. If good, the tax deed affects title to the Sarah Jane Farley undivided interest, for the tax sale was made under
Is the tax sale valid? To sustain it we must find that it is based on a valid assessment. From the record it is clear that-the assessment underlying the tax sale was an assessment of an undivided interest in land. "We have shown herein how it was undertaken to assess the whole, by parts. The notations of transfer on the land books, the deeds for the undivided interests corresponding to the transfers made, the report of the surveyor relative to the tax purchase, and the tax deed itself, all unmistakably point to the fact that the officials making the assessment and those acting under it considered it an assessment of an undivided interest in the 100 acres. Indeed that is what it was, and what it in fact was intended to be. Such an assessment is invalid, and the tax sale is void. Toothman v. Courtney, 62 W. Va. 167.
We have observed that the land was assessed by parts, and that such assessment embraced every interest claimed therein. The shortage in the quantity must be considered as arising from a mere misstatement. No one claimed any other interest than those assessed. There was a separate entry plainly representing each interest outstanding. So by illegal method the whole of the land was entered for taxation. Such entry continued, with payments of taxes pursuant to the same, until the date of the tax deed. Though the assessment was an irregular one, yet the owners waived the irregularity and paid the taxes under the assessment. The State accepted the taxes. Up to the time of the tax deed no forfeiture occurred for non-entry. Webb v. Ritter, 60 W. Va. 193.
After-the tax deed was recorded, the former assessment by parts to the respective claimants of the different interests, all in privity, was materially changed. Thereafter the interest which the tax purchaser was supposed to have taken was assessed in his name, and the assessment in the name of Mary Farley was dropped. No assessment in the name of any former owner of that interest ever again appeared. Entries!
By the forfeiture the title was lost to the former owners except so far as right of redemption remained. But it is maintained that the void tax deed estops the State from bringing any suit for the sale of the forfeited land, in which the former owners could avail themselves of redemption, and that the void tax deed, when the title passed to the State by forfeiture, operated to transfer to the grantee therein the title to the one-third undivided interest which it purported to convey. We were of this opinion at first, deeming it consistent with State v. Snyder, 64 W. Va. 659, and State v. West Branch Lumber Co., 64 W. Va. 673. But further consideration has brought us to a different conclusion. Those cases involved no such deed as the one now in question. Here we have a tax deed void not simply for defects in the proceedings underlying it, but a tax deed on its face wholly unwarranted by law. It purports to convey an undivided interest in a tract of land. It is therefore not within the description of the deed which the- statute makes conclusive against the State. Code 1913, eh. 31, sec. 29. That statute plainly refers to “such deed” as the law authorizes. It plainly refers to the deed authorized by section 25 of the same chapter as being essential to create a tax title. In section 25 it is pro
These considerations bring us to the conclusion that the land is unaffected by the deed made to the purchaser at tax sale and remains forfeited to the State. Another tax deed under which also plaintiff claims, for another one-third interest in the land, occupies a similar invalid status as the one we have discussed and need not be further noticed. The argument of plaintiff in relation to an equity by which it is entitled to the whole of the fund is not tenable.
For determination of the particular proceedings under review, plaintiff and defendant W. F. Harman may be considered the owners of the land from which the right of way was taken since they will no doubt avail themselves of an opportunity to redeem, now that the forfeiture has been ascertained and adjudged. Plaintiff has title to an undivided one-half of the land subject to redemption of the land from forfeiture, and defendant W. F. Harman has title to the other one-half subject to such redemption. The decree is only erroneous wherein it awards the fund absolutely. One-half should have been awarded plaintiff, to be paid whenever the land shall have been redeemed from forfeiture; and the other one-half should have been awarded defendant W. F. Harman, to be paid whenever the land shall have been redeemed from forfeiture. And pending proceedings for redemption of the land, which presumably will be instituted by the commissioner of school lands so that the parties may avail themselves of the grace of redemption given by law, the fund should be left in the hands of the general receiver of the court, where it now is. The’ judgment will be modified in the particulars mentioned, and as so modified it will be affirmed.
Modified and Affirmed.