7 Kan. 110 | Kan. | 1871
The record presents several questions for our consideration. The sale to Elizabeth E. Weaver was made March 30th, 1863, for $200. Within one year, and on the 29th of March, 1864, plaintiff paid to the sheriff who made the sale, and who was still sheriff, for the redemption of said property, $220, the amount for which the property was sold, and ten per cent, interest. The sheriff on the same day tendered the amount to the purchaser, which was refused. A tender of the money is, by the terms of the law, made equivalent to payment. Also payment might be made to the purchaser or for him to the officer making the sale: (§ 5, ch. 171, Comp. L., p. 771.) The redemption might be made by the judg- ■ ment-debtor or his successor in interest; (§2, same chapter.) Here the party seeking redemption claimed title by virtue of a deed from Noble Carithers, the judgment-debtor, made intermediate'the date of the. judgment and the day of the sale. He was therefore the “ successor in interest of the judgment-debtor,” and entitled to redeem. Having performed all that, the law required for the redemption of the property, all interest therein which the purchaser acquired by the sale ceased. This seems to have been conceded on the trial below, (except so far as it is affected by the question presented in the fourth instruction given at the instance of defendants, of which hereafter,) and is referred to, only for the sake of preparing the way to the question we shall now consider. There was some testimony offered upon the trial for the purpose of showing that the deed from Noble Carithers to plaintiff was without consideration, and made for the purpose of defrauding the wife of the grantor. Plaintiff asked the court to instruct the jury, that, “If Mrs.
Nor would the fact that the party acquired no interest in the tax proceedings till after the termination of his lease or agency change the case, if during the lease or agency the taxes became due and payable and he then neglected to pay them. The instruction' given by the court of his own motion ignores this principle entirely. It reads thus :
“ The legal effect of the tax-deed in evidence was to pass the entire title to John T. Weaver; and if the jury believe from the evidence that such deed was legally recorded in the office of register of deeds for Johnson county, more than two years previous to the commencement of this suit, the plaintiff is barred, and has no right to maintain a suit to recover possession of said premises.”
In regard to the third instruction given at the instance of the defendants, that in reference to a conveyance of the homestead, we have looked through the record carefully and see no testimony which would make an such instructions applicable to the case.
For these reasons the judgment of the court below must be reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings.