71 Md. 283 | Md. | 1889
after stating the case a's above reported, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The lot ixi question was sold for taxes, and purchased by John Morrow in the month of October, eighteen hundred and sixty-two. The deed was executed by the Collector in November, eighteen hundred and sixty-three. He paid taxes for that year and for each successive year up to and including eighteen hundred and sixty-eight. In September, eighteen hundred and sixty-eight, he leased the lot for ninety-nine years, renewable forever, to Charles Shipley, at an annual rent of fifty-four dollars, payable semi-annually. Shipley paid this, rent up to September, eighteen hundred and eighty-six, and paid all the taxes on the lot from eighteen hundred and sixty-
We will assume that the tax proceedings under which Morrow purchased were irregular, and not efficient to maintain his title. Yet the deed was valid on its face, and was made by a public officer who had the right to sell the property for the unpaid taxes; provided he complied with the requirements of the law. It could under no circumstances he considered as conveying less than color of title. In Wright vs. Mattison, 18 Howard, 56, the Supreme Court said: “The Courts have concurred, it is believed without an exception, in defining ‘color of title’ to he that which in appearance is title, but which in reality is no title. They have equally concurred in attaching no exclusive or peculiar character or importance to the ground of the invalidity of an apparent or colorable title; the inquiry with them has been whether there was an apparent or colorable title, under which an entry or a claim has been made in good faith. ’ ’ To the same purport, is Baker vs. Swan’s Lessee, 32 Md., 358. The effect of an entry by one under color of title is very different from the entry of a mere tort feasor. Before the Act of 1852, a person holding merely by adverse possession,
It is maintained that the entry in behalf of the complainants defeated the possession under both of these tax sales. We suppose that we are to take it as conceded that Austin Woolfork died in the year 1841, seised and possessed of this lot of ground in fee, and that the complainants acquired title in fee under his will. Although they never made any entry on the land, yet, it is well settled in this State and in most of the States, that the title of an owner of real estate always draws to itself the possession of vacant property. This possession has sometimes been called constructive; hut it is in no wise different in its legal effect from an actual visible occupation. Cresap vs. Hutson, 9 Gill, 269; Hoye vs. Swan’s Lessee, 5 Md., 237. ' Tlie'possession of Woolfork’s devisees would therefore continue until it was displaced by an adverse holding of some kind. As long as they held the legal title, they would retain their right of entry, unless it was taken away hy the Statute 21 James the First. And they might hy the use of reasonable force expel any person wrongfully holding the possession. Manning vs. Brown, 47 Md., 512. It is said that by the ancient common law, the disseisee was not only allowed hut required to expel the wrong-doer incontineyier, flagrante disseisina et maleficio; but that if he did not eject him within a reasonable time, he was put to his assise of novel disseisin. Bracton, 166. And at the present day, although under the Statute 8 Henry 6,
We have considered the case as if the ’ complainants were within the provisos of the Statute of 21 James the First. But the record informs us that one of the devisees under Woolfork’s will died during the late -war, and one in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-one. The question arises as to the effect of these deaths on the operation of the statute. The second section saves the rights of entry and action to all persons who, at the
As the entry has not defeated the possession under the tax sales, the complainants must establish their title by an action of ejectment, which is the legitimate mode of deciding possessory titles. The bill in this case was intended to remove an alleged cloud on the title to real estate, and is in the nature of a quia timet. It must fail
“Those only who have a clear legal and equitable title to land, connected with possession, have any right to claim the interference of a Court of equity, to give them peace or dissipate a cloud on the title.”
It must be stated that the majority of the Court do not consider it necessary to decide the question of limitations, inasmuch as they hold that for the other reasons stated in this opinion, the decree of the Court below ought to be reversed.
Decree reversed, and bill dismissed with costs.