134 Mo. 281 | Mo. | 1896
This is an action of ejectment for lots 1, 2 and 3, in Rickert’s first addition to Kansas City, Missouri. The ouster is laid November 20,1891. The damages are alleged to be $1,500, and the monthly rents to be $150 per month.
The answer admits the possession of lots 1 and 3, and alleges such possession to be lawful, but denies all other allegations in the petition.
The case was tried to a jury, who rendered a verdict for plaintiffs for all three of the lots sued for, assessed their damages at $200, and the value of the monthly rents and profits at $12.50 per month. Plaintiffs remitted $100 of the damages and $4.50 per month of the value of the monthly rents and profits, and judgment was then rendered in favor of plaintiffs for the balance of the damages and rents and profits according to the verdict of the jury. Defendant appealed.
Plaintiffs showed a derivative title to the lots in
Defendant, to sustain the issues on his part, read in evidence, over the objections of plaintiffs, tax deeds executed by Theodore S. Case, city treasurer of Kansas City, to Thomas O’Leary, one for lot 1, and the other for lot 3 of the property sued for, together with the acknowledgments and the certificates of the recorder indorsed thereon as to the filing of the same, and all indorsements on each deed. Defendant claimed title to lots 1 and 3 by purchase from O’Leary, but denied any claim or title to lot 2.
The deeds are assailed by plaintiffs on various grounds.
The court over the objections of defendant gave fourteen instructions to the jury, but in order to a proper disposition of the case, it will only be necessary to set forth herein the first and fourth which are as follows:
“1. You are instructed that plaintiff brings this action to recover the possession of lots 1, 2, and 3, Rickert’s first addition to Kansas City, Missouri. That defendant, by his answer, admits that he is in possession of lots 1 and 3. And you are further instructed that defendant does not claim the right to the possession of said lot 2. And if you find from the evidence that on or about the first day of February, 1892, defendant entered into possession of said lot 2, by inclosing the same with a fence, if he did so fence the same, and still withholds the possession thereof from the plaintiff, then as to said lot 2 you will find for the plaintiff aDd assess his damages as to that in the manner hereinafter set forth in these instructions.”
*287 “4. If you believe from the evidence that the notice of sale for delinquent taxes read in evidence or the notice that a deed would be issued to the purchaser, also read in evidence, did hot describe the property as lying in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri, then said notices were insufficient, and all proceedings based therein were illegal, and defendant’s tax deed in evidence is no defense to this action.”
The first instruction is criticised by defendant in that it is claimed that it was not warranted by the evidence, and ignored important facts shown by the evidence of defendant.
Lot 2 lies between lots 1 and 3, and in order to inclose the lots- claimed by defendant he inclosed all three of them, without any intention, however, of holding or claiming possession of lot 2 adversely to the true owners. A witness on the part of plaintiffs testified that the fence inclosing the lots was a common, substantial fence, while defendant testified in his own behalf that in January or February, 1892, he caused a fence to be constructed on one side of the three lots, consisting of posts and some bars, and a part of the way on another side, that was, with four posts four or four and a half feet high, with rails, put along so that cows could not come under it; that he brought the fence down on the north side of the lots to within eighteen or twenty feet of his barn, on the west side of his residence property, which joined lot 3 of the property in controversy. Before the suit was begun defendant informed plaintiffs and also their attorney that he did not claim lot 2, and if plaintiffs did not desire the fence to remain as it was, he would remove it.
It thus seems quite clear that defendant was in the actual possession of lot 2 at the time of the commencement of this suit. It also appears that he so continued up to the time of the trial, and, although before the
It is next insisted that by the fourth instruction questions of law were submitted to the jury; that is, whether* the notice of sale of the delinquent land list of Kansas City for 1889, and the notice that deeds would be issued to the purchaser, described the property in controversy as lying in J ackson county, Missouri, which were questions to be determined by the court.
Whether the notice of the sale of the lots for delinquent taxes which was read in evidence, and the notice that a deed would be made to the purchaser, also read in evidence, described said lots as being in Kansas City, J ackson county, Missouri, were questions of law to be determined by the court. The question is not as to whether notice had in fact been given, thereby presenting a question of fact, upon which it would have been the province of the jury to pass, but is as to whether those that were given were in accordance with the provisions of the charter of Kansas City, which require such notices to be given. The general rule is that the construction of written and printed documents in evidence is a question of law for the court and not one of fact for the jury (Levy v. Gadsby, 3 Cranch, 180; Goddard v. Foster, 17 Wall. 142; State to
Under this instruction the' jury must have found that the lots were not described in the notices as being in Jackson county, Missouri, and in consequence thereof that the proceedings based thereon were illegal, and the tax deeds under which' defendant claims title invalid, and no defense to this action. This is the logical result flowing from the verdict.
If, therefore, the jury construed the notices wrongly, the judgment must be reversed, but if they construed them rightly the error is immaterial and it would be a work of supererogation to reverse the “judgment in order that the judge might decide what the jury rightly decided.” 1 Thompson on Trials, sec. 1020, and authorities cited; Lee v. Dunlap, 55 Mo. 454.
There are several objections taken by plaintiffs to the notice of sale, publication, and the proof of the publication of said notice. The first is that the notice does not describe the lots as lying in Kansas City, or Jackson county, or the state of Missouri. The notice is as follows:
“PUBLICATION OP SEAL PROPEETY POR THE YEAE 1889.
“Notice is hereby given that I, William Peake, city treasurer of Kansas City, Missouri, will at my office in the basement of the Nelson building, at the southeast corner of Missouri avenue and Main street, in said city, on the fourth day of November, A. D. 1889, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, in accordance with section 38, article 5, charter of Kansas City, offer for sale the following parcels of real property.
“The following is a description, substantially the same as in land tax book, 1889, of Kansas City of the
*290 several parcels of real property to be sold and delinquent taxes and assessments thereon, and such real property as has not been advertised and sold for taxes on any previous year or years and on which taxes remain due and delinquent, and the amount of the taxes, interests, and costs against each parcel of real property.
“William Peake,
“City Treasurer of Kansas City, Mo.
Section' 37, article 5, of the charter of said city provides that on the first Monday of November of each year the city treasurer shall-offer at public sale at his office in said city all real property on which taxes shall remain due and unpaid, and such-sale shall be made for and in payment of the total amount of taxes, interest, and costs due and unpaid on such property. The following section provides that the notice to be given of such sale shall state the time and place thereof, and contain a description-, substantially the same as in the land tax book, of the several parcels of real property to be sold, and all delinquent taxes thereon.
By section 67, of the same article, it is provided that “any and all descriptions of real estate in any
The land tax book has a heading at the top of each page as follows: “Land Tax Book of 1889, of the City of Kansas, Jackson county, Missouri.”
The description of the lots in question, as contained in the land tax book of 1889, is substantially the same as in the notice of sale of the delinquent list of that year.
This court will take judicial notice that Kansas City, Missouri, is in Jackson county (State v. Pennington, 124 Mo. 388), and from the description of the lots in the notice, the reference therein to the land tax book of Kansas City, for the year 1889, where the descriptions are the same, the reference to the section of the city charter of said city prescribing the notice to be given for the sale of real property, for delinquent taxes, the fact that the notice is given by the city treasurer of said city, whose name appears thereto, in his official capacity, that his functions as such officer are confined to the limits of the city, that the lots are described on the land tax book of Kansas City, Missouri, for 1889, as lots 1 and 3 Rickert’s first addition to Kansas City, Missouri, we must hold that the notice when considered in the light of section 67, of article 5, of the city charter above quoted, described the lots as being in Kansas City, Jackson county, Missouri.
The general rule, however, is that the notice itself must impart all necessary information as to the land to be sold and the time and place of sale.
Section 39, article 5, of said charter, provides that notice of sale of real property for delinquent taxes shall be published once in the daily edition of some newspaper of general circulation published in Kansas City, and for the further period of ten days immediately following such publication there shall be inserted notice*in large type at the head of the columns upon its local page stating the day and date of said publication so made. Said section of the charter further provides that the city treasurer shall obtain a copy of said advertisement together with a certificate of the due publication thereof from the printer, publisher, or business manager of the newspaper, and shall file same in the office of the city auditor.
The affidavit of the publication of the notice which was duly sworn to by the person mating it is as follows:
“affidavit of publication.
“Nathan Eisenlord, of the City of Kansas, Missouri, of lawful age, being duly sworn, says that he is the president of The Evening Netos, a newspaper published daily, except Sunday, in the City of Kansas, Jackson county, Missouri, and that the notice of delinquent tax sale, a true copy of which is hereto attached,*293 was duly published in the daily edition of said newspaper, for the period of one day, beginning October 10,1889, and ending October 10, 1889, on the following dates: October 10. The same being published in number 178 in volume 5 of said newspaper.
“Nathan EisENlord.”
The only evidence adduced by defendant to show that the notice was published for ten days immediately following the publication of October 10, 1889, in the 'Evening News, was the issues of that paper of October 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 21, and 22, 1889, which were procured from the office of the Kansas City librarian, where the paper was received and bound in volumes, from which it appears the notice was published in each of those numbers as in the issue of October 10.
The city charter provides that the city treasurer shall obtain a copy of said advertisement, together with a certificate of the due publication thereof from the printer, publisher, or business manager of the newspaper in which the same shall have been published, and shall file the same in the office of the city auditor, etc.
When the process of collecting taxes by the sale of Jands for their nonpayment is a summary remedy, as in the case at bar, and the law requires that certain things be done by the officer making such a sale in connection therewith, nothing less than a strict compliance with such requirements will suffice, and, unless it appear that the law has been strictly complied with, the sale will be void.
The law not only required that the treasurer should obtain a copy of said notice of sale, together with a certificate of the due publication thereof, from the printer or publisher or business manager of the paper in which it was published, but that he should file the same in the office of the city auditor. The certificate
“Where the statute itself appoints the evidence by which the fact of due publication of the notice shall be proved, and directs how it shall be made and how recorded or preserved, such preappointed evidence is, as a rule, exclusive, and the lack of it can not be supplied by parol or by any other evidence.” Black, on Tax. Titles, sec. 214, sufra; Martin v. Barbour, 140 U. S. 634; Iverslie v. Spaulding, 32 Wis. 394; Martin v. Allard, 17 S. W. Rep. (Ark.) 878.
It would be a dangerous principle to adopt, that titles to land derived from tax sales may be sustained partly by record and partly by parol proof. The publication of notice of the tax sale, the certificate that such notice had been given, and filing the same in the office of the city auditor in the manner and time prescribed by law, were prerequisites to the validity of the tax deeds. And “any neglect of the officer selling land for the nonpayment of taxes, which deprives the owner
What has been said does not in our opinion conflict with Haley v. Guinn, 76 Mo. 263. In that case the land had been sold for delinquent taxes under a judgment rendered by the county court of Schuyler county, on a notice by publication in a newspaper, and while it was said the affidavit of the printer was not the only evidence of the publication, it was held by a divided court that, as the judgment of the county court expressly averred that the collector had given due notice, a tax deed founded upon the judgment could not be attacked by showing that the printer failed to affix to the copy of the newspaper containing the list, which in compliance with the statute was filed in the court at the time the judgment was rendered, his certificate under oath showing the due publication thereof. In other words, that as the judgment recited that notice had been given it could not be collaterally attacked.
But there was no judgment under which the lots were sold in this case. The notice of the sale, together with the certificate of its due publication, when filed in the office of the city auditor, constituted a part of the record of the tax proceedings, and may have been examined by the owners of the lots, who failed to pay the delinquent taxes solely for the reason that they discovered there was no record evidence that the notice of sale had been duly published by the city treasurer. We must, therefore, in the absence of proper evidence of these important facts, hold the tax deeds void.
The conclusion reached renders it unnecessary to pass upon other questions raised by counsel in the case. The question of damages was properly adjusted by the trial court. The judgment was clearly for the right party, and ¿lthough error was committed