123 Mo. 337 | Mo. | 1894
— This is an action of ejectment for a. tract of land, in Daviess county. The petition is in ordinary, statutory form. R. 8.1889, sec. 4631.
The original defendant, Mr. Stephens (who was. sued alone), answered, admitting his possession as tenant of the Lyle heirs. The latter also appeared and became parties defendant on their motion, viz., Messrs. W. H. Lyle and George W. Lyle, and Mrs. Etta R. Fisher and Mr. John Fisher, her husband.
They filed a separate answer, alleging possession of' the land by their tenant, Mr. Stephens, and denying-the other allegations of the petition.
They then charged that plaintiff’s claim of title was. under a judgment and sale in a certain tax suit, entitled, State ex rel. and to the use of N. B. Brown against, “defendants in this answer,” which suit terminated in.
The answer then continues thus: —
“That defendants herein are, and have ever been, since 1880, residents of Illinois, and had no information of said suit; that there was no allegation in said petition for taxes; that the defendants were nonresidents, nor was there any order of publication by this court, nor was the tax book, under which said suit was brought, ever examined and completed as required by law; and the said suit and execution, and the sale thereunder was, and is, wholly void; and defendants therefore pray that the said deed be set aside, and the cloud which is so made thereby on defendants’ title be removed; that the defendants have title, to said land, ■subject to a certain mortgage not yet foreclosed; and defendants ask for such further orders, judgments and •decrees as they may be entitled to.” '
To this answer the plaintiff filed a reply, consisting of a general denial.
Upon the trial it was admitted that the defendants, Lyle and Fisher, were the owners of the land, and that Stephens was their tenant, unless the proceedings in the tax suit, and sale thereunder, had transferred the title to plaintiff, in which event he should recover.
The monthly rents and profits were also agreed upon.
It was further stipulated that the sheriff’s deed to plaintiff, under the tax sale, should be considered in ■evidence, subject to be finally received or rejected by the court, after hearing all the other evidence and the ■objections thereto by defendants.
The sheriff’s deed was then produced in evidence, ■and plaintiff rested.
Defendants then offered the court record and all the papers in the tax suit.
At the close of the testimony, the court overruled the objections to the sheriff’s deed, and gave judgment for plaintiff.
Defendants then appealed, after taking the usual steps for a review.
1. The first objection to the sheriff’s deed, under the tax judgment, 'is that the defendants in the judgment were not in court, because the order of publication was granted without proper foundation; .
The record shows that a writ of summons was issued, January 7, 1889, to all the defendants. The sheriff’s return upon the writ was this:
“Non est; none of the within named defendants found in my said county.”
Thereupon the court ordered publication, February 12, 1889 (at the February term), “it appearing to the court, among other things, that the defendants are nonresidents of this state, so that the ordinary process of law can not be served,” etc.,'as the order states.
No affidavit of nonresidence of defendants was •filed. Nor does the petition in that suit allege that fact.
Under the revenue law, all notices and process in suits for the collection of back taxes are required to be sued out and served in the same manner as in civil actions in the circuit court; and the proceedings against nonresident or other parties, on whom service can-not be had by ordinary summons, shall be the same as now provided by law in civil actions affecting real estate, etc, R. .S. 1889, sec. 7682, same as section 6837 of 1879. .
The code provides that, in a case to enforce a lien on real property, when “summons shall be issued against any defendant, and the sheriff to whom it is directed shall make return that the defendant or defendants can not be found, the court, being first satisfied that process can not be served,” shall make an order of publication against such defendants. Eevised Statutes, 1889, section 2024, same as section 3496 in 1879.
Upon the return of “not found,” on the summons to defendants, the court had power to grant the order of publication “being satisfied,” as stated in the section last quoted.
The fact that the court made such an order, after the return of not found, is sufficient of itself to indicate that it was “satisfied” of the required fact. For it should be assumed of a court, in the absence of any . showing to the contrary, that it acts in conformity to, not in violation of, the law.
Yerbal testimony was put in by defendants, at the trial of this case, with a view to prove that the court made the order of publication without any legal evidence that process could not be served.
That verbal testimony was wholly incompetent for that purpose. *
A judgment can not be collaterally impeached by such evidence of facts outside the record of the cause in which the judgment was rendered.
But, even accepting, for the moment, that verbal testimony, it amounts only to this: that the attorney, representing the collector in the tax suit, informally represented to the court that the defendants were nonresidents, after the sheriff’s return had been made;
Those facts surely would not nullify the action of the court in that behalf when collaterally attacked.
If the court had power to act on proof of a given fact, its action upon the statement of it by an unsworn witness would not, for that reason alone, be entirely void, so as to render its judicial action a nullity when questioned collaterally. And if the court was satisfied that defendants were not residents of the state, it might logically and reasonably conclude that they could not be served with ordinary process.
Nor does the recital, in the order of publication, to the effect that it appeared to the court that defendants were nonresidents, vitiate the order. That part of it is simply surplusage. Its material part is that it appeared to the court that the ordinary process of law could not be served.
The record made by the, defendants in the case at bar establishes that they were in fact residents of Illinois, during the time the tax suit was pending, and for many years before.
There is certainly no injustice done them in applying firmly the presumption of correct action by the circuit judge in making the order of publication in the tax suit, when the record therein does not negative the correctness of that order, and defendants’ own admissions now prove conclusively that the order had, at the time, ample support in truth.
2. It is then claimed that the order was void because of its form.
In the petition in the tax case, and in the order of publication, the defendants were named thus:
“Wm. H. Lile, Gferge W. Lile, Etta B. Fisher, and-Fisher her husbánd.”
The answer in the case in hand admits that Mr. John Fisher, one of defendants in both cases, is the husband of Etta R. Fisher, and that the present defendants are the same persons who were defendants in the former suit.
The object of giving notice by publication is to advise the parties, to whom the notice is directed, of the proceedings mentioned.
If the notice effectively does that, it should be held sufficient against any collateral attack.
Judge Vanfleet thus summarizes the rule deducible from principle and well considered cases:
“That the omission of the name of a defendant from the process makes the judgment void, in respect to him, is plain; but, where he is so described that he would not be misled, it is not void.” Vanfleet’s Collateral Attack, secs. 361, 356.
It certainly seems to accord with just principles of law and of common sense that where the notice names the parties defendant with sufficient definiteness to plainly indipate their identity, it should be held good and not void, when questioned in this collateral way.
Here the notice in effect was directed to Etta R. Fisher and Mr. Fisher, her husband. It would. have been practically no more informative of the identity of John Fisher, her husband, had the blank'in the order and in the petition in that case been filled with his. first name.
3. It is next urged that the publication of the order in the newspaper was insufficient. .
According to the affidavit of the printer and publisher, it appeared in the designated paper, the Gallatin Democrat, “for four weeks,” namely, on March 7, 14, 21 and 28, 1889.
Whatever we might think of the ruling in the forty-fourth report as an original proposition, it has been acquiesced in so fully, and been treated as a settled point of practice in making publications in all sorts of proceedings, for so many years, that we decline to re-examine it. We consider that the rule it declares has become a rule of property, on the faith of which great numbers of titles, founded on judicial sales, depend.
The publication in the tax suit was sufficient under the decision last mentioned, and we refrain from any further discussion of it, without, however, intending to cast any doubt upon its correctness.
4. Defendants also object to the validity of the tax judgment, because the petition, and all the subsequent proceedings in that case, including the sale, deal with the property as one tract, a quarter section, instead of subjecting each subdivision to its appropriate part of the taxes.
This point is settled against defendants by Jones v. Driskill (1887), 94 Mo. 190.
This criticism, though perhaps, indicating error or irregularity in the proceedings, does not show a blemish sufficiently serious to avoid the judgment in a collateral action.
5. Defendants also object to the sheriff’s deed, on the ground that it conveys nothing by its terms.
It recites the proceedings in the tax suit at great
It then continues as follows:
“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, and of the sum of $97 to me, the said sheriff, in hand paid by the said N. Gr. Cruzen, the receipt whereof I do hereby acknowledge, and by virtue of the authority in me vested by law, I, Grabe W. Cox, sheriff as aforesaid, do hereby assign, transfer and convey unto the said N. Gr. Cruzen all the above described real estate so stricken off and sold to him that I might sell as sheriff as aforesaid, by virtue of the aforesaid judgment, execution and notice.
“To have and to hold, the right, title, interest and estate hereby conveyed, unto the said N. Gr. Cruzen, his heirs and assigns, forever, with all the rights and appurtenances thereto belonging. In witness whereof,” etc.
It is enough to say that we regard the terms of this deed as sufficient to transfer to plaintiff the interests of the defendants in the tax suit, under the statute law touching the form of such conveyances.
We have discussed all the defendant’s assignments of error, which appear to call for any remark.
We hold the objections to the tax deed untenable. The learned circuit judge was correct in overruling them.
We affirm the judgment.