254 S.W. 1080 | Mo. | 1923
Suit to quiet title to eighty acres of land in Dent County. From a judgment in favor of defendants, Investors Security Association and E.F. Shaw, plaintiffs have appealed.
An opinion was handed down at the April term, 1922, affirming the judgment of the trial court. Upon motion of appellants, a rehearing was granted and the case was again briefed and submitted at the present term.
The common source of title is Jerome H. Gregory. Appellants' evidence consisted of a sheriff's deed, dated November 27, 1917, conveying to them the land in controversy, and the testimony of J. Frank Dent to the effect that he purchased said land at the sheriff's tax sale in good faith, believing he was getting good title, and that he had paid the taxes on said land for the years 1917, 1918 and 1919. Plaintiffs also introduced in evidence a letter from the Secretary of State, John L. *559 Sullivan, dated March 24, 1920, advising counsel for plaintiffs that he was unable to find the Investors Security Association on the records of his department.
Defendants offered in evidence warranty deed from J.V. Gregory and wife to E.R. Coffin, dated August 11, 1910; general warranty deed from E.R. Coffin to W.G. Burris, dated January 21, 1911; warranty deed from Walter G. Burris and wife to F.B. Rogers, dated February 9, 1911; general warranty deed from F.B. Rogers and wife to F.N. Parmenter, dated November 14, 1911; general warranty deed from F.N. Parmenter, single, to Leo Picard, dated November 6, 1914; and deed of trust from Leo Picard and wife to E.W. Bennett, trustee for defendant Investors Security Association, dated September 8, 1916, to secure payment of a note of the same date for $1,000 with six per cent interest per annum, payable on September 8, 1919, to said Investors Security Association. All of the above instruments properly described the land in controversy, and were recorded in said Dent County prior to the date of the institution of the suit for taxes hereafter referred to. The considerations stated in the warranty deeds varied from $1200 to $3000, as shown by respondents' additional abstract. Defendants also offered in evidence said note for $1000, together with assignment thereof to defendant E.F. Shaw, which assignment was dated May 5, 1917, and was duly recorded.
Defendants then offered in evidence the petition in the case of State of Missouri ex rel. A.R. Stephens, Collector, etc., v. Jerome H. Gregory, Leo Picard and Investors Security Association, a corporation, filed in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dent County on June 9, 1917. Said petition is in conventional form, asking for judgment for the state and county taxes, due on the land in controversy, for the year 1914, together with interest, amounting in all to $3.69, and praying for the sale of the land and for fieri facias, and alleging that the defendants were the owners of said land. *560 Said petition concluded as follows: "Plaintiff further states that the defendants, Jerome H. Gregory, Leo Picard, Investors Security Association, a corporation, are non-residents of the State of Missouri."
Defendants then offered in evidence the order and proof of publication in said tax suit, which need not be noticed here, further than to quote a statement in the order of publication, as shown by appellants' abstract of the record, as follows:
"Now at this day comes the plaintiff by counsel, before the undersigned, Clerk of the Circuit Court of Dent County, Missouri, in vacation, and files herein its petition and affidavit stating among other things that the defendants, Jerome H. Gregory, Leo Picard and Investors Security Association, are non-residents of the State of Missouri and cannot be summoned in this action inthis State by the ordinary process of law as provided by Article 4, Chapter 21, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909."
Respondents have filed an additional abstract, claiming that appellants' abstract is erroneous and that the order of publication does not contain the words we have italicized. Since appellants make no denial in their reply brief of the alleged error in their printed abstract and the original files are not brought before us, we must regard the italicized words as not being a part of the original order of publication.
Defendants then offered in evidence a judgment in the tax suit rendered August 18, 1917, which is in ordinary form and recites that defendants did not appear, although publication was duly made notifying them of the proceeding. The judgment was for $3.69 and costs and ordered sale of the land and special fierifacias.
Finally defendants offered in evidence a quit-claim deed to the land in controversy from Jerome H. Gregory and wife to J. Vernon Gregory, dated December 16, 1919, and describing the land in controversy. Said quit-claim deed contained the following recital: "This *561 deed is made to supply a deed heretofore made between the same parties hereto and which was never recorded and has become lost or destroyed."
The foregoing comprised all the evidence in the case. The trial court found the issues for defendants, Investors Security Association and E.F. Shaw, declaring that the deed of trust from Leo Picard to Investors Security Association, securing a note for $1000 with six per cent interest, constituted a valid lien against the lands in controversy to the extent of $1180.
I. The order of publication in the tax suit, as corrected by respondents' additional abstract, stated that plaintiffs had alleged in the petition and affidavit that defendants "are non-residents of the State of Missouri and cannot be summoned in this action." The italicized words were notConstructive used in the petition. If they were in anService: Against affidavit, such affidavit does not appear ina Corporation. the record. Respondents contend that the attempted service by publication on defendant Investors Security Association was not good because not in compliance with Section 1770, Revised Statutes 1909 (now Sec. 1196, R.S. 1919). The allegation in the petition is not sufficient to authorize publication service upon a foreign corporation. Nor is the allegation referred to in the order of publication sufficient. If said defendant was a non-resident corporation, it must be that it was organized under the laws of some other state, kingdom or country. Section 1770, Revised Statutes 1909, authorized service by publication upon such corporation only when "plaintiff or other person for him shall allege in his petition, or at the time of filing same, or at any time thereafter shall file an affidavit stating, that part or all of the defendants are non-residents of the State, or is acorporation of another state, kingdom or country, and cannot beserved in this State in the manner prescribed in this chapter." The words we have italicized comprise the allegations essential *562
to authorize publication service on a foreign corporation. [Huiskamp v. Miller,
II. Appellants contend that said corporation, Picard and preceding grantors are all strangers to the title, and that the records show that Jerome H. Gregory was the owner of the land; that said Gregory was properly served byApparent Owner: publication in the tax suit and they purchasedUnrecorded Deed: at the sheriff's sale all of his right, titleActual Notice. and interest in the land and that they are therefore owners in fee simple. How stands the case from the angle?
Without considering the effect of the sale of the land under the judgment in the tax suit, the quit-claim deed from Jerome H. Gregory to J. Vernon Gregory and the warranty deed of J.V. Gregory to Coffin, to Burris, to Rogers, to Parmenter and then to Picard, completed the *563 chain of title to the land in Picard, subject to deed of trust to Bennet as trustee for Investors Security Association. All the foregoing deeds were on record in Dent County at the time the tax suit was filed, except the quit-claim deed to J. Vernon Gregory, which was executed and delivered since the judgment in the tax suit and the sale thereunder. Picard and Investors Security Association were made defendants in the tax suit and it is apparent the Collector of the Revenue had notice of the recording of the instruments conveying to said defendants their respective interests in the land and, he having made them defendants, the purchasers at the tax sale had like notice. Appellants contend that the deed from J.V. Gregory to Coffin was a "dropped in" deed and that Coffin and all subsequent grantees were strangers to the title and that suit against Jerome H. Gregory as the record owner and judgment against him and sale of his interest in the land gave appellants good title as against the respondents.
The latest grantee under the deed from J.V. Gregory to Coffin was made a party defendant in the tax suit. It was apparent to any prospective purchaser at the tax sale that Picard and Investors Security Association were the owners because the petition so alleged. Hence, appellants had actual notice of such ownership. The rule that the recording of a deed from one not the owner does not impart constructive notice to one purchasing from the grantor in such deed, who subsequently acquires title, does not apply here.
Section 11498, Revised Statutes 1909, in force at the time the tax suit was filed, provided that "all actions commenced under the provisions of this chapter shall be prosecuted in the name of the State of Missouri, at the relation and to the use of the collector, and against the owner of the property, if known, and if not known, then against the last owner of record as shown by the county or city records at the time the suit was brought." If the recital in the quit-claim deed is true, Picard was the *564 owner of the land within the meaning of said section. It is onlyif the actual owner is not known that suit may be prosecuted against the last owner of record, the apparent owner. Not only did the collector have knowledge of the record of Picard's deed and the deed of trust, but he alleged that the grantee in the one and the beneficiary in the other were actually owners. The purchasers at the tax sale were charged with knowledge of ownership. They, therefore, had knowledge that Picard and the Investors Security Association were not only claiming title to the land, but were actually the owners. In such case they could not rely upon the apparent ownership of Gregory. Picard being the actual owner, subject to the deed of trust, and the purchasers having knowledge of that fact, they cannot now claim title under the law authorizing the proceedings against the record or apparent owner.
This conclusion is fully supported by Stuart v. Ramsey,
"That Ramsey and his joint grantee, Evans, under these circumstances, were put upon that inquiry which would have disclosed to them the fact that plaintiff was in fact the owner of the lands by duly executed conveyances, there cannot, under the lands of this State and the adjudications of this court, be any doubt whatever. *565 But it is also clear that Mr. Hethcock, the Collector of the Revenue, had been also notified that the plaintiff was the owner of these lands, and that the plaintiff was in correspondence with him for the purpose of ascertaining the amount of the taxes and to make provision for the payment of the same, and although he was thus advised that plaintiff was the owner and was corresponding with him about the taxes, he brought suit against the Real Estate Company for these taxes, and at no time mentioned that fact to the plaintiff, and it was equally clear that under Section 9303, it was his duty to have brought the suit against the plaintiff as the owner of the lands. It is plain to us that to permit the defendants to recover in this suit would be to deprive the plaintiff of his property without due process of law and in direct violation of the plain statutory provision requiring him to be notified as the owner of the land when the suit was brought for said taxes. He was not made a party to the suit and was not notified in any way that it was pending, and his agent, Mr. McCormick, had no notice of it until after the lands were sold, although the defendants and the collector had notice of his ownership.
"In our opinion the judgment of the circuit court upon the undisputed facts appearing in evidence should have been for the plaintiff, divesting whatever title, if any, the defendants acquired under and by virtue of their sheriff's deed, and also any title that the Sligo Furnace Company may have acquired in and to said lands."
We think the Stuart Case, together with the cases therein cited and discussed, is ample authority for the disposition of the point adversely to the contention of appellants, if Jerome H. Gregory had actually conveyed to J.V. Gregory prior to the tax suit and sheriff's sale. Here the purchasers had not only actual notice in the petition, naming Picard and Investors Security Association as defendants, that they had some probable interest in the land, which notice was ample to have put them *566 on inquiry concerning the actual ownership of the land, but they also are chargeable with notice of an allegation in the petition that said defendants were the actual owners. This case is therefore stronger in its essential facts than the Stuart Case.
Plaintiffs rely on White v. Lumber Co.,
Leo Picard's record title was not complete when the tax suit was filed. If a deed conveying the land had actually been executed and delivered by Jerome H. Gregory to J. Vernon Gregory, at that time and prior to the sheriff's sale under the judgment in such tax suit, which deed "was never recorded andRecitals in has become lost or destroyed," as recited in theQuit-Claim quit-claim deed from Jerome H. Gregory and wife toDeed. J. Vernon Gregory, and if J. Vernon Gregory is the same person as J.V. Gregory, named as grantor in the deed to E.R. Coffin, dated August 11, 1910, then the actual title of Leo Picard was good. The failure to record the prior deed from Jerome H. Gregory to J.V. Gregory (or J. Vernon Gregory), if such deed was executed and delivered, and the subsequent loss or destruction of such deed affected the record title of Leo Picard, *567 but not his actual title. The trial court assumed the truth of the recital in the quit-claim deed, which was made subsequent to the sheriff's sale, that a deed, prior to the tax suit and the sheriff's sale had actually been executed and delivered. We think this was error. In our former opinion we fell into the same error. It needs no argument or citation of authorities to show that the grantees in the sheriff's deed are not concluded by the recital in such quit-claim deed executed subsequent to such sheriff's deed.
It will, therefore, be necessary to reverse the judgment and remand the cause to the circuit court in order that said court may determine from proper proof the truth of the facts above pointed out as having been improperly assumed by such court on the trial.
The foregoing conclusions make it unnecessary to consider appellants' objections to the declarations of law given by the trial court. The various deeds offered in evidence by respondents were properly admitted in evidence. If the recital in the quit-claim deed that Jerome H. Gregory had conveyed the land to J. Vernon Gregory (J.V. Gregory) is true, then Leo Picard was the owner of the land when the tax suit was filed and sheriff's sale had. As he was properly served by publication, the judgment was valid as to him, but was not sufficient to affect the rights of the holder of the note secured by deed of trust on the land, and appellants took the land under the sheriff's deed subject to such deed of trust.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed and cause remanded for retrial. All concur. *568