58 Colo. 313 | Colo. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court:
A dispute having arisen between the parties to this proceeding over the ownership of a tract of land, plaintiff in error brought an action to enjoin defendant in, error from taking possession of the property, and to quiet title. The judgment was in favor of defendant, declaring it to be the owner of the premises and entitled to the possession thereof.
Plaintiff deraigned title through a tax deed, from which it appears the tract was assessed, sold for taxes and conveyed by the tax deed under the following description: “That part of block 2, not subdivided, lying southeast of lot 21 and north of the line of the Congres
Defendant deraigned title by deed containing tbe following description: “Beginning at a point where a line drawn through the center of the easterly pier of the Fifteenth Street bridge intersects the line of Fifteenth Street on the south side, and running thence in a line at right angles to Fifteenth Street to a point where said perpendicular to Fifteenth Street intersects the south line of Section 28, Township 3 South, of Range 68 West: thence from said point of intersection with said south line of said Section 28 to the intersection of said south line with the said south line of Fifteenth Street; thence along said south line of Fifteenth Street to the point of beginning.”
Both deeds appear to be regular and valid, and the crucial question is whether the description in each covers the same tract. If they do, plaintiff is the owner of the tract involved, and entitled to its possesion, otherwise not.
In February, 1871, Steven D. Kasserman was the owner of the E. ½ of the S. W. % of Section 28, Township 3, South, Range 68 West, which, according to the plat on file in the office of the County Clerk of the City and County of Denver, he laid out and platted into lots, blocks, and unsubdivided portions, under the name of Kasserman’s Addition to the City of Denver. The South Platte River runs diagonally across the southeasterly portion of the 80 in question, and the tract in dispute lies south of the river. The land conveyed by defendant’s deed is definitely described by metes and bounds, without reference to lot, block or addition. The description in the deed of plaintiff is also definite, and embraces the tract in dispute, if block 2 extends across the river to the line of the Congressional Grant. So that the question
Plaintiff and his predecessor have acted entirely in
Plaintiff relies upon the provisions of sections 2923
Neither does section 5733, R. S. 1908, which provides that an action for the recovery of land sold for taxes shall not lie, unless brought within five years after the execution and delivery of the tax deed, have any application, because the subject matter of controversy was not sold for the taxes of 1883. In other words the rights of the parties are not dependent upon the validity of the tax deed, but whether it embraces the premises involved.
In brief, as previously stated, the right of plaintiff to the premises in dispute, depends upon whether block 2 extends south of the river, and as it does not, none of the sections of the statute of limitations considered, are applicable, and cannot be made the basis upon which plaintiff can assert title.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.