48 A.2d 43 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1946
Argued April 16, 1946.
The original controversy between the Millers and the plaintiffs in this action arose over the title to oil and gas rights under part of a tract of land owned by the Millers. The title to this interest has been adjudicated in two actions of ejectment which were appealed to this *175
court. Miller v. Dierken,
Prior to 1943, there was no separate assessment of the oil and gas and no taxes were paid on them, although the wells had been producing oil for more than fifty years. The fact that there was no separate assessment is the background against which the present controversy arose. For the years 1935 to 1938, inclusive, the Millers did not pay the taxes on their land. On August 10, 1942, the county treasurer sold the land to Mary C. Shultz, Miller's mother-in-law. The treasurer's sale made no mention of the reservation of the oil and gas and purported to convey them along with the surface. In order to protect their interests, plaintiffs then filed a bill in equity, which is pending in the court below, on May 4, 1944, to prevent a cloud upon their title, praying for a correction of the county treasurer's records so that the sale would not include the oil and gas, and also praying for a division of the taxes between the surface and the oil and gas prior to 1943. It was apparent that the equity case could not be decided before the redemption period expired; so plaintiffs redeemed the land on August 7, 1944. They paid the sum of $626.81, and received a certificate of redemption which described the fifty-four acres in which they were interested. Judgment was entered on the certificate against the defendants named in this action, and execution issued on the judgment. The Millers filed a petition to open judgment or to have the judgment satisfied and a rule was granted. From the court's order discharging the rule, defendants appeal.
The principal question raised in this appeal is whether the appellees were within the class of persons *176
entitled to a treasurer's certificate and authorized to enter judgment on such certificate. The Act of May 29, 1931, P.L. 280, § 9, as last amended by the Act of June 20, 1939, P.L. 498, § 5,
Unquestionably the appellees owned an interest in the land. Ownership of the oil and gas in solido constituted an interest in the land. Cf. Hamilton v. Foster,
Appellants contend that the certificate is defective in its description of the land redeemed. The land described in the tax sale was the entire sixty-eight acres owned by the Millers. The description in the certificate describes only the fifty-four acres in which the appellees were interested. While the act provides that the certificate shall contain "a brief description of the real estate redeemed," appellants are in no position to complain because appellees did not demand or receive a certificate *178 on which they could have entered judgment against the entire 68 acres instead of against the 54 acres only in which they were interested. The redemption of the additional 14 acres was solely for the benefit of the owners and they cannot be heard to complain because the redemptioners have elected to waive their right to a certificate and judgment against the additional acreage and to proceed only against the acreage in which they were owners of a valuable interest.
The order is affirmed.