107 Ill. 458 | Ill. | 1883

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was ejectment, by Susan Connelly, against Thomas Eagan, in the Gireuit court of Ford county, for the west half of the south-east quarter of section 25, in township 28 north, range 9 east, of the third principal meridian, in that county. Judgment was given for the plaintiff, and the case is brought here by the appeal of the defendant.

Plaintiff gave in evidence, upon the trial, a patent from the United States to Cosmore G. Bruce, a deed from Bruce and wife to Ell N. Keys, and a deed from Keys and wife to plaintiff, all embracing the land in controversy. Defendant objected to the reading of these deeds in evidence, upon the ground that the acknowledgments do not show that the grantors were personally known to the officer taking the acknowledgment. Both deeds were executed and acknowledged in the State of Ohio, and upon this objection being made, plaintiff offered in evidence a book, the title page whereof reads thus: “Statutes of Ohio—By authority of the General Assembly— In force August 1st, 1854—Published in pursuance to the act of the General Assembly of April 18th, 1854.” And plaintiff then also offered in evidence chapter 34, page 309, thereof, relating to the acknowledgment, etc., of conveyances. Defendant objected to this evidence, but the court overruled the objection, and permitted the statute to be read in evidence; and the court also, after the reading of this evidence, permitted the deeds to be read in evidence. Exception was taken to this ruling, and it is now assigned for error. No question is made but that the deeds were acknowledged as required by the statute read in evidence, and it will therefore be unnecessary to compare the acknowledgments with the requirements of the statute. We think the evidence was properly admitted. Section 10, chapter 51, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, page 490, provides that “the printed statute books * * * of the several States * * * purporting to be printed under the authority of * * * said States, * * * shall be evidence in all courts and places in this State of the acts therein contained.” And it is provided by section 23, of chapter 30, of the Revised Statutes of 1874, page 277, that “all deeds, conveyances, and powers of'attorney for the conveyance of lands lying in this State, which have been or may be acknowledged or proved * * * in conformity with the laws of any foreign State, * * * shall be deemed as good and valid in law as though acknowledged or proved in conformity with the existing laws of this State. ” And section 22 provides that “any legal mode of proving that the same is executed in conformity with such foreign law may be resorted to in any court in which the question of such acknowledgment may arise.” The statute being proved, the certificates of acknowledgment show for themselves whether they conform to it, and nothing more is needed.

An objection is also made that the women joining in the acknowledgments are not properly shown to be the wives of the grantors. This is trivial. The deeds would pass the legal'title though the wives did not join in their execution. The only object in having them join is that they may release their rights of dower, which is of no consequence whatever in this suit.

The defence interposed was a judgment and sale for taxes, and a deed thereunder, and plaintiff made certain objections thereto, to be hereafter noticed. Defendant, however, contends these objections can not be considered, because plaintiff did not show that all taxes due upon the land had been paid by her. This will not avail as against the objections here interposed. All persons may object to the want of a sufficient judgment, precept or deed. Spellman v. Curtenius, 12 Ill. 412; Wilson v. McKenna, 52 id. 48.

The judgment relied upon by defendant was for the delinquent taxes for the year 1866. The record of the lands and town lots against which the judgment was rendered, and upon and by virtue of- which the land in controversy was sold, was not signed or sealed by the county clerk, nor did it have any certificate of his attached thereto at the time of the sale; but on the 4th of April, 1883, nearly sixteen years after the sale, the county court made an order that lames S. Frederick, who was county clerk at the time of the sale, be granted “leave to attach the proper form of the clerk’s certificate authenticating the record,” etc., and the certificate was thereupon attached. The court, upon the trial, excluded the record so amended as evidence, and held no valid precept authorizing the sale was shown. The statute in force at the time of the rendering of the judgment and the making of the sale provided: “The clerk of the county court shall, before the day of sale, make a correct record of the lands and town lots against which judgment is rendered in any suit for taxes due thereon, and which shall set forth the name of the owner, if known, the description of the property, and the amount due on each tract or lot, in the same order as said property may be set forth in the judgment book, and shall attach thereto a correct copy of the order of the court, and his certificate of the truth of Such record, which record, so attested, shall hereafter constitute the process on which all real property shall be sold for taxes, as well as the sales of such property.” 1 Purple’s Stat. sec. 164, page 604.

It is true, as contended by counsel for the defendant, in Curry v. Hinman, 11 Ill. 420, it was held that a precept, substantially as required by the foregoing language, was not process, within the meaning of the 7th section of the 4tli article of the constitution of 1848, and need not run in the name of the People; but this related only to the technical name of the instrument, and had no reference whatever to its effect. In Pitkin v. Yaw, 13 Ill. 251, in an action of ejectment to recover possession of certain lands by virtue of a deed claimed to have been made pursuant to a sale for taxes, it was held the record,was properly excluded for want of a valid precept, and it was said: -“A party claiming title by virtue of a sale for taxes must show a valid judgment against the land, a precept authorizing the sale thereof, and a sheriff’s deed to the purchaser or his assignee. The precept is the authority under which the sheriff makes the sale. It performs the same office in this respect as an execution on an ordinary judgment.” This court has many times held that a tax deed is void unless it is supported by a valid judgment and a valid precept. Hinman v. Pope, 1 Gilm. 141; Baily v. Doolittle, 24 Ill. 577; Holbrook v. Dickinson, 46 id. 285; Wilding et al. v. Horner, 50 id. 50; Williams et al. v. Underhill, 58 id. 137; Gage v. Lightburn et al. 93 id. 248. Although, therefore, not technically process, it answering the place and performing the office of an execution, should, in respect of amendments, be governed by the same rule applicable to the amendments of executions. The amendment ought not, in any event, to have been allowed without notice to the opposite party. But this is of but minor importance.

It is too obvious to require argument, that without the certificate of the clerk, as required by the statute, the record made up constituted no precept. This was as indispensable as his attestation to an execution. As we said in Sidwell v. Schumacher, 99 Ill. 426: “Where the law expressly directs that process, ”—and we may here add, that which stands in the place and performs the office of process,—“shall be in a specified form, and issued in a particular manner, such a provision is mandatory, and a failure on the part of the official whose duty it is to issue it, to comply with the law in that respect, will render such process void.” And from this it logically follows, no subsequent amendment can relate back to and make valid a sale made under and by virtue of such void process,—and so we held in that case. There having been no precept at the time of the sale, the collector had no authority to make the sale. His act was a nullity, and the purchaser could base no right thereon. If no right passed at the sale, no subsequent amendment could, by relation, cause something to then pass, or of itself divest one man of his title and invest it in another. Were it possible to give an amendment such an effect, it would, in such cases, deprive a party of his right of redemption, for he could not be expected to exercise it so long as nothing passed by the pretended sale. See Cooley on Taxation, 242, and cases cited in note 1.

Our conclusion is, the record was properly excluded, and the judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.

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