92 Mo. 192 | Mo. | 1887
This was an action in ejectment for the west one-half of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 30, range 22, in Greene county, Missouri. The petition, in usual form, was filed April 14, 1883. The answer of the defendant admitted possession and denied the other allegations of the petition. The case was tried by the court without a jury; verdict and judgment for plaintiff. Both parties claim title under one Theophilus Leathers, who, it was admitted, was the owner of the land at the time of his death in 1857, and who, by will, devised said land to his wife, Elizabeth (who died January 24, 1883), during her life ; remainder in fee to his sons, Edwin R. and John W. Leathers. Plaintiff claims to have acquired all the undivided interest of the said Edwin R. in the said northwest quarter of the southwest quarter, by virtue of a sheriff’s deed dated June 5, 1873, properly acknowledged and recorded March 3, 1883, and the undivided interest of John W. in the west one-half of said northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of the land sued for by a verbal partition, between him and the said John, of said forty-acre tract, and, on the trial, offered said sheriff’s deed in evidence, to which defendant objected, but which was admitted in evidence over his objection. The deed contained the following recitals:
“ Whereas, on the ninth day of May, 1872, judgment was rendered in the circuit court of Greene county in favor of Elisha Headlee, public administrator of Greene county, Missouri, having in charge the estate of Nathan Boone, deceased, and against E. R. Leathers, John Evans, and D. M. Evans, for the sum of two hundred and twenty-nine one-hundredths dollars for debt, and twenty-one and twenty-five one-hundredths dollars
It is contended for the appellant that the recital in said deed, that the real estate was advertised to be sold between the “lawful hours” of the day upon which it was to be sold, renders it invalid. There is nothing in this contention. It was the duty of the sheriff to designate the day upon which the land would be sold in his •advertisement; the law fixed the hours of that day between which it must be sold, arid whilst it was not necessary that the hours should be stated in the advertisement it was the duty of the sheriff to sell between those hours (1 W. S., p. 610, sec. 45), and the recital in the deed shows that the sheriff did sell the land between the hours of nine a. m. and five p. m., as the law required.
It is next objected to said deed that it does not appear that the notice therein recited was put up “at the front door of the courthouse.” The law governing the caséis as follows: “In all cases where the times of
It will be observed that the recitals in the deed show a compliance with the requirements of the law in every particular, except in that it does not thereby affirmatively appear that the notice was put up “at the front door of the courthouse.” There is nothing in the deed that tends to negative, or is inconsistent with, the idea, that in fact the notice was put up at the front door of the courthouse, and it is to be presumed that the officer in this respect discharged his duty. It is the policy of the law that every reasonable presumption should be indulged in favor of sustaining the ministerial acts of officers making judicial sales ; besides, the advertisement designated the day of the February term on which the land would be sold, the law required that it should be sold on the same day of the next changed term. The act making the change fixed the day on which such term should commence, and everybody was informed by the advertisement and the law in such cases of the day
There was no error in admitting said sheriff’s deed in evidence; its legal effect was to convey to plaintiff the undivided interest of Edwin R. Leathers in the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of said section, and he thereby became a tenant in common in fee with John W. Leathers of said tract, and by virtue of the partition between him and the said John W. became the sole owner of the west half of said northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 4, the land sued for, and entitled to recover the same in this action, unless the defendant acquired plaintiff’s title thereto by virtue of the tax deed by him offered in evidence.
The tax deed under which defendant claims was executed by the sheriff of Greene county, dated the fourteenth day of November, 1883, properly acknowledged, and is based on a judgment rendered on the twenty-fourth day of December, 1879, in the circuit court of Greene county in favor of the state of Missouri at the relation of the collector of said county against Elizabeth Leathers, in an action' to enforce the state’s lien for delinquent taxes for the year 1877. The law in force at the time the suit by the collector was instituted, which resulted in the judgment against Elizabeth Leathers, required that ‘ ‘ all actions commenced under its provisions shall be prosecuted in the name of the
. The instructions given for plaintiff contained correct declarations of the law applicable to the case, and there was no error in refusing those asked for the defendant. The judgment, of the circuit court is affirmed.