Gage v. Reid

118 Ill. 35 | Ill. | 1886

Mr. Justice Scholfield

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case was before this court in Gage et al. v. Reid et al. 104 Ill. 509, where a full statement of the case, as then presented, will be found. After the ease was remanded, pursuant to the judgment of this court as then rendered, the bill was amended in the respects then held defective, and the circuit court, on the hearing, thereafter decreed that the three tax deeds in the amended bill described,—namely, one to Portia Gage, dated February 27, A. D. 1872, one to Asahel Gage, dated August 30, A. D. 1878, and one to Asahel Gage, dated January 16, A. D. 1884,—be canceled, and set aside as colorable and voidable, upon the complainants paying to-the holders of such deeds certain amounts which the decree finds and recites to be due to them, on account of taxes, penalties, interest and costs, etc. And the decree, afterwards, contains this clause, also: “And in case the said complain■ants, or other parties to this suit, shall not comply with the order herein, in this regard, then, in that case, the said sums of money so found to be due to the said defendant, as aforesaid, shall be, and it is hereby declared and decreed to be, an equitable lien upon the whole of said premises for the amounts thereof, respectively, with interest thereon, at the irate of six per cent per annum, from the date of this decree.”

The respects wherein it is argued that the circuit court ■erred, are, first,-in holding the titles of appellants colorable .and voidable; second, in holding that appellees have a sufficient interest to warrant a decree in their favor; and third, in adding the clause to the decree, as just recited. It will be convenient to consider these points in the order stated.

First—It is provided in section 5 of article 9 of our constitution, that, in case of sales for taxes, occupants shall in all eases be served with personal notice before the time of redemption expires. And section 216 of the Revenue act, in force July. 1, 1874, provides: “Hereafter no purchaser, or assignee of such purchaser, of any land, town or city lot, at any sale of lands or lots for taxes or special assessments, due either to the State or any county, or incorporated town or city within the same, or at any sale for taxes or levies authorized by the laws of this State, shall be entitled to a deed for the lands or lots so purchased, until the following conditions have been complied with, to-wit: Such purchaser or assignee shall serve, or cause to be served, a written or printed, or partly written and printed, notice of such purchase on every person in actual possession or occupancy of such land or lot, and also the person in whose name the same was taxed or specially assessed, if upon diligent inquiry he can be found in the county. ”

The tax deed to Portia Gage is under a sale made in A. D. 1869, for the taxes due for the year A. D. 1868. The property was then owned by and assessed in the name of Reid & Sherwin, a firm composed of John Reid and Joseph Slier-win. Cecilia Reicl testified, that her father, James Sherwin, .and her mother, Mary Sherwin, resided on this property, •continuously, for a period of twenty-five years, up to and next preceding the death of her father, which occurred in August, 1879,—they were in possession in 1868, and never left there. No one contradicts this testimony. The only evidence of the ■service of notice prior to the making of this deed, is in the .affidavit of U. George Taylor, who testifies that he served a notice on Reid & Sherwin on the first day of April, A. D. 1871, by handing the same to Joseph Sherwin, one of the ■firm, etc.' This was not even good service as to Reid, and there can he no pretence that it was any service as to James 'Sherwin and Mary Sherwin. The deed to Portia Gage, therefore, was clearly made in violation of the constitution and •of the statute, and was colorable, only, and therefore voidable.

The tax deed to Asahel Gage, dated August 30, A. D. 1878, is one on a sale made in A. D. 1875, for the taxes due in A. D. 1874. The record shows that John Reid died intestate •on the 9th day of May, A. D. 1873, seized in fee of the undivided one-half of the property, leaving surviving him Cecilia Reid, his widow, and Joseph J. Reid and Annie M. Reid, his -children and only heirs at law; and that Cecilia Reid, Joseph •J. Reid and Annie M. Reid, resided together in a house upon this property, and were in the actual occupancy of the prop■erty from the time the sale was made until the deed was made. The only evidence of the service of notice prior to the making of this deed, is in affidavits showing service of •such notice upon Mary Sherwin, James Sherwin, D. O’Hara, •Joseph Sherwin and Asahel Gage: There is no evidence of service of notice upon Cecilia Reid, Annie M. Reid or Joseph -J. Reid, nor upon John J. Hawley, one of the persons in whose name the property was assessed. This deed, therefore, was also made in violation of the constitution and of 4he statute, and was colorable and voidable.

The fax deed to Asahel Gage, dated January 16, A. D-1884, is under a sale made on the 11th of October, A. D. 1878, a little more than five years and three months intervening. It was then, and still is, provided by section 225 of the Revenue act, in force July 1, 1874, (Rev. Stat. 1874, p. 895): “Unless the holder of the certificate for real estate-purchased at any tax sale under this act, takes out the deed as entitled by law, and files the same for record, within one-year from and after the time for redemption expires, the said certificate or deed, and the sale on which it is based, shall, from and after the expiration of such one year, be absolutely null. If the holder of such certificate shall be prevented, from obtaining such deed, by injunction or order of any court, or by the refusal of the clerk to execute the same, the-time he is so prevented shall be excluded from the computation of such time. ” The excuse for non-compliance with this section is, that the clerk, by mistake, made a deed in apt time to one Henry H. Gage, and that this deed was made-to correct that mistake. The evidence shows that the certificate upon which the deed to Henry H. Gage was made, was formally assigned, in blank, by Asahel Gage; that the deed was made upon the application of Henry H. Gage, and the evidence fails to show that the clerk made any mistake in making the deed to Henry H. Gage. But if there was a mistake made by the clerk, Gage had notice of it upon receipt, of the deed, and in ample time to have the mistake corrected within the year. There is no pretence that Gage was prevented from obtaining his deed within the year, by the refusal of the clerk, either actually or constructively, and we are not authorized to extend the exceptions to others than those enumerated in the section.

It follows, that we entirely concur with the ruling of the circuit court in regard to the tax deeds. Other objections than those we have considered, were urged to these deeds, but as to-them we express no opinion, deeming it unnecessary to do so-

Second—It is claimed, under this point, that the evidence shows that the title of the complainants has passed to Gage, by virtue of a sheriff’s sale and deed, since the suit has been pending. Nothing of this kind is disclosed by the pleadings, and the evidence is pertinent to no issue under the pleadings. If it was desired to avail of this defence, it should have been brought forward by plea.

Third—It is enough to say that the clause in the decree objected to does appellant no harm. It gives him an additional security for the payment of the amount due him. If the other side do not object to this,—and they have urged no objection here,—he can not do so. No rule is better established than that a party can not assign for error that which does him no injury.

The decree is affirmed. Secre6 affirmed.

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