13 S.E.2d 473 | W. Va. | 1941
Lead Opinion
By deed dated October 26, 1917, George Morris, of Ritchie County, conveyed to C. A. Gates, of Kanawha *8 County, and one John Davidson an undivided three-fourths of the oil and gas in 309 acres of land in Ritchie County.
Gates died February 10, 1923, leaving Clara L. Gates as his widow, and C. Bernard Gates and Mabel Gates Crickard as his two children and sole heirs-at-law.
The undivided three-eighths thereof separately entered for taxation in the name of C. A. Gates for the year 1935 became delinquent for the non-payment of taxes thereon and was sold December 14, 1936, by the Sheriff of Ritchie County to J. H. Lucas, who assigned his purchase to George Morris who, in due course, applied to Olin V. Wilson, Clerk of the County Court of said county, for a deed therefor. Notice of application was given by publication directed to C. A. Gates in The Ritchie Standard, a newspaper published in Ritchie County, and no redemption having been made, the clerk executed a deed to Morris for said property dated April 15, 1938, and recorded in the office of the Clerk of the County Court of Ritchie County on the 28th day of June, 1938.
In October, 1938, Clara L. Gates, C. Bernard Gates and Mabel Gates Crickard brought this suit against Morris and Lucas and Wilson, as clerk of said county court, for the cancellation of said tax deed, alleging their relationship to C. A. Gates; their residences at the time of said tax sale, and for a long time theretofore in Kanawha County; the invalidity of said published notice and an agreement by said Morris to pay said taxes; and charging that papers on record in said clerk's office would have disclosed to him and said purchaser the identity and addresses of the plaintiffs, particularly a lease of said oil and gas to the Aetna Oil and Gas Company executed by the plaintiffs and others. No demurrer was interposed by either of the defendants; Lucas and Wilson made no defense, but Morris answered denying the agreement to pay the taxes, knowledge that the plaintiffs were heirs of C. A. Gates, that he knew their residences, and negligence on the part of said clerk in ascertaining the proper persons to be notified or otherwise, and insisting upon the sufficiency of said published notice. *9
Evidence was taken at the bar of the court on behalf of the plaintiffs, consisting of their own testimony and that of the clerk, called on their behalf. Morris offered no evidence. The plaintiffs testified to their relationship to C. A. Gates, and his death, and identified the record copy of said oil and gas lease. Clara L. Gates stated that she did not "receive a notice of the proposed tax sale"; C. Bernard Gates stated that he did not have "any notice of a tax sale of this property"; and Mabel Gates Crickard said that she did not receive any "notice of any nature of the proposed or contemplated sale by tax deed or otherwise." Wilson, the clerk, merely identified the record of the oil and gas lease. This lease is not in evidence.
The trial chancellor denied the plaintiffs relief and dismissed their bill. This appeal followed.
The plaintiffs totally failed to prove the alleged agreement by Morris to pay the taxes on this property. There is no testimony of his "connivance" to procure the property by fraudulent or unconscionable means. The plaintiffs, therefore, must rely for relief wholly upon the alleged insufficiency of the statutory notice of application for the tax deed.
The burden was on the tax deed grantee, Morris, to prove the validity of this published notice. "Where the statute authorizes the publication and posting of a notice, which affects property rights, the steps directed by the statute must be strictly pursued. The burden of showing such pursuance is on him who would profit by such notice." Dickerson v. Flanagan,
By Code,
Is this failure of notice remedied by any curative statute? Code, 11-10-26, makes said tax deed "prima facie evidence" against these plaintiffs that the material facts therein recited are true, and that such estate purported to be conveyed thereby vested in the grantee in the deed. The deed in question is in statutory form and recites "that the clerk of said county court caused a notice required by Section 16, Article 10, Chapter 11 of the Code to be served upon the persons entitled thereto." But this prima facie case is clearly overcome by the facts showing that no notice was issued against or served on these plaintiffs.
Code,
Attention also is called to the fact that the statute requiring notice to these plaintiffs first came into our Code in the Acts of 1917, but that for a long time prior thereto these curative provisions of the statute had been in effect. The later statute requiring notice, therefore, should prevail over the older curative statute. Norfolk Western R. Co. v.Virginian Ry. Co.,
The appellee further insists that the plaintiffs must fail because they have not shown title in themselves to the property sold, in that they have not negatived the existence of a will by C. A. Gates. This was unnecessary. Proof of his death, with nothing more, raised a presumption that he died intestate. Consult: Stephens v. Perkins,
It is also contended that the plaintiffs' bill was properly dismissed because the plaintiffs did not tender or offer reimbursement to said tax deed grantee for the taxes and expenses paid by him and interest thereon, and indeed there is no showing that such tender or offer was ever made in the suit or prior thereto. Ordinarily, this would have been good ground for demurrer, but inasmuch as the bill charged defendant with the duty to pay these taxes, no reimbursement was due him if this allegation had been proved and the bill would not have been bad for this omission. Not until the plaintiff failed in court to prove this agreement was a tender necessary. It could have been made at that time. Where this Court has found a plaintiff to be otherwise entitled to have a tax deed cancelled, a decree below for defendant may be reversed *13
and the cause remanded to give an opportunity for making such reimbursement. McClain v. Batton,
Therefore, finding the plaintiffs are entitled to have the tax deed in question cancelled by the payment of the taxes and expenses paid by George Morris, the tax deed grantee, with interest thereon, we are of opinion to reverse the decree appealed from and remand this cause to the Circuit Court of Ritchie County, with direction to give plaintiffs an opportunity to make said reimbursement, if they so desire, and thereupon to enter a decree cancelling and setting aside said deed, but if after opportunity so to do, they elect not to make such payment, then their bill to be dismissed and all relief herein sought denied them.
Reversed and remanded.
Dissenting Opinion
It is with regret that I find myself unable to concur with the decision which the majority of the Court has reached. However, I agree with the opinion so far as it holds that the curative provisions of Code, 11-10-26, which make a tax deed "prima facie evidence" that the material facts recited therein are true, does not operate to take the place of the notice required by Code,
In all deference, I am fully convinced that there is such a dearth of material evidence that this Court was not justified in reaching its decision, and that the trial chancellor's decree should be affirmed. The burden of proof rested on the plaintiffs to prove their case which, in my opinion, they have not done. If this case should be appraised most favorably to plaintiffs, they would be entitled to nothing more than an order remanding the case for further development.