81 Kan. 753 | Kan. | 1910
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action by the Girard Trust Company, trustee, to foreclose a mortgage on a quarter section of land, given by Sherman Dykes in 1889 to secure the payment of his note for $500. In its petition the company alleged that it had acquired the note and mortgage by assignment, and that Dykes, the mortgagor, had been absent from the state for the past ten years. The appellants, who were in possession of
These rulings can not be upheld. The purchaser at a tax sale acquires an interest which ripens into a title upon the execution of a tax deed. A valid tax deed vests in the grantee the absolute title to the land, and extinguishes and destroys all titles and liens existing at the time of the tax proceedings upon which the deed is founded. (McFadden v. Goff, 32 Kan. 415.) A tax deed is open to attack for irregularities and defects in the proceedings for a period of time after the tax deed is issued, but the five-year statute of limitations provided in section 141 of the tax law (Gen. Stat. 1901, § 7680) cures irregularities and defects, except in cases where the taxes have been paid or the land redeemed as provided by law. In Edwards v. Sims, 40 Kan. 235, it was held that “a tax deed that has been recorded in the proper county for more than five years, and under which the tax-deed claimant has been in the actual possession and occupancy of the land, where the land sold for taxes was subject to taxation, and the taxes have not been paid or the land redeemed as provided by law, can not be overthrown by evidence not contained within or upon the face of the deed.” (Syllabus.)
It is true that appellants, after setting forth their title under the tax deed, did include in the prayer of their answer the formal request to have their title quieted. There was nothing substantial in this prayer, as the granting of it would give them no more than- a judgment decreeing that the lien of appellee’s mortgage had been extinguished by the tax deed. Appellants were at least entitled to set up the tax deed by way of defense and to prove that it was a valid conveyance which defeated the lien of the mortgage, and a judgment to that effect is as far-reaching and effee
There is complaint about the abstract, and some reason for the claim that it is incomplete. The remedy for incompleteness is a counter abstract by the appellee supplying omissions and correcting inaccuracies. A counter abstract was made by appellee, and together the two abstracts sufficiently presented the questions determined on this review.
Upon the findings of the trial court the judgment is reversed with directions to enter judgment in favor of the appellants.