138 Tenn. 512 | Tenn. | 1917
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an ejectment bill filed by complainants against defendants in the chancery court of Yan Bu-rén county to recover certain lands described in the bill.
The chancellor entered a decree in favor of the complainants, from which decree defendants have appealed to this court and assigned errors. The tracts of land sued for are as follows:
Second. The Francis Church grant, No. 2426, issued by the State of Tennessee to Francis Church on March 24, 1832.
Third. Three hundred acres out of the Isaac Hinkle grant, No. 4765, issued by the State of Tennessee to Isaac Hinkle on September 26, 1836.
The complainants claim a perfect chain of title to the land described from the State of Tennessee down to themselves.
The defendants claim the Eliza Simms grant, by virtue of a tax sale, and by virtue of adverse possession. They also claim the J. H. Walling five thousand acre grant, No. 5245, issued May 25, 1837, which laps on and covers a portion of the Church grant claimed by complainants. The Walling grant is younger than the Church grant, and defendants claim to have defeated the' Ghurch title by adverse possession. Defendants also claim a ” portion of the Isaac Hinkle grant, but there is practically no .controversy in this court with reference to that grant.
The real controversy in the lawsuit involves the following propositions:
(1) Is the tax sale of the Eliza Simms grant, under which defendants claim, valid or void?
(2) Have the defendants had possession of the Eliza Simms grant such as would defeat the title of complainants ?
The tax deed to the Simms grant, under which defendants claim, was dated October- 6,1866, and was executed by William Sparkman, as sheriff and tax collector, to Hiram Gilbert. The tax deed recites that a judgment was ; rendered on the 7th day of April, 1861, in the circuit court of Yan Burén county for $5.40, for taxes, costs, and charges due and unpaid for the year 1860, against a tract of land of which Eliza Simms was the reputed owner, containing five thousand acres. It further recites that on this judgment “an order of sale issued and came to the hands of William Sparkman, sheriff and tax collector of the county of Van Burén for the year 1861, by virtue of which, after advertising and giving notice agreeable to law, the within Sparkman sold said land at the courthouse door of said county on the first Monday of July, 1861, at public sale, to Harmon Walling, for the sum of $5.40.” The tax deed further recites that this was the highest and best bid, and that said Harmon Walling directed title to be made to Hiram Gilbert. This deed was recorded in the office of the register of Van Burén county in “Deed Book D, p. 19.”
A number of attacks have been made by complainants upon this tax sale. Their first contention is that the sale is void beca;use the assessment was not in compliance with the law,- that it contained an insufficient de
Several copies o*f assessment of the Simms land for the year 1860 were introduced, but we think, as did the chancellor, that the book from which these copies were made was not the original, assessment book. Defendants’ exceptions to these copies were sustained in the lower court, and in this action we think the chancellor was correct.
We are of opinion, however, that the tax deed was void for the following reasons:
(1) Because William Sparkman was not the tax collector at the date of the alleged sale, and was not clothed with authority to make such sale. Under sections 597-602 of the Code of 1858, which were taken from chapter 103 of the Acts of 1843-44 (construed by this court in Boughton v. State, 7 Humph., 193), the county court a.t its January term each year was authorized to elect a collector of taxes, but if the county court failed at that time to elect a collector, then it was provided the sheriff should be collector. So that each year it was contingent until after the January term of the county court whether -the sheriff would or would not be the collector of revenue.
The legislature, however, on December .15, 1859, changed this system entirely and . took away from the county court the discretion as to whether it would elect a revenue collector, and vested the election of that
“Section 1. Be it enacted by the general assembly of the state of Tennessee, that there shall he elected in each county in this State, by the qualified voters thereof, a revenue collector, who shall hold his office for two years from the date of his qualification.
“Sec. 2. Be it further enacted, that the first election for a revenue" collector, under the provisions of this act, shall he held on the first Saturday in March next, and elections for said officers shall ever afterwards he held at the same times and pla,ces that elections are held for the election of sheriffs. '
“Sec. 3. Be it further enacted, that should any revenue collector die, resign, or remove from the county before the expiration of his term of office, the vacancy thus created shall he filled hy the county court, who shall elect a revenue collector to serve until the next regular election thereafter, and who shall execute the bonds, be subject to all the liabilities, and enjoy all the emoluments of the revenue collector, elected by the people. ’ ’
It will be observed that under chapter 9 of the Acts of 1859-60, above quoted, there was no provision for the sheriff ever to be revenue collector. The tax deed, however, recites that on a judgment of the circuit court in
(2) The tax deed is void for the further reason that while the puported tax sale was made July 1,1861, the tax deed was not executed until October 6, 1866. At that time William Sparkman was neither collector nor sheriff. His term of office-had expired more than four years prior to the execution of the deed. At the time the tax deed was executed, Jaimes Hunter was sheriff, and Samuel Johnson was revenue collector. Prior to 1856, sheriffs and revenue collectors had no power to make deeds after they went out of office. Hightower v. Freedle, 5 Sneed, 312. In chapter 91 of the Acts of 1855-56, section 3, carried into the Code of 1858 aq section 662, it was provided as follows, with reference to the tax collector:
“662. He may sell la,nds-condemned by the circuit court for taxes due and unpaid, and make titles to the same, at any time within two years from the expiration of his term of office; and if he fail or neglect to sell such land, then it shall be sold by his successor.”
We therefore think that if Sparkman was tax collector in 1861, and in fact made the sale, he could not make the deed after he went out of office, unless he made it within two years of the expiration of his term of office. The record shows that in (¡March, 1862, one W. 0. Ha,s-ton was elected sheriff and Daniel Dodson was elected
It is insisted hy counsel for defendants that upon the resignation of Harmon York as tax collector, William Sparkman, the newly elected and qualified sheriff, became tax collector hy virtue of sections 597-598 of the Code, hut this contention is unavailing for four reasons:
First, because these two sections of the Code were repealed hy chapter 9 of the Acts of 1859-60 above quoted hy necessary implication; there being a plain antagonism between the two systems.
Second, even if sections 597-598 of the Code were in, force, and were applicable to a case where a revenue collector had been elected but had resigned, still the sheriff became revenue collector only in the event the county court failed to elect a new collector. The record in this case affirmatively shows that- the county court elected a successor to Harmon York immediately upon receipt of his resignation.
Third, William Sparkman never qualified as revenue collector.
Fourth, even assuming that William Sparkman was tax collector as well as sheriff at the date of the sale, the deed was void, as above stated, for the reason that it was not executed until 1866, more than two years after his term of office had expired.
The oldest possessions on the land'in controversy relied upon by the defendants are known as the C. G. Miller improvements, the John J. Miller improvements, and the Mary Wells or Henry Davis improvements. All of these are within the boundary of the Eliza Simms grant, No. 5769. These possessions came .about as follows: . On October 1, 1868, Hiram Gilbert executed .a certain deed to one E. P. Gilbert, which was duly recorded in the office of the register of Van Burén county on December 10, 1868. The lands described in this deed were the Eliza Simms grant, No. 5769, of five thousand acres, and the J. IT. Walling grant, No. 5245, also of five thousand acres. The deed conveyed one thousand acres within the boundaries described to E. P. Gilbert, individually. Out of the Eliza Simms grant, the deed reserved to the grantor one thousand five hundred acres “lying on the northern portion thereof, and in one piece, and extending all the way across ’ ’ that grant. The other seven thousand five' hundred acres described in the deed were conveyed to E. P. Gilbert upon the following condition:
*523 “That is the said party hereto of the second part (E. P. Gilbert) hereby covenants and agrees to and with the sa.id party of the first part (Hiram Gilbert, the grantor), that he the said party of the second part, his heirs or life representatives, shall and will for the nominal consideration of one dollar convey nnto each of the hereinafter named persons, children of one Philena Miller, who is now a resident of Wayland in the county of Aligan and State of Michigan, also to the children of Juliett Wilcox, now deceased, late resident of Lntton in the State of New York, and also to the children of Lydia' Jane Perry, deed., formerly of Lntton as aforesaid, five hundred acres of the land herein expressed and intended to be conveyed, to each and every one of them that will enter upon, take possession of, use, occupy and commence cultivating the herein intended to be granted to them at any time within five years from the date hereof, and continue in possession of and use, occupy and cultivate lands so occupied during and for the full term of five years from the time of taking-such possession or occupation of the lands hereby intended to be conveyed to them as follows, viz:
“To William Lee Miller, Charles G. Miller, John J. Miller, Mary C. Wells, Margaret Ann Baird, Martha 0. Miller, Jane Lovina Lashley, Christa Morton Atwood, John Wilcox, Lydia Downey, Jeremiah Wilcox, Mary E. Perry, Charles A. Perry, and Alice Perry, and it is covenanted, agreed and understood by and between all the parties hereto and herein named, that in case any one or all the above named children of Philena Miller,*524 Juliett "Wilcox and Lydia Perry should refuse to enter upon, take possession of, use, occupy and cultivate said lands intended for him, her or them within the said five years before mentioned, or in case any or either of them should take possession of said lands and fail to remain in possession of or to use, occupy and cultivate the same,' or remove therefrom or offer to sell said lands at any time during the five years that they or either of them are required to remain thereon, and cultivate the same, without first consulting and getting the consent and approval of the said Hiram Gilbert, party hereto, of the first part, his heirs or legal representatives, then and in that case the lands so intended for him, her or them so refusing to occupy as above expressed, shall revert back to the said Hiram Gilbert, his heirs or legal representatives, to his and their own proper use, benefit and behoof forever, and this conveyance or any other conveyance made or to be made by virtue of the above mentioned covenant shall be declared and is null and void and of no effect so far as relates to him, her or them so refusing to occupy said lands as above expressed, and each and every deed to be made by virtue of the within indenture shall contain a reversion, and also a mineral reservation clause the same as those herein contained, and in case the before mentioned Mary 0. "Wells, Margaret Ann Baird, Martha 0. Miller, Alice P. Miller, Lydia Downey, Christa Morton Atwood, Mary E. Perry and Alice Perry, or either-of them, shall elect to enter upon, possess, occupy and cultivate the lands hereby intended for*525 them, then and in that ease the said party hereto of the second part, his heirs or legal representatives, shall make or cause to he made a deed of conveyance, conveying in fee to each and every one of them who shall so elect to occupy said lands and continue thereon as above expressed five hundred acres of the land hereinafter described to her own sole and separate use and the same shall not be subject to the disposal of her husband, nor liable for any of bis debts, any law of the State to the contrary thereof notwithstanding in which said lands are situated, and the lands hereby intended to be conveyed, may be known and located, and are situated, lying and being in district No. 7, in the county of Van Burén, in the State of Tennessee, and are described as follews.”
Pursuant to the provisions of this deed, about the year 1871 or 1872, C. G-. Miller, J. J. Miller, and Mary Wells moved on the, Eliza Simms tract of land and built and maintained improvements on what is known in the record as the- C. G. Miller five hundred-acre tract, the J. J. Miller five hundred-acre tract, and the Mary C. Wells five hundred-acre tact, otherwise known as the Henry Davis tract. E. P. Gilbert afterwards executed deeds to these parties as follows: In 1880 a deed to Henry Davis and others for the Wells or Davis five hundred acres; in 1884 a deed to J. J. Milley for his five hundred acres; a|nd also in 1884 a deed to O. G. Miller for his five hundred acres.
The record shows that these parties maintained their improvements for more than seven years prior
But even if this were not true, we think each of. the respective parties claimed the particular land upon
The record shows that beginning about the year 1873, each of the parties was assessed with five hundred acres of land, and each paid taxes on five hundred acres. It further shows that neither the Millers nor Mrs. Wells ever paid any rent to any one, but enjoyed the use of their respective lands for themselves. We therefore think that the occupancy of each of these parties was on his own account alone and in his own right.
The difference between the relation of landlord and tenant and that of vendor and vendee is fully stated by Judge Caruthers in Redmond v. Bowles, 5 Sneed, (73 Tenn.), 630, this court said:
“The relation of one who enters into the possession of la,nd under a contract of purchase, though verbal, is in almost every respect unlike that between tenant and landlord. The former, in point of fact, enters to hold exclusively for himself; he is neither to render rent or other service, nor is he to restore possession of the premises to the seller; he is under none of the positive obligations of a tenant by actual contract.”
“Moreover, under the uniform holding of this court, during’ the currency of the parol contract and until it is repudiated, the vendee in possession holds for himself, and not as tenant of the vendor. Redmond v. Bowles, 5 Sneed, 551 [73 Am. Dec., 153]; Sullivan v. Ivey, 2 Sneed, 487; Beard v. Bricker, 2 Swan, 50; James v. Patterson’s Lessee, 1 Swan, 309, 55 Am Dec., 737; Fain v. Headrick, 4 Cold., 334.”
And where one goes into possession under a parol donation he occupies the same relation in respect to his possession as a purchaser by parol. In Bailey v. Henry, 125 Tenn., 402, 143 S. W., 1127, it was said:
“Plaintiff insists that a parol donee of land does not, in legal contemplation, stand upon a parity with a pa-rol vendee, and that the decisions we have noticed have no application to this case, because, as he says, the cases referred to were based upon equitable considerations. We cannot assent to this proposition. ”
In that case this court quotes with approval the following from Blackstone:
“ ‘Purchase, indeed, in its vulgar and confined acceptation, is applied only to such acquisitions of land as are to be obtained by way of bargain and sale for money, or some other valuable consideration; but this falls far short of the legal idea of purchase,-for if I give land freely to another, he is in the eyes of the law a purchaser, and falls within Littleton’s definition for he comes to the estate by his own agreement; that is, he consents to the gift.’ ”
“Now, to say that the act of the donor in speaking the words of gift, which authorize the act of entry into possession by the donee, and that the act of the donee, in entering under the parol gift are acts void in law and to be treated as if they had not been done, is going beyond any requirement of the statute of frauds, and beyond the legal effect of its provisions.
“It is well settled that these acts of the donor and donee, viz. the parol gift and the consequent entry and continuance of adverse possession by the donee, do by the lapse of seven years ripen into a defensive right to the la,nd in the donee, which is good against the donor or his heirs. O’Neal v. Breechen, 5 Baxt., 605; Haynes v. Jones, 2 Head, 873; Keys v. Keys, 11 Heisk., 430, 431; Jordan & Ransom v. Maney, 10 Lea, 145, 146; Moore v. Burrow, 89 Tenn., 104, 17 S. W., 1035; Kittel v. Steger, 121 Tenn., 410, 117 S. W., 500, and other authorities there cited. ’ ’
We are of opinion that the possession of the Millers and Mrs. Wells up to the time they received their deeds did not perfect the title of Hiram Gilbert to the Simms grant, but only gave to each of said parties, after the lapse of seven years a possessory right to the land which he had actually inclosed, and that the continued possession of the parties for seven years subsequent to the execution of their deeds perfected the title of each to the extent of the boundaries set out in his deed. Complainants do not seek to recover these five hundred acre tracts but concede that the title
The defendants rely upon several' other possessions, known in the record as the Hiram .Gilbert, Jr., possession of an acre and a: quarter; the Buck and Tom Walling possession; the Gaul extension of the Baldwin orchard; the Haston-Beech possession; and the Haston wire lot.
The first of these involves a possession made by Hiram Gilbert, Jr., about 1858, on grant No. 3687, to which he had title. He was ai federal soldier, and was killed about 1862 or 1863, leaving brothers and sisters surviving him. He left no will. At his death he left certain persons in charge of the possession and premises above mentioned, and they held the same claiming under Hiram Gilbert, Jr., as late as 1881. Hiram Gilbert, Sr., died in 1871, leaving a will in which his real estate was devised to his children. This possession made by Hiram Gilbert, Jr., on grant No. 3687, extended an acre and a quarter over on the J. H. Walling five thous- and acre grant, No. 5245, which interferes to some extent, at this point, with the Church grant. This same acre and a quarter is also embraced in grant No. 12315 of two hundred acres owned by Hiram Gilbert, Jr., which grant 12315 lies wholly within the boundaries of the J. H. Walling grant, some of the lines of the two grants being in common; but the J. H. Walling grant is the older of the two. Defendants’ contention is thajt this acre and a quarter extension of the Hiram Gil
Upon the other possessions above mentioned claimed by defendants, a great mass of proof has been taken by both sides. We have carefully examined this testimony, and we are of opinion that, under the great weight of the evidence, these possessions have, not been made out. It would unduly lengthen this opinion, and would serve no useful purpose, to review the testimony of the large number of witnesses introduced, a great deal of which is very conflicting. In his written opinion filed in the record, the chancellor has set out a somewhat detailed
It results from the foregoing that there is no error in the decree of the chancellor, and it is accordingly affirmed.