16 Wis. 594 | Wis. | 1863
By the Court,
This suit was brought under section 29, chap. 141, R S., 1858, which provides that any person having the possession of and legal title to land, may institute an action against any other person setting up a claim thereto, and if the plaintiff shall be able to substantiate his title to such land, the defendant shall be adjudged to release to the plaintiff all claim thereto.
The first question which we have to consider is one of jurisdiction. The appellants here, who were the defendants below, contend that the action can be maintained under this statute,
It was undoubtedly not the intention of this statute to give a court of equity power to try actions of ejectment. A court of law is the proper tribunal to try and adjudicate legal titles, and therefore when the holder of a legal title is not in possession he is ordinarily turned over to his action at law to recover it. But we do not understand that this suit was intended to be a substitute for, and answer the purpose of an action of ejectment. The plaintiffs allege title and possession in themselves and the object of the suit manifestly, is to quiet their title and remove the cloud which the tax deeds held by the defendants cast upon it., And if they have the legal title to the real estate and are in possession of it, as we think the proof shows that they are, they can maintain their action under this statute for the purpose of removing all doubts in respect to that title arising from the' existence of the tax deeds, especially when the holders of those deeds refuse or neglect to take any proceedings to test their validity or obtain possession of the premises under them. Besides I think there is another conclusive answer to this objection at this stage of the case, which is that it comes too late. If the defendants had wished to insist upon the objection, they should have raised the point in their answer as a bar to the court taking cognizance of the action, and not have gone to trial upon the merits and now raise it for the first time. The following authorities are clear upon this question of practice and show that it is too late to raise the objection, in such a proceeding at the final hearing. Stockton vs. Wil
And this brings us to an enquiry into the validity of the tax deeds set up and relied on in the answer as a defense to the relief demanded by the complaint. If for any reason these deeds are invalid or the defendants are unable to avail themselves of the title derived through them, then as a matter of course the judgment will have to be affirmed. The defendants rely entirely upon these deeds and the three years limitation, as the source of all their title or interest in the premises. One of these deeds was given by the clerk of the board of supervisors of Winnebago county to Charles Doty, on the 16th day of April, 1851, and recorded the same day; and the other was given by the treasurer of the village of Me-nasha to the defendant Pulling, the 20th day of August, 1857, and received for-record the 1st of September following. The lands embraced in these deeds were principally uncultivated, although the evidence shows that various persons actually occupied or resided upon some portions of them, sometimes entering into possession with the knowledge and consent of the administrators of the estate of Jones and sometimes with the knowledge and consent of the defendant Doty, the grantee of Charles, Indeed the whole evidence shows, that there was a constant squabble and contest in respect to the possession between those acting on behalf of the estate of Jones and those claiming under the tax deeds. We shall not enter upon any discussion of the testimony upon the question of possession and shall content ourselves with stating the conclusion we de
It follows from these views that the defendants had no rights in the premises, derived through the two tax deeds mentioned in the answer and proofs which could be enforced, and that the judgment must be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.