116 Va. 424 | Va. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants in error, plaintiffs below, brought an action of ejectment against the plaintiffs in error to recover a tract of 100 acres of land situated in Halifax county, Virginia. At the trial the plaintiffs asserted title to only one-half of the land, and there was a verdict and judgment in their favor for an undivided half only. To that judgment this writ of error was granted.
The entire tract of land was sold by the treasurer of Halifax county for delinquent taxes and purchased in the name of the Auditor of Public Accounts for the benefit of the Commonwealth. The land not having been redeemed was purchased by J. T. Lacks, under whom the defendants claim, who made application to the county court of the county at the January term, 1903, to be allowed to complete his purchase without a survey and report by ■the county surveyor. The court granted the motion, being of opinion that a sufficient description of the land to identify the same could be obtained from the records without additional survey and report, and dispensed with such survey and report and ordered the clerk of the court to make the purchaser a proper deed to the land with covenant of special warranty. The deed was accordingly made by the clerk January 29, 1904, and duly acknowledged by him. February 2, 1904, before a notary public, and admitted to record.
There are several subordinate assignments of error, but the action of the court in sustaining the plaintiffs’ objection to the introduction of the clerk’s deed in evidence is controlling, and alone demands special notice.
The grounds of objection to the deed are: (1) That it is not sealed: and (2), that it is invalid and incapable of passing title to J. T. Lacks because it does not comply with the requirements of section 666 of the Code, in that
. 1. The first ground of objection rests upon the fact that the deed concludes: “Witness my hand and seal of the court, the day and year first above written. Thomas Easley, Clerk, (Seal).”
Admittedly the instrument would have been free from objection if the words “of the court” had been omitted. Those words, it will be observed are not necessary to give meaning to the paper, and neither their presence nor absence can affect its validity. They are, in short, merely superfluous, and may be rejected. Utile per inutile non vitiatur. Besides, the omission to recognize the scroll as a seal in the body of the instrument at all would have been cured by its solemn recognition by the grantor at the time of acknowledgment for record, inasmuch as the writing is required by statute to be sealed. Parks v. Hewlett, 9 Leigh, (36 Va.) 511; Ashwell v. Ayres, 4 Gratt. (45 Va.) 283; Clegg v. Lemessurier, 15 Gratt. (56 Va.) 108; 2 Minor on Real Property, see. 1139.
The rule is succinctly stated in 1 B. C. L. sec 22, p. 261, as follows: “One who acknowledges an instrument required to be under seal is deemed to adopt a seal affixed thereto by another’s hand, just as effectually as he adopts the signature when written by another person, and for the same reasons.”
We are unwilling to adopt a rule of construction, the effect of which would be to subordinate substance to form and defeat a substantial right upon a bare technicality, and especially as the better right is sustained by the better reason.
. 2. The second contention is that the clerk’s deed to the purchaser is invalid because it does not comply with the requirements of section 666 of the Code and set out all the circumstances appearing in the clerk’s office in relation to the sale.
Professor Minor in Ms work on Tax Titles thus distinguishes between sales under section 666 and the original tax sale: “The Commonwealth may do what it pleases with its own, and if the legislature sees fit to dispense with notice to the owner, it may dispose of its title privately. TMs constitutes the great difference between the notice required by law preliminary to the original tax sale, and that required as preliminary to the re-sale by the Commonwealth. In the former case, the property is the owner’s and he cannot be deprived of it without notice ; in the latter case the property is the State’s, and the legislature may dispense with notice altogether. ’ ’ Minor on Tax Titles, p. 84.
Again, the learned author, at p. 85, says: “The Commonwealth will be deemed to have acquired the title at the time of the tax sale, and any subsequent omission of steps prescribed by statute will not invalidate that title, such steps being construed as merely directory. A resale, therefore, under this construction would convey to the purchaser such title as the Commonwealth has, not subject to be defeated by proof that any subsequent steps, so long as the State retains its title, have been omitted.”
The deed in question complies with the requirements of section 666, and the trial court erred in refusing to admit it in evidence.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment must be reversed, the verdict of the jury set aside and the case remanded for a new trial conformable to this opinion.
Reversed.