32 Wis. 504 | Wis. | 1873
This is an action of ejectment to recover possession of a tract of land in Dodge county, to which the plaintiff claims title in fee simple by virtue of the land having remained vacant and unoccupied for the period of three years next after the recording of certain tax deeds to himself and to others, grantors of his, under whom he also claims. The tax deeds were executed and recorded respectively in the years 1856, 1857 and 1858. The defendant connects himself with the original title from the government of the United States. The controversy in the court below turned upon the point of possession, or whether the land in fact remained unoccupied for the period of three years from the date of the recording of any one of the tax deeds. The trial was by the court without a jury, and the court found that part of the premises were cultivated in the years 1857 and 1858 by persons who seemed to have been trespassers, and who had no authority to use the land or any part of it from the then owner or claimant of it under the original title; and that after the year 1858 the same were lying wild and unoccupied. An examination of the tes
Besides the, actual occupancy thus shown in 1858, it appears that Mr. Rice occupied in 1857, and that in 1859 Mr. Lake went on and repaired the fences by direction of the agents of the then owner by title derived through Rice.
- Under these circumstances the question comes up, what benefit or title, if any, the plaintiff can claim or assert by virtue of
. The subject under consideration is well illustrated by some decisions of the supreme court of Illinois under a statute of that state which declares that color of title, possession, and the payment of taxes, for seven successive years, shall bar the remedy of the former owner, and so become conclusive evidence of ownership in the party possessed. In Elston v. Kennicott, 47 Ill., 187, it was held in regard to the payment of taxes required by the statute, that the omission to pay them for any one year would not be excused because .of some technical defect in the assessment for that year, which would have vitiated it if the question had been made. The omission to pay such
In this case we deem it unnecessary to consider whether there may or may not be possible exceptions to the broad rule above laid down, as, for example, where the former owner takes actual possession on the last day of the three years, or so shortly before the expiration of the time as that it is impossible for the grantee by tax deed to take measures to oust or dispossess him. The rule would seem to admit of no such exception, and the result in that case would appear to be, the bar of the statute not having taken effect in favor of either party, the grantee in the deed or the former owner, that the question of title would be open to litigation between them, and that the grantee in the deed might still prevail if he could show that a valid and sufficient title passed by it. It might be possible that the possession so taken would be regarded as a fraud upon the grantee. See Encking v. Simmons, 28 Wis., 281, and authorities there cited. And such would seem to be the situation of the parties wherever neither can take advantage of the three years’ bar. But of this question we express no opinion.
It follows from these views that the judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded with direction that a venire de novo be awarded.
By the Court.— It is so ordered.