13 Iowa 28 | Iowa | 1862
— An action of right. On the trial before the court, the title and right of possession in the premises, were adjudged to be in plaintiffs. In seeking a revision of this judgment, the defendant insists that the court below committed an error in excluding from its consideration the evidence of his title to the land in controversy, consisting,
First. Of two deeds of conveyance, one from Benjamin S. Olds, special administrator, dated January 3d, 1846, to Amos E. Kimberly; the other from said Kimberly to the defendant, dated January 9th, 1850; both duly recorded,
It seems that the plaintiffs are the devisees of Bobert Long, who, in 1843, died seised in fee of the land in controversy, in the State of Ohio, making a will, but appointing no executor. Afterward, in 1844, the will was duly’probated, and one Peter Igow, was appointed administrator, with the will annexed. Afterwards, Igow came to this state and applied to the judge of probate of Muscatine county for letters of administration, representing that there was personal property in said county belonging to the estate, and upon which the will operated. On account of some informality in the authentication of his papers, his application was refused.
But the judge of probate being advised that the property was in danger of being lost, unless it received immediate care, upon request appointed Benjamin. S. Olds a special administrator, (as he had the power to do under the statute,) to take possession of and preserve the same, until a regular or general administrator could be appointed. To this extent were his duties as special administrator specified by his letters under which he was commissioned to act, and it is proper to remark, that the conditions of his bond were restricted to the same duties. Nevertheless, in November thereafter, (1845,) being unable to find or successfully to obtain any assets belonging to said estate, but having incurred certain expenses in attempting to do so, he petitioned the probate court to sell the land in controversy to
The exclusion of these deeds on trial below by the court, is now pressed as matter of complaint. But we are not prepared to gainsay the correctness of this ruling. They were offered to prove title in the defendant. Their admissibility for that purpose depends entirely upon the question whether the judge of probate possessed the power, under the law at the time, to license any one, except an administrator proper, to sell land to pay the debts of the estate. If he had not, all the proceedings in the premises were void.
The Statutes of 1843, page 677, very clearly define the extent of the particular powers and duties of a special administrator, showing, in the first place, that his appointment is contingent, and can only be made when for some cause, such as the pendency of a suit concerning the proof of a will, or some other cause, regular administration is delayed. His functions are limited to a few prescribed duties, in relation to the preservation of the personal assets, and these cease as soon as a regular administrator is appointed. He cannot be sued. The statute of limitations does not run against the creditors of the estate during the period of his agency. He is simply an agent, and not an administrator. He has no power to settle the estate; much less power to sell land for any purpose. It was no more competent for the judge of probate to grant him license to sell land, than that of any third person. His act in doing so was extra-jndicial, and void. The judge’s power over the real estate of deceased persons is derived through the medium of regular administration. This was wanting in
Some of these cases referred to, arose in courts of general jurisdiction, where every intendment of the law is in favor of their proceedings, and of their jurisdiction. Other references, to be sure, are to the proceedings of inferior courts, with limited jurisdiction. But in all these
It is difficult to supply a rule under which to determine definitely what are or what are not jurisdictional facts, or, in other words, just when the jurisdiction of a court attaches in a given case. The case of Morrow v. Weed, supra, and the case of Cooper v. Sunderland, 3 Iowa, have-
Yet between the class of jurisdictional questions presented in these cases, and also in most of the cases cited by the defense, and the one raised at bar, there is a clear distinction. In the latter, the want of jurisdiction, for the reasons before stated, is obviously apparent upon the face of the proceedings. In such a case all presumptions are rebutted, and we are not allowed to indulge them. And this rule, in our opinion, is applicable in courts of superior as well as inferior jurisdiction. It follows that the proceedings under the unauthorized license of the judge of probate were nullities, and that the deeds in question were properly excluded.
Second. But the defendant offered other evidence of title, founded upon a tax sale which took place on the 10th day qjf April, 1843, for the delinquent taxes of 1841 and 1842. The certificate of purchase was originally issued to Wm. H. Tuthill, Esq., by him assigned to Stephen Whicher, who assigned the same to Amos E. Kimberly, to whom the deed was made on failure to redeem, and from whom the defendant derived whatever title it conveyed. The deed thus offered was unobjectionable in form, and by the revenue law of 1841, under the provision of which the sale took place, it was made prima facie evidence of the regularity of the sale. This feature • of the revenue law of 1841, materially changes the rule generally adopted by the courts, that the party who sets up a title under such a sale, must furnish the evidence necessary to support it, independent of his deed, by showing that every prerequisite of the law had been complied with in conducting the sale. This provision of the statute shifts the burden of rebutting the presumption of regularity upon the plaintiff.
Inasmuch as the court ruled against the defendant’s title derived from this source, he must have found that the facts
Samuel "Wampler also testified that he was at that time treasurer and recorder of said county, that he had examined all the records back to the year 1841, that he found nothing indicating a tax sale in 1848, for the delinquent taxes of 1841 and 1842, not even a memorandum in regard to it. In this attitude of the case, what should be the effect of such testimony ?
We are inclined to think that it must ex necessitate reshift the burden of proof upon the defendant, to account for the absence of this record evidence, or otherwise show from evidence aliunde that all the conditions or prerequisites of the law had been strictly observed in making the sale. Some rule must be adopted in cases of this kind, and we cannot perceive why the one suggested is not sound and reasonable. Surely, it is much easier for the ministers of
Now in answer to the above proof, the defendant fails to account satisfactorily for the non-existence of the collector’s notice and return of said sale, or other record'evidence of the same, but he does undertake to supply some evidence of the same by Judge Tuthill, who stated that he purchased the property in controversy, that from certain circumstances mentioned he remembered seeing the delinquent list, and the warrant authorizing the sale, &c. Yet this goes a very short w.ay in showing, as we think he was bound to do under the circumstances of this case, that the several steps prescribed by the statutes had been strictly followed.
.It is true the defendant’s deed undertakes to recite a compliance with the statutory provisions, but these recitals are not evidence against the owner of the property sold. 4 Hill, 76; 2 Denio, 323; 1 Selden, 366; 19 Barb. 644.
The deed shows that it had been drawn with great care and particularity, evidently indicating that the writer intended to set forth all that he thought the law required the officer to do in selling land for delinquent taxes, yet he did omit one requisite, that of stating, “ after the clerk and assessor had corrected the assessment roll, and laid it before the board of commissioners, the said board, finding it correct, had accepted the same in writing on the back thereof, signed and attested by their clerk, and filed in his
The appellees make several other points against the validity of this tax title, the consideration of which we waive, except one, and that is this: The evidence shows that the certificate of purchase of the land in controversy, byTuthill, was assigned, by'him to'Whicher, before the two years in which to redeem had run out, and that Whicher at that time was the acting attorney for the estate of Robt. Long, deceased; that he stated to Tuthill at the time he .purchased the certificate, that he stood in the place of the deceased, and represented the estate, yet he took the assignment to himself. It is insisted that this assignment in law inures to the benefit of the estate, under the circumstances. Payment of taxes, or the redemption of land sold for the non-payment within the prescribed time, is always a good defence against a tax title. Whether the estate of Long did redeem the land in question through Mr. Whicher, the attorney, is chiefly a question of fact, which it was competent for the court below to pass upon, but is not for us. We only refer to it as showing another probable reason, in the mind of the court below, for ruling against the defendant’s title.
It only remains to say, that at the trial below it was admitted that the legal title of the land in dispute was in Robert Long at the time of his decease, and that it was still in the plaintiffs, his heirs, unless it had been divested by the defendant’s several title deeds offered in evidence.
The court below held that it had not been, and such is our opinion.
Judgment affirmed.