27 N.M. 511 | N.M. | 1921
OPINION OF THE COURT.
The appellee, A. R. Manby, brought suit in the district court for Taos county against Daniel Martinez and others to quiet title to the Antonio Martinez land grant. ,From a judgment in his favor the persons hereinafter named as appellants have perfected this appeal.
The complaint of appellee Manby alleged in substance that the lands within the Antonio Martinez grant were granted by Spanish authority in 1716 to Antonio Martiiiez and his heirs and assigns; that it was confirmed in 1892, and patent therefor was issued by the United States in 1897; that ap-pellee is the owner in fee simple of more than an undivided three-fourths interest in said grant; that defendants are the owners in fee simple of a fraction less than a one-fourth undivided interest in said grant, but as to the extent of the respective undivided interests of each defendant the appellee has no knowledge. The complainant further alleged that many of the named defendants, and other persons, resided upon the grant, and had used and occupied divers and sundry tracts therein allotted and segregated from the body of the estate or common lands of the grant, and that he did not desire to molest or disturb said persons, but desired the same set off by the court to the various owners shown to be entitled thereto by the proofs to be submitted in the case.
The appellant, Voorhees, filed an answer and cross-complaint. The answer denied the allegations of the complaint, except with respect to the confirmation of the grant and .the ownership in fee by defendants of certain segregated tracts within the grant. By way of cross-bill he alleged, among other things:
“The defendant herein owns and holds the title in fee simple, and is in actual possession of that certain tract of land lying and being within the exterior boundary lines of the said Antonio Martinez land grant * * * and the said defendant, through his ancestors, their ancestors and predecessors in title, have occupied, held, and possessed 'the same for a period of more than 10 years prior to the filing of the said complaint * * * herein and the commencement of this action, and have held and occupied and possessed said' tracts of land by virtue of conveyances, devises, and other assurances purporting to convey an estate, in such land in fee simple.”
Here follows a description by metes and bounds of the land claimed.
The answer of appellee Manby to this part of the. cross-complaint alleges that the appellee denied that the said defendant either owns or holds the title in fee simple or otherwise, or that he is in actual possession of the lands and premises attempted to be described and set forth in paragraph 4 of his said cross-complaint, and further denied on information and belief that the said defendant, A. C. Voor-hees, himself, through or by his grantors and pre-dessors, has occupied, held, or possessed the said land for a period of more than 10 years prior to the filing of the complaint in this cause, and the commencement of this suit, or that the said defendant has occupied or possessed said tract of land, or any part thereof, under any conveyance purporting to convey the estate thereof in fee simple or otherwise.
The evidence was taken before a referee, who found that the proof failed to show that Jose R. Vigil or the Hadleys, predecessors in title of the appellant Voorhees, ever took possession of or exercised any control over the Hadley tract in any way whatsoever; that the land was vacant sagebrush land, and that possession thereof had always been in the heirs, successors, and assigns of Antonio Martinez, the original grantee of the grant. The trial court approved this finding of the referee, and one of the principal contentions in the case is that the referee and the court both erred in making this finding.
The witness McClure testified that he purchased part of the land from Vigil in 1894 and 1895. The land was surveyed in 1887, at which time witness went around most of the tract with Vigil. Vigil obtained most of the land by purchase. Vigil told witness that he (Vigil) had deeds for the property. In 1877 Vigil was in possession of the land either through himself or his tenants. Vigil continued in that possession until 1896. Witness was not personally acquainted with the land in 1877. When he first saw the house on the land it was in ruins. On cross-examination he said Vigil died in 1898. Some of the Hadley tract was cultivated in small patches (date not given); it was unfenced. Vigil told the witness that the ditch coming from out of the Arroyo Hondo, and from which the land was irrigated, he (Vigil) saw'built about 1809, when he was a very small boy herding sheep. Witness first saw the house in 1888, and it was in ruins then. No improvements on the land since 1887, and no one has lived on it since that time. In 1898 witness permitted Vigil to farm his (witness’s) part of the land, and Vigil pitched his tent on the land preparatory to farming it, but died before the seed had been sowm.
Vincente Mares testified that he knew Vigil from about 1865 to his death. In 1874 the witness passed the Vigil house and saw him there farming the land. The house looked old at that time.
F. A. Gallegos testified that he knew that Vigil claimed the land in 1881. At that time the house upon the land was old.
Jose M. Santisteven testified that he knew Jose R. Vigil, and that he claimed the land in dispute. The father of the witness told him that Vigil used to live at. Desmontes, but witness never saw Vigil there. There was a house and some corrals on the land about 1881, at which time such improvements were old. The land was surveyed in 1888. Vigil said the land was 1,000 varas wide, running from Desmontes to Rio Seco, but that it did not run through the Rio Seco creek at all. For 15 or 20 years the witness saw tenants of Vigil cultivating the land on shares for Vigil (prior to 1888). On cross-examination he said he knew only by hearsay that people were planting the land for Vigil on shares.
Donaciano Dnran testified that he knew that Vigil claimed the land for more than 30 years. Saw Vigil on the land. When asked how long ago that had been, he said for over 40 years that he knew of. Vigil planted the land and rented it on shares, and had many head of stock on the land. Did not know when Vigil discontinued farming the land. On cross-examination he said he did not know the quantity of land cultivated by Vigil.
Smith A. Simpson testified:
He came to Taos in 1859, and knew Vigil. Vigil lived on the land in 1861 and 1862 with his family and peons. He was farming the land, and “he had the finest piece of wheat land that I ever saw in Taos county.”
“Q. Do you know of your own knowledge of his farming the land continuously either by himself or tenants ? A. Oh, I think he farmed; I am certain he farmed it after I came out of the service in 1866, from 1866 on. He had some parties on the land, one by the name of Maes that lived with him; that was in 1870 or after 1870.
“Q. Now can you recall any other time that you were there or passed by there, A. Oh, yes, a number of times we passed there.
“Q. State whether or not you recall at any time seeing crops growing on that tract of land. A. In fact all of the tract of land in Desmontes was under cultivation. The reason I noticed this crop was he took me on the top of his house and showed me off toward the south. He said that was ‘my wheat field.’ It looked to me as though there was 80 to 100 acres. He said it was all his. He was always selling (wheat) to Mr. St. Vrain, the miller, and others would go to him to buy his crop. It came to considerable money. It was a very big crop of wheat. It made a big field if all he showed me was his.”
On cross-examination:'
“Vigil had woodyard and corrals there.”
On behalf of appellee, Manby, he testified that he was acquainted with tract since 1885, and only a small portion of the tract was cultivated, and that was at the upper end, the balance being sagebrush land, and that the land since that time had not been occupied by any one.
Enrique Gonzales testified no improvements on the land, except the Vigil house. On cross-examination: Heard that Vigil lived on the land, but never saw him on the land.
T. P. Martin testified that he knew the Vigil land from 1889, and it had never been in cultivation since that time.
Lauriano Garcia testified: Knew the house where Vigil lived many years, but no one lived there now. The land was cultivated some years ago, but hot since 1885. The house stands in the middle of what was the cultivated land. Vigil claimed the property.
This evidence, while not as exact as to date and as to the manner and extent of possession by Vigil as could be desired, indubitably establishes the fact that long prior to 1885 Vigil had placed this land under his control and asserted title to it. It establishes a consecutive 10-year period of possession and dominion by Vigil antedating the year 1880, and it is of importance to note that none of the testimony of the appellee conflicts with such evidence offered by the appellant. Appellee’s evidence is all directed to a time subsequent to 1880, at which time Vigil had consummated the exclusive right to the property by virtue of more than 10 years preceding possession. The referee failed to appreciate the importance of this evidence, or its relation to the evidence introduced by the appellee, and, there being no substantial evidence to support his finding that Vigil did not have the requisite possession, the find^ ing cannot be sustained on this appeal. Pueblo of Nambe v. Romero, 10 N. M. 58, 61 Pac. 122.
In the Probst Case, the Supreme Court of the United States, in interpreting this statute, said:
“Nor is it necessary that the defendant shall have a paper title under which he claims possession. It is sufficient that he asserts ownership of the land, and that this assertion is accompanied by uninterrupted possession. It is this which constitutes adverse possession, claiming himself to be the owner of the land. This is a claim adverse to everybody else, and the possession is adverse when it is held under this claim of ownership, whether that ownership depends upon a written instrument, inheritance, a deed, or even an instrument which may not convey all the lands in controversy. If defendant asserts his right to own the land in dispute, asserts his right to the possession, and his possession is adverse and uninterrupted, it constitutes a bar which, the statute intended to give to the defendant.”
The court held in that case that it was error to refuse an instruction as follows:
“That an uninterrupted occupancy of land by a person who has in fact no title thereto, for the period of 10 years adversely to the true owner, operates to extinguish the title of the true owner thereto, and vests the right to the premises absolutely in the occupier.”
In the Maxwell Land Grant Case, the court said:
“Plaintiff also complained of the instruction of the court upon the subject of the statute of limitation, namely, that if the plaintiff permitted defendant to take possession of the tract, claiming all of it as his own, and to continue such possession adversely under such claim of title- for an uninterrupted period of 10 years or more, such possession would ripen into a right and title in the defendant, and forever afterwards prevent the plaintiff from taking possession of the property. We think, however, the instruction complained of was justified by the language of the statute, which provides (Comp. L. New Mexico of 1884, § 1881) that ‘no person, or persons, nor their children, or heirs, shall have, sue, or maintain any action, or suit, either in law or in equity, for any land * * * but within ten years next after his, her, or their right to commence * * * such suit shall have * * * accrued, and that all suits * * * shall be had and sued within ten years next after the title or cause of action, or suits, accrued or fallen, and at no time after the ten years shall have passed.’ Under similar statutes it has been held by this court that the lapse of time not only bars the remedy, but extinguishes the right, and vests a complete title in the adverse holder.”
The court cites the Probst Case and other cases.
While the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States upon such a matter are not binding upon this court, the two decisions referred to were, at the time they were rendered, binding upon the territory, and we see no reason, either upon principle, or as a matter of authority, to now depart from the conclusions reached by the Supreme Court of the United States.
It follows from the foregoing that the appellant Voorhees, having shown occupancy and dominion under a claim of - right adverse to the true owner by his predecessor in title for more than 10 years prior to the bringing of this suit, showed sufficient, not only to defeat the appellee in his recovery, but also showed sufficient to establish title in himself to the land in controversy.
“This certificate not having been made by De Cordova and Ygenio Sanchez, then collectors and ex-officio treasurers at the time of the above-mentioned sales of this property for said years, therefore, I have issued this certificate of sale this 17th day of August, 1905, and assigned the same to William M. Frayne, by paying the full face value and interest as follows: Here follows the figures showing the compilation of the amount due.) Recorded this 18th day of August, 1905, in Book 2, at page 409, of the Record of Sales, reported by collector October 6, 1905. Alex Gusdorf, Chairman.”
Certificate No. 713 is for the taxes of the year 1901 and was likewise issued and sold to Frayne on August 17, 1905. Certificate No. 714 was for the taxes of the year 1903, and it was testified by one of the witnesses that it was dated March 17, 1904.
It appears from the evidence in the case that there is no record in the collector’s book of sales, or elsewhere, containing the date of the sales and description- of the property sold and the name of the purchasers and amount for which the same was sold, as is required by section 23, chapter 22, Laws 1899. It was attempted to be shown by a witness introduced on behalf of appellee that, as a matter of fact, tax sales of this property were held. He testified that notices of the tax sales were published, but no proof of such publication could be produced from the collector’s office or elsewhere. The witness testified that he was -sure- that it was published, and that he was deputy collector covering most of this period, and knew as a matter of fact that the sales were made in accordance with the notices.
The tax rolls of the county shown in evidence disclosed assessments in the name of Mary C. Hadley or Mrs. O. A. Hadley from 1898 to 1907, inclusive. There was no description whatever of the property in the assessments of 1898 and 1899. The assessments for 1900 to 1902, inclusive, described the property as “1643” or “1649 acres at 33 1-3 cents per acre,” without further description. The assessments for 1903 refers for description to “Book A13, pp. 63 and 64, Taos Co. Records,” and describes the property as 1,649 acres at 33 1-3. The assessments for 1904, 1905, and 1906 were identical with those for 1903. The 1907 roll showed a re-assessment for the years 1898 to 1902, inclusive, and for 1904 to 1907, inclusive, in the name of Mary C. Hadley, with a full and complete description of the property according to a detailed survey, with total taxes of $163.23, and the payment thereof by her heirs in full.
It is to be observed that the assessments for 1903, 1904, 1905, and 1906 referred to a certain book and page of the Taos county records for a description of the property assessed. It will not be necessary, however, for us to consider whether this is a compliance with the requirements of the statute as to the description of the property in the assessment for taxation, for the reason that the property was redeemed from the tax sale of April 6, 1905, for the taxes of 1903 within 3 years after the date of such sale, and for the further reason that the taxes for the years 1904, 1905, and 1906 are shown to have been paid by Frayne or Manby as owners of the property.
“If such property is described in the assessment roll and .delinquent tax list for any year by such description as will serve to identify the same, the sale of such property for taxes as provided in this act shall not be void, or set aside on account of any error or irregularity in listing the same upon such roll or list, either as to the name or names of the owner or owners thereof, or by reason of its being listed in the name of the wrong person; and no bill of review or other action attacking the title to any property sold at tax sale in accordance with this act shall be entertained by any court, nor shall such sale or title be invalidated by any proceedings except upon the ground that the taxes, penalties, interest and costs, had been paid before the sale, or that the property was not subject to taxation.”
It is to be admitted that if the descriptions heretofore mentioned are sufficient to “serve to identify” the land, they are to be held sufficient in this regard for the purposes of this tax sale. But can it be said that the descriptions do serve to identify the land ? Its location, aside from being in Taos county, is not mentioned. Its boundaries are not attempted to be defined. The precinct or precincts in which it lies are not named. It is not identified by name. We are compelled to hold that such a description does not serve to identify the land as the subject of taxation, and forms no legal basis for the assessment and levy of taxes. In so holding we desire to be rather cautious in laying down any hard and fast rule on the subject of necessary description of property for taxation. We appreciate the difficulty in this state in properly describing real estate, because of the fact that a large proportion of the property is held by metes and bounds rather than by government legal subdivisions, growing out of the fact of the large areas covered by Spanish and Mexican land grants. The fact remains, however, that- some method of identification must be resorted to in such descriptions other than merely stating the number of acres taxed. That this.is the general rule on this subject, see Black on Tax Titles (2d Ed.) § 112; 1 Cooley on Taxation (3d Ed.) p. 740 et seq. See, also 26 R. C. L. “Taxation,” § 314; McClellan v. District of Columbia, 18 D. C. (7 Mack.) 94; Bush’s Heirs v. Williams, Cooke (Tenn.) 360; Fed. Cas. No. 2,225; Smith v. Cox, 115 Ala. 503, 22 South. 78; Thibodaux v. Keller, 29, La. Ann. 508; Adams v. Larrabee, 46 Me. 516; Cogburn v. Hunt, 54 Miss. 675; Lyman v. Philadelphia, 56 Pa. 488 ;Newcomb v. Franklin Township, 46 N. J. Law, 437; Palomares L. Co. v. Los Angeles County, 146 Cal. 530, 80 Pac. 931; State Finance Co. v. Mather, 15 N. D. 386, 109 N. W. 350, 11 Ann. Cas. 1112.
In Maxwell v. Page, 23 N. M. 356, 168 Pac. 492, 5 A. L. R. 155, we held that a premature sale was an irregularity which was not available to the owner in view of the restricted defenses reserved in the statute. In that case we said that:
“The essentials of taxation are the existence of the subject matter which is to be subjected to taxation, and its liability to the imposition of the tax, the assessing of the property for taxation, and the levying of the tax thereon.”
In that case the question was not, as it is here, whether a tax sale had in fact been had, but whether the sale had been had at the time prescribed by the statute. We did not have before us in that case any question as to whether, if no sale in fact had been had, the defects in the proceedings would have been jurisdictional.
In Pace v. Wight, 25 N. M. 276, 181 Pac. 480, however, we had the identical question which is present in this case, i. e., whether the tax sale was in fact made is jurisdictional, and whether that fact can be established by anything except the book of sales, required by section 28, chapter 22, Laws 1899. In that case it was first held by us that the fact of actual sale for taxes was jurisdictional, and that, there being no legal evidence to that effect, the tax deed was void. On rehearing, however, it was made to appear that the tax sale was an admitted fact in the case, and consequently our holding became obiter. It was arrived at, however, by a unanimous court, and stands as the opinion of this court on the subject. In that case thé former cases were collected, and we held in terms that the curative provisions of the statute did not apply to jurisdictional defects in tax proceedings. We now add to the foregoing list of defects which are jurisdictional, and which are not cured by the statute, that of failure of description sufficient to identify the land. This must necessarily be so. If you have no description, you have no subject-matter upon which the tax can be laid, and you have no property which can be conveyed to the purchaser.
In the case at bar there is no official record whatever of the fact that the sales for taxes for the years 1898 to 1902, inclusive, were in fact ever made by the collector except perhaps for the year 1902. The collector in office in 1905 wrote up some tax sale certificates purporting to be based upon some supposed sales made by two of his predecessors in office. Concerning the truth of the fact that these sales were actually made, he could have had no knowledge, and did not pretend to have the same. For this reason alone the tax .certificates issued by the collector in 1905 are within the doctrine of the Pace-Wight case, to which we adhere, and are wholly void and furnish no basis for the tax deed here in question.
There is language in the Pace-Wight case to the effect that the only evidence admissible under any circumstances of the fact that a sale for taxes was made is the official record to be kept by the collector. We have some doubt of the correctness of this broad statement. Circumstances might perhaps arise under which the fact of sale might be otherwise shown, and when such a state of facts is presented, we will' endeavor to state a rule on the subject. As applied to the facts in that case, however, where a record was made by reciting facts, which the collector could not and did not know, the staternent was correct.
There are other appellants in the case claiming right to possession of certain tracts of land within the grant, but the evidence in support of their claims is so uncertain and undeveloped that the findings below with respect to them must be affirmed.
It follows from all of the foregoing that there is error in the decree of the district court as to the appellant Voorhees, and that the same should be reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court with directions to enter a decree in favor of the appellant quieting his title to the land in controversy; and, it is so ordered.