This is the same case in another form as the ejectment case of Gitchell v. Messmer, reported in
There is no dispute as to the facts in the present record ; but an agreed statement thereof, which in brief shows the claims of the parties upon the funds in question to be in accordance with their respective titles, which are the same as those heretofore litigated in the
It appears in this record, as in the said ejectment suit, that Mrs. Lina Y. Newman, who was the owner in fee of the property, was not, as before stated, made a party defendant in said first tax suit, but that said Bigelow, Hilton and Socrates Newman, the husband of Lina V. Newman, were. It is apparent from the record that said Bigelow and Hilton had no interest in the lot when the first tax suit was brought. Indeed, this is conceded on all hands, but the claim for Gitchell, made in this case, is that the husband’s interest in the wife’s land was vendible on execution, and that he acquired it by the first sale. We are not dissatisfied with the views heretofore held, as to the meaning, scope and effect of Revised Statutes, section 3295, and are not at all inclined to overrule our prior decision thereon, which we would, in effect, have to do to sustain the position of counsel for Gitchell on this appeal. It can serve no useful purpose to again go into the learning upon the subject, as to the nature, character and extent of the right of the husband, if any, under said statute. It is sufficient to refer to, and again approve, what has been said by us in that behalf in Gitchell v. Messmer, supra; Burns v. Bangert,
As to the alleged hardships suffered in this behalf by the state and said Gitchell, it is, we think, sufficient to say that the collector omitted to make the owner of the property a party defendant in the first tax suit, and said Gitchell was notified and warned at the sale and prior to his purchase that the defendant in the execution had no interest in the property, and he therefore bought with knowledge and at his peril.
This leads to an affirmance of the judgment, and it is accordingly so ordered.
