83 W. Va. 553 | W. Va. | 1919
This suit was brought by M. F. Matheny against Silas Jackson to cancel a tax deed made to defendant 'on the 10th of January, 1917, by Will P. Cook, Clerk of the County Court of Wyoming County, for an undivided one-half interest in lot No. 23 in the town of Sizemore in said county, pursuant to a sheriff’s sale, made the 13th of December, 1915, for delinquent taxes, assessed for the year 1913 in the name of Elizabeth Sturgill, plaintiff’s grantor. Defendant answered and depositions were taken and filed, pro and con. Upon the hearing, on the 16th of February, 1918, the court held plaintiff was not entitled to relief and dismissed his bill, and he has appealed.
Two issues are raised, one of law and the other of fact. The issue of law is, that the misdescription of the lot in the
The issue of fact is, that plaintiff applied to defendant, within the time allowed for redemption, for the purpose of redeeming his lot, and was misled by his false and fraudulent statement, on the truth of which plaintiff relied. Plaintiff testifies that, sometime in November, he thinks about the 10th, 1916, he was in Pineville, and was then informed by Floyd Lusk that defendant had bought in plaintiff’s lot at a .tax sale; that plaintiff immediately went to see defendant for the purpose of redeming it, and told him he understood he had bid in lot No. 23 in the town of Sizemore, or an interest therein and, if it was true, he wanted to redeem it, and defendant replied that he had made no sucli purchase, that he and some friends of his had made several purchases at the delinquent sale, but that plaintiff had no property in the list. This was within the time to redeem. Defendant admits plaintiff came to see him, but denies he told plaintiff that none of his property was in the list of properties he had purchased, because, he says, he did not then know,who owned the lot. He swears plaintiff said to him: “I understand you have bid in some of my property,” and witness replied that, if he had, he did not know it, and then got his receipts and looked over them, and told plaintiff he had bought nothing that was sold in his name, and further says plaintiff only asked about lots sold in his name, and that he did not know at the time of sale, and did not learn until after the year of redemption had expired, that plaintiff owned lot No. 23. But defendant is contradicted and plaintiff supported by witness Floyd Lusk who gave plaintiff the information about the sale. Lusk was the owner of lot No. 13, and says John Riley Sizemore had told him that defendant had bid in his (witness’) lot, and
The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to-the lower court'to enter a decree can-celling the tax deed after payment has been made by plaintiff to defendant of the siim tendered, awarding cost's to appellant both in this court and the court below.
Reversed and remanded.