88 W. Va. 270 | W. Va. | 1921
The decree of the Common Pleas Court of Kanawha County, which the Circuit Court of that county refused to disturb by the award of an appeal therefrom, brought up by this appeal, dismissed, on final hearing, a bill filed for the purpose of vacation of a tax deed conveying to the appellee, White, a tract of 7% acres of land, based on a sheriff’s sale thereof for non-payment of taxes for the year 1904.
The tax deed was obtained October 24, 1911. Telitha J. Gillispie and her husband, claiming some interest in the tract of land, executed a deed, December 18,1911, conveying 5 acres thereof to J. G. Carper. On the next day Carper and his wife executed a deed purporting to convey to the said Gillispie and her husband, the undivided % of the 5 acres. On March 29, 1912, White and the Gillispies and the Carpers executed a lease on the 7% acres to E. A. Mead, J. H. Mead and L. M. Whan, for oil and gas purposes. White had previously executed a lease on the same land to the Hamilton Company, which afterwards came into the hands of the William Seymour Edwards Oil Company. Not long before the tax deed was obtained, oil was discovered in the neighborhood of the land, and, since this controversy arose, a well of small production has been drilled on the land. Before he took his deed Col. White claims to have advised the owners of their right to redeem and given them a fair opportunity to do so. That ample time was allowed is clear. After obtaining it, he conveyed the surface to plaintiff’s mother for a merely nominal consideration, if any, at all.
As no demurrer was interposed to the bill, its sufficiency seems to be conceded. The answer is very full and complete.
The argument submitted to sustain six of the seven assignments of error found in the brief filed for the appellant is based largely upon an exhibit filed with the bill, which, on its face, purports to be only a part of a record or paper, and admittedly is only a part thereof. A witness testifies that it is a certified copy of a part of the delinquent list for 1904. The-document from which it was taken, as now found in the Clerk’s Office of Kanawha County, is described as being a bound book, twenty or twenty-four inches long and about sixteen inches wide, and is designated the delinquent list for the year 1904, by a label or mark placed thereon.
The first thing on the exhibit is this incomplete caption: "List of property on the land book, for the County of Kana-wha — thereon or not ascertainable for the year 190..” Following that are the headings of columns for names of persons charged with taxes, the estates held, the quantities of land, the descriptions and locations of the land, the distances and bearings from the Court House and the different funds for which taxes are charged. Under the designation "Grand Recapitulation,” are the names of the magisterial districts, cities and towns of the county, opposite to which are columns of figures showing the aggregate amounts of taxes for which delinquent returns were made. This is followed by an affidavit admittedly made in the form prescribed by the statute. Lastly it sets forth what purports to be an attested copy of an order entered by the County Court of Kanawha County, on July 24, 1905, saying: "This day came J. A. Jarrett, Sheriff of this County, presented to'the Court a list of Real Estate, which is improperly placed on the Assessor’s Books, or is not ascertainable with the amount of taxes charged on such property for the year 1904, verified by his affidavit thereto appended, which said list being examined by the Court, and found to be correct, is therefore allowed. ’ ’
The statute contemplates three delinquent lists: (1) a list
As the statute does not authorize sale of lands returned in the first one of the three lists, but does authorize sale of those required to be returned in the second, the heading of the exhibit and the court order thereon certified are treated in the argument, as proof that only one list was returned, a list of lands improperly charged or not ascertainable, and that no list showing a return of lands delinquent for non-payment of taxes was made out and filed. Upon this assumption, it is contended that the list returned constituted no basis for a sale; that no list authorizing sale was preserved and recorded by the clerk; that no such list was presented to the County Court or examined by it; that no such list was certified to the Auditor by the clerk of the court; and that the Auditor did not certify to the sheriff, for sale, lands returned delinquent for non-payment of taxes, 'but did attempt to certify for sale lands improperly charged or not ascertainable.
Regular and accordant with statutory requirements, on its face, the tax deed is prima facie proof that all statutory provisions essential to a sale of the land thereby conveyed were complied with and that such title as it purports to convey vested in the grantee. Code, ch. 31, sec. 29. Hence, in every attack upon such a deed by the former owner of the land, he must affirmatively show, in order to prevail, that some essential step in the proceedings was omitted or some vitiating act performed. Hogan v. Piggoti, 60 W. Va. 541; Mosser v. Moore, 56 W. Va. 478; Duquasie v. Harris, 16 W. Va. 345. Recognizing this rule, the plaintiff has attempted to establish lack of a return of delinquency of the land in question for non-payment of taxes.
Though there may have been but one affidavit to the list from which the exhibit was taken, that fact does not disprove sufficiency of the list. Only one list of real estate may have been returned and that may have been one of lands delinquent for non-payment of taxes.
If the list returned was such as we have shown, a merely defective one, the defect therein would not justify vacation of the deed. It is expressly and clearly cured by see. 25 of ch. 31 of the Code, saying: “And no irregularity, error or mistake in the delinquent list, or the return thereof, or in the affidavit thereto, * ■ * * shall, after the deed is made, invalidate or affect the sale or- deed. ’ ’
Treated as the clerk’s certificate of the list to the Auditor, the attested copy of the court order is sufficient. A manifestly erroneous designation of the list in a clerk’s certificate could not change its character. It would correctly define itself by its contents, even though a single erroneous expression therein should be inconsistent therewith. The order or certificate says the list was presented, examined, found to be correct and allowed, and the erroneous designation thereof, in the case supposed, would be corrected by its true character as disclosed by its contents. The statute requires certification of copies of the lists, but it prescribes no form of certificate. A copy of the court order allowing the list is usually endorsed upon the original, copied with it for the certificate and recorded, but it can operate only as a certificate, for the
What has been said fully disposes of the contention that the Auditor’s certification of the lands in the list to the sheriff for sale, as being delinquent for non-payment of taxes, was unauthorized and invalid. What is relied upon as proof of return of a list on which a sale could not be predicated and certification thereof to the sheriff, is wholly insufficient for that purpose.
There is no proof that the county court did not approve and allow the list as one of lands returned for non-payment of taxes. Despite the attested copy endorsed on the exhibit, there may have been a court order so allowing it, and the proof does not negative its existence. The court ought not to be asked to infer non-existence thereof from the exhibit, because, if it does not exist, the fact could have been shown. Stout v. Sands, 56 W. Va. 662, 669. Strictly speaking, the attested copy should not have been on the original list. The order should have been sought in the order books of the court.
Nor is there clear evidence that the list was not properly recorded. Though one witness was made to say the original list was merely bound, instead of transcribed in a book, by assumption that it was, in questions propounded to him, he distinctly said there was a book in the office of the kind required by law to be kept for recordation of such lists. Another witness said the book from which the exhibit was taken was “a book such as we record the delinquent lists in each year.” Both describe it as a book labeled as the delinquent list for 1904, and say there was a book of that kind for each year. If what is claimed is true, it was susceptible of clear proof in less than a dozen words and the burden of proof thereof was on the plaintiff. It is .not the province of courts to raise out of equivocal expressions what is manifestly susceptible of positive proof if it exists. Stout v. Sands, cited.
The remaining inquiry is whether the land was sold at a time prescribed by law. If it was not and the fact appears
Sec. 6, eh. 31, Code, requires sale to be made “on the first day of the nest November or December term of the circuit or county court of the said county, whichever may be held first, after the posting of said list and the publication of said notice as herein required; or if no term of either court be held in said county in November or December, then on the second Monday in December next thereafter.” An exception is provided in these words: “If the lists herein named be not received by the sheriff in time to publish such notice and make such sale in the month of November or December, as herein provided for, then said sale shall be commenced on the first day of a circuit or county court for such county, whichever may be held first, in the year next after the publication of such notice of sale,” If the lists were not received in time to sell in November or December, within the meaning of these provisions, then the.second notice of sale, fixing upon Feb
Prom this conclusion it results that the sale was made on the day authorized by law, after due advertisement and posting of the list, and it is immaterial that there were mere purpose and preparation to sell on a different day.
Affirmed.