21 S.W.2d 640 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1929
On January 6, 1921, the Commerce Trust Company filed a suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City, to enforce the lien of four special tax bills held by it which had been issued against the land in question by Kansas City on June 27, 1919, in which action the then record owners of the property described in the bills were made parties defendant. Summons was duly issued by the clerk of the court, returnable to the next term thereof and the sheriff returned the summons so issued nonest as to all of the defendants.
The tax bills sued on in that action provided that they should constitute a lien against the land therein described for two years after the date thereof and that suit must be brought to enforce the liens thereof within said period.
On December 27, 1923, the Commerce Trust Company filed suit in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, at Kansas City, to enforce the lien of four additional special tax bills issued by Kansas City against the land in question on July 29, 1919, naming as defendants the then record owners of the property described in the tax bills. The clerk of the circuit court duly issued summons thereon, returnable to the next term of court. The sheriff made anon est return thereon at the next term of court as to all of the defendants. *1233
The tax bills sued on in that action were each payable in four equal installments beginning June 30, 1920, and provided that the lien thereof should continue for one year after the maturity of the last installment.
No further effort was made by the Commerce Trust Company in either of these cases to procure service upon the defendants. No further process was issued and none of the defendants appeared. The cases remained upon the docket, and with the exception of the general order of continuance made at the end of each term by the court in all cases therein pending, no order was made in either of these cases.
In its answer and cross-petition filed in the case at bar, the Commerce Trust Company set out the tax bills described in these two actions, alleged the filing of said suits and asked to have the tax bills declared liens upon the land described in the plaintiff's petition which was the same property described in the tax bills held by the Commerce Trust Company.
The validity of the special tax bills held by the plaintiff McGrew and the defendant Standard Investment Company was not questioned. The only contention against the validity of the special tax bills held by the Commerce Trust Company was that they were barred by limitation, it being urged that the failure to have alias summons issue each term in the suits brought to enforce the liens of these tax bills by the Commerce Trust Company until service was finally obtained, operated as a discontinuance of the actions as a matter of law.
The learned trial court found the tax bills held by McGrew and the Standard Investment Company to be valid liens against the property in question. However, following the decision of this court in the case of Weaver v. Woodling,
The Supreme Court of Missouri in the recent case of Ferber v. Brueckl (decided May 18, 1929, but not yet reported), has expressly overruled the case of Weaver v. Woodling, supra, and the pronouncement therein that it is necessary to sue out analias summons each succeeding term until service is obtained upon the defendants in order to prevent the discontinuance of a cause, is no longer the law. In the Ferber case the rule is announced that where there is a non est return upon an original summons it is not necessary for the plaintiff, in order to keep the suit alive, to sue out successive writs of summons *1234 at interval terms, until the writs can be served. It follows, therefore, that the ruling of the trial court in the case at bar that the tax bills held by the Commerce Trust Company were barred by limitation was error.
The filing of the petitions to enforce the liens of the special tax bills held by the Commerce Trust Company within the time prescribed tolled the limitation. [State ex rel. Brown v. Wilson,
Inasmuch as the validity of the tax bills held by the Commerce Trust Company was not questioned in any other particular, it follows that they constitute liens upon the land therein described. However, the tax bills held by respondents McGrew and Standard Investment Company having been issued at a later date than those held by the Commerce Trust Company, constitute prior liens, it being the rule, with respect to the priority of tax bills liens in this State that "The first shall be last and the last shall be first." [Jaicks v. Oppenheimer,
This judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to enter a decree in conformity herewith. All concur, except Trimble, P.J., absent.