13 Ill. 716 | Ill. | 1852
This was an action of ejectment originally commenced by Merritt & Simmons against John P. Thompson, Elijah F. Wellington, and William Gooding, in the La Salle Circuit Court, to recover the possession of lot one, in block nineteen, in the town of Peru.
The cause was taken by change of venue to the county of Grundy, where the death of William Gooding, one of the defendants, was suggested, and, on motion, William C. Thompson, the landlord of the surviving defendants, was substituted as sole defendant in their place, on his giving security for the payment of such costs as might be awarded against him, and stipulating that he was in the actual possession of the premises sued for at the time of the commencement of the action, and that the depositions which had been taken in the cause might be read against him on the trial. This substitution was made against the consent of the plaintiffs, and they excepted to the opinion of the court allowing it to be done.
The defendant pleaded the general issue. On the trial the plaintiffs offered in evidence a certified copy of the record of a judgment of the Circuit Court of La Salle county, rendered at the November term, 1843, against the lot in question for the taxes, interest, and costs due thereon for the year 1842, and the precept issued upon said judgment. The defendant objected to the receiving of these papers in evidence, on the ground that the precept varied from the judgment, and the court sustained the objection. The plaintiffs also offered in evidence a sheriff’s deed to the lot to Onslow Peters, the assignee of the purchaser at the tax sale, which was objected to by the defendant and excluded by the court, on the ground that it showed a sale of the lot by the sheriff for a larger amount than was authorized by the judgment and precept, and that there was a variance between such deed and the judgment and precept. The plaintiffs then gave in evidence, without objection, a deed from Peters to themselves for the premises in controversy. The court found the issue for the defendant, and entered judgment against the plaintiff for costs.
Two questions are submitted by this record for our consideration :
First, was it error to substitute William C. Thompson as sole defendant, without the consent of the plaintiffs ?
Second, was there any such variance between the judgment, precept, and deed, as should have excluded them from being received in evidence ?
Upon the first point we think the court erred. When the premises are actually occupied, the statute requires the suit to be brought against the occupant; if not occupied, the action must be brought against some person exercising acts of ownership on the premises, or claiming title thereto or some interest therein. Rev. Sts. ch. 36, § 4. Section 36 of the same chapter authorizes the plaintiff, recovering judgment in ejectment, to recover damages against the defendant for the rents and profits of the premises, and in subsequent sections the mode of proceeding is prescribed. If the landlord of the occupant should happen to be a non-resident, and he is allowed to substitute his own name as defendant in the place of his tenant, how could the plaintiff recover for the rents and profits in case he was successful in the ejectment suit? The defendant, in such a case, would be beyond the reach of the process of the court, and it would consequently be impossible to proceed against him in the mode prescribed by the statute, while if the tenant in possession had remained defendant, the plaintiff would have had a remedy against him. The consequence of allowing a substitution of a different person from the one sued as defendant against the plaintiff’s consent, would often be to deprive the plaintiff of the remedy which the statute gives him for the rents and profits. It may be that the court has the right to allow a landlord to come in as a co-defendant with his tenant; or he can be permitted to defend in the name of the person sued, with such person’s assent; but there is no warrant in the statute for the substitution of his own name as defendant in the place of the person sued, as in this case, without the plaintiff’s consent, nor was such a practice tolerated at the common law. Adams on Ejectment, ch. 9; Emlin v. Hoops, 3 Serg. & Rawle, 130; Jackson v. Stiles, 1 Cow. 134.
The supposed variances between the judgment, precept, and sheriff’s deed, out of which arise the other questions in the case, and on account of which those papers were rejected when offered in evidence, all relate to costs. In other respects it is not pretended that there is any variance between the precept and judgment; and there is no variance between the judgment as recited in the deed, and for which the sale took place, and the one which was offered in evidence, if the costs are to be considered as included in the latter.
The judgment against the lot is for a tax of seven dollars and fifty cents; and annexed to the list of lands and other real estate, as described in the judgment, and immediately preceding the other parts of the judgment order, is this statement: “ Forty cents will be added to each town lot or tract of land as costs, in case of sale.”
The precept, as copied into the record, omits the statement as to costs, but, upon examination of the original process on which the sale took place, which, by agreement of the parties, has been brought before the court for its inspection, it is found to contain a true copy of the statement in the judgment as to costs. So that, in point of fact, there is no variance between the judgment and the process on which the land was sold. So far, therefore, as relates to those records or any variance between them, it is quite immaterial whether the statement as to costs is to be considered as part of the judgment or not. If it is regarded as part of the judgment, it will be so considered in the copy of the order on which the lot was sold. If it is not to be regarded as constituting part of the judgment against the lot in question in the judgment itself, no more will it be in the copy of the judgment which constituted the process; and it has already been decided that whether a judgment be for too much costs or not enough, cannot be made a question when the judgment comes collaterally in issue. Spellman v. Curtinius, 12 Ill. 414.
The deed to Peters recites a judgment against the lot in controversy for “ seven dollars and ninety cents, being the amount of taxes, interest, and costs assessed upon said tract of land for the year 1842.” It is insisted that this shows the sale of the lot to raise a larger sum than was authorized by the judgment, that the sheriff exceeded his authority in making a sale to raise $7.90, when the judgment against the lot was for only $7.50, and that therefore the sale was illegal and void. Numerous authorities have been referred to to establish the proposition that an officer, in the execution of a naked power conferred by statute, in derogation of the common law, must strictly pursue the power, and that any excess of authority by him will vitiate his proceedings. Of the principle of law we have no doubt, but the question here is, did the sheriff exceed his authority in making a sale for $7.90 ? The judgment was for a tax of $7.50, and contained a statement that, in case of sale, forty cents would be added to each town lot or tract of land, as costs. These two sums make the precise amount of $7.90 for which the land was sold, and which is stated in the deed to have been the amount of the judgment and costs. It is a maxim in law that that is certain which may be rendered certain, and there is no more difficulty, in legal contemplation, in ascertaining, from the statements in this judgment, the amount of costs assessed against each lot and tract of land contained in it, than there would have be,en if the sum of forty cents had been annexed to and carried out opposite each tract of land as the costs chargeable against the same. The statement in the judgment, at the foot of the list of lands, does in fact make it a judgment against each tract for forty cents costs, in addition to the amount of the tax. The amount of the costs to be collected is necessarily conditional, depending on the fact whether a sale takes place. If the taxes are paid before the sale, though after judgment, the owner is only required to pay the costs which have accrued up to that time. But admitting that the statement as to costs constitutes no part of the judgment against each tract of land, and still there is in reality no variance between the judgment offered in evidence and that recited in the deed. The judgment would then be for $7.50 tax and costs generally, without specifying the amount. This is the form in which judgments are entered in ordinary cases, and the clerk makes up the costs, which are then included in the execution which is issued on the judgment. This practice was sanctioned in the case of Bryan v. Smith, 2 Scam. 49.
In suits for taxes, when no defence is made, the law fixes the amount of the costs, and they are no more certain when the amount in numero is specified in the judgment than when it is not. If the amount of costs is not specified in the judgment, it then becomes the duty of the sheriff to tax them; and should he tax a larger amount than the law allows, and make a sale therefor, such sale would doubtless be void for the reason that he would exceed his authority in making a sale for costs not allowed by law. Suits for taxes may, however, be defended, and in such cases costs to a large amount may accumulate, which are to be charged to the particular tract of land on account of which they are made. No costs of this kind appear to have been made in the case under consideration; but suppose there had been such costs, would it be insisted that the amount must have been made out and inserted in dollars and cents opposite the'particular tract of land on account of which they were made, or would a general judgment for costs, leaving the amount to be afterwards taxed by the clerk, as in ordinary cases, have been sufficient 1 We apprehend that a judgment for costs generally, without specifying the amount, would be proper in such a case, and that such a judgment is proper in all cases of suits for taxes. In a legal sense, such a judgment is to be regarded as a judgment in numero against each lot or tract of land for the amount which the law authorizes to be taxed against it. In this case it is not pretended that the legal costs against the lot in controversy did not amount to forty cents. There was, therefore, no excess of authority in making the sale for $7.90, which was the exact amount of the taxes and costs due upon the lot; nor was there any variance in a legal point of view between the amount of the judgment, as recited in the deed and that specified in the record of the judgment offered in evidence, for the amount of the costs as fixed by the law and for which judgment was entered generally, when added to the amount of the tax as fixed by the judgment, makes the exact sum recited in the deed as the total amount of taxes and costs for which judgment was rendered.
On the argument, much stress was laid upon the forms prescribed by the statute for the collector’s report, the judgment of the court thereon, and the sheriff’s deed; also upon what the statute requires to be stated in the advertisement. “ The amount of taxes, interest, and costs due ” on the lands advertised for sale, is required to be stated in the notice. In the form given for the judgment, it is stated to be “ fop the sum annexed to each tract or parcel of land, being the amount of taxes, interest, and costs, due severally thereon.” In the form prescribed for the deed is a recital of a judgment, “ for the sum of dollars and cents, being the amount of taxes, interest, and costs assessed upon said tract of land,” <fec., and the consideration for the deed is stated to be “ the said sum of dollars and cents.” The form for the collector’s report also contains a column for costs. Acts 1838, 1839, pp. 12, 13, 14, and 17.
These provisions of the statute, taken by themselves, would seem to require that the whole amount of costs, attendant on the sale of a tract of land for taxes, should be included in the collector’s report, the advertisement, and the judgment, and that it should correspond in all three. In ordinary cases, and where no defence is made, this could be done; but at the time of giving notice of the intended application for judgment, which is required to state “ the amount of taxes, interest, and costs due on the land,” and also that the lands against which judgment is rendered will be exposed to sale “ for the amount of said taxes, interest, and costs due thereon,” it would be impossible to know what costs might be made by an unsuccessful defence by the owner of any tract of land. In the forms prescribed, the judgment is also said to be for the amount of the taxes, interest, and costs due on the land, and yet interest is never charged, nor does the statute make any provision for charging interest.
In ordinary cases, and when no defence is made, the costs could be as well made up before judgment as afterwards, and we have no doubt it would be a correct practice for the collector to tax and insert in his report and notice the whole amount of costs necessarily chargeable against each lot of land in case of sale, though the amount would of necessity be changed in the judgment, in case additional costs were incurred in an unsuccessful defence of the suit.
There are other provisions of the statute which seem to contemplate a taxation of costs after the judgment is entered. Section 35 of the act under which this sale took place, Acts 1838, 1839, p. 15, declares, that “in selling the said lands, the sheriff shall offer the whole tract or lot for sale, for the amount of taxes, interest, and costs thereon, including the fees hereinafter mentioned.” Why insert the words, “ including the fees hereinafter mentioned,” which evidently relate to the fees attendant on the sale of the land, if such fees were already included in the amount of the judgment for costs? Section 46, of the same act, declares, that “ persons paying taxes upon lands advertised for sale for taxes, or after judgment has been obtained, and previous to sale, shall be required to pay the costs of suit, and of advertising the same, and all other costs which may have accrued on said land under the provisions of this act, up to the time of such payment.” Here a distinction is drawn between the costs of suit, the cost of advertising, and other costs in the case.
These provisions of the statute evidently contemplate that there will be no judgment in numero for costs, which will embrace all the charges in case of sale. Hence we are inclined to hold, notwithstanding the forms prescribed in the statute, that it is not improper, in suits for taxes, to enter a judgment for costs generally, as in ordinary cases, and that when a judgment is thus entered, it is to be regarded in a legal sense as a judgment for such an amount of costs as are legally chargeable against the land, leaving it to the sheriff, or to the sheriff and clerk, in case defence be made, to tax the amount.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
- Judgment reversed.