National Bank v. Baker Hill Iron Co.

108 Ala. 635 | Ala. | 1895

HEAD, J.,

This is a common law action of ejectment against the Baker Hill Iron Co., the demise to plaintiff being laid in different lessors in the various counts of the complaint. The plaintiff’s title was founded upon a sale for taxes of the premises in controversy and a deed made thereunder. It was also claimed that plaintiff’s lessors had acquired title by adverse possession. The judgment entry recites that the plaintiff suffered a voluntary non-suit on account of adverse rulings of the court below on the pleadings, but the bill of exceptions declares that it was rendered necessary by the court’s action excluding from the jury the tax deed, and the various proceedings culminating , in a tax sale, on which the deed was based. The cause is submitted here on the merits and on a motion to strike from the record the bill of exceptions and also two papers purporting to be extensions of time for filing a bill of exceptions.

*6381. Tlie motion to strike must be denied on tbe authority of Mobile & Birmingham Railroad Co. v. Worthington, 95 Ala. 598. The precise question here made was raised in that case and decided adversely to the contention of appellee. We adhere to that opinion.

2. If the recital in the judgment entry, that the non-suit was taken inconsequence of the'rulings of the court on the pleadings, stood alone, the appeal could not be sustained. It is shown, however, by the bill of exceptions, that 1hesnon-suit was suffered on account of the exclusion of certain evidence from the jury. There being a conflict in this-regard between the judgment entry and the bill of exceptions, as to matters of which the bill ought to speak, the rule is well settled that the recitals of the bill must be taken as true. — Hurst v. McWhorter, 72 Ala. 336 ; McDonald v. Jacobs, 77 Ala. 524.

3. It has been so frequently held, that, where a non-suit is suffered and a bill of exceptions taken, as authorized by section 2759 of the Code, the revisory power of this court is limited to those rulings and decisions which are the proper matter of a bill of exceptions and does not extend to rulings on pleadings which of necessity form parts of the record, that no citation of authority is required in support of the proposition. The question has been so often and so uniformly decided that we ought not to be called on to decide it again. We are put to the necessity of once more saying, however, that the .assignments of error which are directed to the court’s rulings on the demurrers cannot be considered on this appeal .

4. There can be no sort of doubt that the tax sale and deed under which plaintiff claims wore absolutely void for the reason that the assessment and sale were not made incompliance with the statutory requirements. The proceedings were had under the revenue law of 1868. Acts of 1868, p. 297. The assessment in question was made by the tax assessor to “owner unknown,” for the years 186.7, 1868 and 1869, and embraced a great many pieces of property, none of which were valued separately, as required by section 33 of the act", but all were assessed at one gross valuation. Furthermore, section 63 of the same act provides that the advertisement of sale by tax collector shall state the amount of taxes due for each year, on the real estate to be sold. This was not *639complied with in the present case, the advertisement making no mention whatever of the amount of taxes due. Finally, the property was not offered for sale by sections or parts of sections, as required by section 79, but was sold en masse, though there were many different and disconnected subdivisions of sections. In all of these essential particulars, and in other respects, perhaps, there was a plain departure from the requirement of the statute, and the sale was thereby rendered invalid. As we have heretofore said, without a rigid adherence to the directions and f nuns of the statute, the sale is void and the owner is not divested of his title or estate. Johnson v. Harper in MSS., 18 So. Rep. 198, decided at last term ; Dowe v. Glennon, 72 Ala 160 ; Oliver v. Robinson, 58 Ala. 46 ; Clarke v. Rowan, 53 Ala. 400 ; Childress v. Calloway, 76 Ala. 128.

5. The tax deed, though void as we have shown, would have been competent evidence, as color of title, to mark the boundaries and extent to the purchaser’s possession, if there had been any evidence that he entered and claimed under it, but we find no such evidence in the record. There is nothing to show that he was ever in possession of the premises sued for. The tax deed was made to A. F. Tomlin who was the purchaser at the sale. He afterwards sold and conveyed the premises to the Stonewall Iron Co., which by its agents, entered upon the premises, claiming them as its own. This entry and claim were made, however, under the deed from Tomlin to Stonewall Iron Co.,' which of itself was enough to designate the limits of the possession claimed. Tomlin having acquired no interest under the tax deed, and having never been in possession, conveyed absolutely nothing by his deed, and hence the tax deed to him could form no part of-the Stonewall Hon Company’s muniment of title. It follows, therefore, that the action of the court in excluding from the jury the tax sale proceedings and the tax deed, on account of which the plaintiff suffered a non-suit, was free from error, and the judgment must be affirmed.