12 Kan. 283 | Kan. | 1873
This was an action for the recovery of real property. In 1858, David A. Williams purchased the Hand in controversy from the United States, John W. Russell furnished the purchase money therefor. Afterwards Williams mortgaged .the property to Russell to secure the payment of said purchase money, but also, on the same day, deeded pne half of the property to his wife, Mary Williams. Afterwards the mortgage was foreclosed by Russell against Williams and his wife, and the land sold on the mortgage judgment to Stinson & Havens to satisfy said judgment. Afterwards, on the nineteenth of June, 1863, the sheriff, in pursuance of said judgment and sale, and the confirmation of said sale, executed and delivered a deed for said property to said Stinson & Havens. The title of Stinson & Havens then passed by regular deeds of conveyance, through several intermediate purchasers, until it arrived at the defendant in this case, Walters, who now claims to own and hold said land under said Stinson & Havens. Walters had been in possession of the property for three years before the commencement of this suit; had made lasting and valuable improvements thereon to the amount of $4,000;,
*1. We suppose a married man may convey real estate directly to his wife, where it is right and equitable that he should do so, and where such conveyance does not interfere with the rights and equities of third persons. Going v. Orns, 8 Kan. *85; Blake v. Blake, 7 Iowa, 46; Wright v. Wright, 16 Iowa, 496; Wilder v. Brooks, 10 Minn. 50, (Gil. 32;) Putnam v. Bicknell, 18 Wis. 51; Johnson v. Stillings, 35 Me. 427. Such a deed, though void at common law, is good in equity. The plaintiff, however, can claim nothing in this case under the deed from Williams to his wife. The deed seems to have been a voluntary conveyance, without consideration, executed November 9, 1858, and never recorded. The mortgage, on the other hand, was executed to secure the purchase money for the property. It was executed November 9,1858, and recorded November 10,1858. Besides, the wife’s interest in said property, whatever it may have been, was barred and foreclosed by the mortgage judgment in October, 1862, and the subsequent proceedings thereon, and therefore she had nothing to convey in 1872, when she and her husband executed said deed to the plaintiff.
2. The sheriff’s deed was good and valid upon its face. The deed did “recite the execution, or the substance thereof, and the names of the parties, the amounts, and date of term of rendition of the judgment,” in accordance with the statutes then in force. Comp. Laws, 199, § 450. The word “recite,” as used in said statute, does not mean to copy or to repeat verbatim, but only to state the substance of the execution, etc. In this connection see Armstrong’s Lessee v. McCoy, 8 Ohio, 128; Perkins' Lessee v. Dibble, 10 Ohio, 433.
3. It was competent for the sheriff to sell said property by his under-sheriff, who is merely a general deputy, (Comp. Laws, 423, § 70,) and afterwards, when the sale was confirmed by the court, to execute the deed himself. It is not required under our laws that the same
*4. At the time said mortgage was executed (in 1858) there was no law authorizing a redemption of land from a sheriff’s sale; and the law of Jane 4, 1861, (Comp. Laws, 769,) cannot have a retrospective operation so as to apply to said mortgage. Bixby v. Bailey, 11 Kan. *359; Thorne v. San Francisco, 4 Cal. 127,139-142; Cargill v. Power, 1 Mich. 369. Besides, the decree in the foreclosure suit in terms barred all right of redemption, and this was binding upon all parties and privies, even if erroneous, and cannot now ■be attacked collaterally. Mills v. Ralston, 10 Kan. *206.
5. No objection was made to the introduction of the sheriff’s deed in evidence because it was not properly acknowledged, or because no preliminary proof of its due execution was first introduced; and hence we shall entertain no such objection made for the first time now. Walker v. Armstrong, 2 Kan. *199, *226; Wilson v. Fuller, 9 Kan. *176, *186; Kansas Pac. Ry. Co. v. Pointer, 9 Kan. *620, *627. The objections to the introduction of the deed in evidence, and there were many, were all for other reasons. The execution of the deed was acknowledged by the sheriff before the clerk of the district court, and the only defect suggested is that the clerk failed to state in the certificate of acknowledgment that the sheriff teas personally hiown to him. We do not understand that the plaintiff claims that this defect would render the deed void as a conveyance, if it were in all other respects sufficient. Neither do we think that this alone could render the deed void. Even if there had been no acknowledgment, still we suppose the deed would nevertheless be valid. Code 1862, § 450; Comp. Laws, 354, c. 41; Simpson v. Mundee, 3 Kan. *172, *181. Neither do we understand that the plaintiff claims to be an innocent and bona fide purchaser of the property in controversy. Even if the certificate of the acknowledgment of said deed, and the registry thereof, were both void, still, as the defendant was in possession of said property long before the plaintiff purchased the same, the plaintiff was bound to take notice of the defendant’s rights.
6. We do not deem it necessary to answer the third question of the plaintiff in error. We would say, however, that the five-year statute of limitations of 1868 (Code, § 16, sub. 1) has no application to this case.
7. The real question presented by the plaintiff’s fourth interrogatory is not whether the record introduced in evidence by the plaintiff is sufficient to sustain the sheriff’s deed, but it is whether such record is sufficient to invalidate said deed. The deed was first introduced by the defendant, and was presumptively valid. Shields v. Miller, 9 Kan. *390, *396, *397; Bartlett v. Feeney, 11 Kan. *593. The plaintiff then introduced this record to show that the deed was not
8. The affidavit for service by publication states “that service of summons cannot be made within the state of Kansas on the defendants David A. Williams and Mary Williams; that the case is one of those mentioned in section 78 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to-wit, suit for the foreclosure of a mortgage upon real estate situate and being in said county of Brown, ” etc. This is almost the exact language of the statute. The statute reads as follows: “Before service can be made by publication, an affidavit must be filed that service of summons cannot be made within this territory [state] on the defendant or defendants to be served by publication, and that the case is one of those mentioned in the preceding section, [section 78.] When such affidavit is filed, the party may proceed ,to make service
9. We think, therefore, that it clearly appears from the affidavit-that the defendants w'ere non-residents of the state of Kansas; and this makes the affidavit sufficient when attacked collaterally. This affidavit was made and filed July 9, 1862. This suit was commenced February 16, 1872, nearly ten years thereafter. Under the circumstances of this case we think we ought to give the most liberal construction possible to said affidavit, so as to hold it, and all the subsequent proceedings thereon, valid. All the equities of the case are-on that side, and not a solitary equity that we can perceive is on the other side.
10. The action to foreclose said mortgage was in its nature a proceeding in rem. The court never obtained jurisdiction of the persona of the defendants, but only of the mortgaged property. This jurisdiction it obtained by virtue of the publication of the notice in the newspaper. This kind of service can only be had after the filing of an affidavit for service by publication. Comp. Laws, 1862,136, § 79; Code 1868, *§ 73. This affidavit is as requisite as the filing-of a petition. And probably it is no more necessary that the-affidavit should be true in order to obtain service by publication, than it is that the petition should be true in order to obtain any kind of service. Either, if valid upon its face, would authorize a valid judg
11. A person who has purchased land from the government of the