25 Colo. App. 296 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1913
rendered the opinion of the court.
On December 27,1909, appellee as plaintiff instituted an action against defendants to quiet title to land in Yuma county. Plaintiff recovered judgment, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
Defendants’ answer pleads seven defenses, namely: (1) General denial; (2) title under tax deed recorded April 22, 1901; (3) the short statute of limitations, sec. 3904, Mills’ Annotated Statutes; (4) decree of the county court of Yuma county quieting title to the land in defendants’ grantors as against appellee, who was defends ant in the county court proceedings; (5) the seven years’ statute of limitations, based upon color of title made in good faith to vacant and unoccupied land, and payment of all taxes legally assessed thereon for seven successive years, sec. 4090, Revised Statutes 1908; (6) laches of plaintiff in not instituting his action to quiet title at an earlier day; (7) the failure of plaintiff, before beginning this suit, to make tender of all taxes paid by defendants.
This appeal can be speedily determined, as substantially fill the objections urged by appellants to the proceedings in the trial court have been heretofore passed upon adversely to their contentions, by either our supreme court or this court.
As to the second defense, the tax deed, pleaded by defendants to .defeat plaintiff’s cause of action was not offered in evidence at the trial in proof of their title. It was offered by them, however, and admitted without objection, as color of-title only. By not offering in evidence the tax deed as proof of the tax- title pleaded,' defendants wholly failed to establish that defense. Appellants say that appellee made no attempt to prove any defects in the tax deed, and, as the law presumes a.tax. deed to be, valid unless defects appear therein, appellants’ title will be conclusively presumed to-be established,.etc. Even if we for .a moment concede appellants’ reasoning to.be sound,, we at once discover, by an inspection of the tax deed,- that .it is void on its face for several, reasons, one of which is that the land had been bought by the county at the sale, and the county clerk assigned the certificate of\sale more than three years thereafter. This fact appeared on the face of the deed. It is unnecessary to cite authorities in this jurisdiction which hold such deeds, to b.e;.void o-n- their face. Both the supreme 'court and tiffs court'have, heretofore .held that under issues- such-as here
As to the third defense, pleading the short statute of limitations, supra, in bar of plaintiff’s cause of action, it is settled in this state, that in this kind of an action the same is not available as a.plea in bar. — Munson v. Marks, 52 Colo., 553, 124 Pac., 187; Carnahan v. Hughes, 53 Colo., 318, 125 Pac., 116; Empire R. & C. Co. v. Mason, 22 Colo. App., 612, 126 Pac., 1129.
The fourth defense pertains to the county court decree of Yuma county. A certified copy of this decree was offered in evidence at the trial and objected'to by plaintiff, for the reason that the- same was offered in proof of title without the judgment roll. The objection was sustained. This was not error. — McLaughlin v. Reichenbach, 52 Colo., 437, 122 Pac., 47.
The fifth défense was founded upon the seven years’ statute of limitations above mentioned. The tax deed was recorded April 22, 1901. The first taxes paid thereafter by defendants were paid in 1902, for the year 1901, followed by payment of taxes, by them, for the years 1903-4-5-6. The payment in 1902 of the taxes of 1901 cannot be counted as payment of taxes for one of the seven successive years mentioned in the statute. — Evans v. Howell, 23 Colo. App., 219, 122 Pac., 47. It is clear, therefore, that defendants did not pay the taxes-for seven successive years under color of title, which was only' obtained upon recording of the deed on April 22, 1901, and that the defense failed of proof.
■The sixth defense, pleading laches of plaintiff, is not tenable. Plaintiff proved fee simple title in himself from the government. It is admitted that the land, during all the tiine' subsequent to the' recording df' the tax dédcí'
The seventh defense, founded upon plaintiff’s failure to tender to defendants the taxes and interest paid by them, prior to the beginning of this suit, cannot be upheld. — Empire R. & C. Co. v. Lanning, 49 Colo., 458, 113 Pac., 491; Empire R. & C. Co. v. Irwin, supra.
The foregoing observations dispose of this appeal adversely to appellants. We find nothing in the record justifying a reversal. The judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment Affirmed.