On the twentieth of November, 1871, Hannah J. Stanton acquired title to the property in question by conveyance from David Stanton, her husband. On the twenty-seventh of April following, she and her husband executed a mortgage on the property to Dennis & Keyes to secure an indebtedness of $408.30. Plaintiff afterwards became the owner of that note and mortgage, and in 1876 he brought suit thereon in the Madison circuit court, and recovered a judgment for the amount of the indebtedness, and for the foreclosure of the mortgage. On the tenth of October, 1872, the treasurer of the county executed to John McLeod a tax deed of the premises, under a sale for delinquent taxes, and on the twelfth of the same - month McLeod conveyed th'e premises to Francis Davis. On the twentieth of September, 1876, the Stantons executed to plaintiff a quit-claim deed, and on the twelfth of December, 1876, Davis executed to him a like conveyance. Those conveyances were intended to cover the property in question, but the description was defective, and on the tenth of February, 1880, Davis executed a second deed, intended to correct the mistake, but the description in that conveyance of the property was also defective. These conveyances were executed in pursuance of an agreement between Stanton and plaintiff, whereby the latter was to accept the premises in satisfaction of the debt secured by the Dennis & Keyes mortgage. On the fifteenth of September, 1875, Layton Jay recovered a judgment against David Stanton in the circuit court for $394.33, on which execution issued August 14, 1876, which was levied on the property, and the same was sold at sheriff ’ s sale, on the twenty-seventh of September following, to James Tumilty, to whom the sheriff executed a deed 'November 22; 1877, and on the twenty-fourth of February, 1880, Tumilty executed a conveyance
We are of the opinion that the plea of estoppel should be sustained. The relief demanded by plaintiff in the action against Thompson was the setting aside of the tax deeds and the quieting of his title to the property. His ownership was necessarily drawn in question ;
Affirmed.
