91 N.W. 1072 | Iowa | 1902
Section 1448 of the Code provided that no action for the recovery of real property sold for the nonpayment of taxes shall be brought after five years from the execution and recording of the 1. TAX sale: treasurer's deed, etc. Under this section, it has statute of been held that the statute begins to run at the limitations. time when the tax-sale purchaser might have obtained his deed, *328
— that is, three years from the date of sale, — and that, if no action is brought by such purchaser within five years thereafter, the tax title is extinguished. Innes v. Drexel,
One Lumsdon went into the possession of the property, claiming to be the owner thereof, in the year 1876. Beckwith, his immediate grantor, built the house thereon, and conveyed the property to Lumsdon by warranty deed dated April 26, 1877. Lumsdon claimed to own the property during all the time he was in possession, and Beckwith, his grantor, held a deed for the same, and claimed to own it before he sold to Lumsdon. June 9, 1879, Lumsdon conveyed the land to defendant Munzenmaier, who went into possession in 1878 or 1879, and has since been in the actual, notorious, and exclusive occupancy thereof, under color of title and claim of right. So that at the time the land was sold for taxes, which was in December, 1887, and at all time thereafter, defendants Munzenmaier and their grantors were in the adverse possession of the land, and this possession was continuous for the full statutory period. Appellant says in response to this that there is no evidence that Lumsdon's possession was under claim of right or color of title. The record, however, does not support this contention. On the contrary, it shows that Lumsdon claimed to be the owner during all the time he was in possession of the 3. POSSESSION property; and as the record shows a deed from deed under a deed from Beckwith to him under date of April 26, deed. 1877, his possession is presumptively, at least, referable to that deed. So that we have not only possession under claim of right, but also under color of title. It matters not that 4. ADVERSE plaintiff does not trace title in Beckwith from possession: the general government. The deed, color of title. although made by one having no authority to convey, is sufficient to support a claim of adverse possession, provided such possession is in good faith. We are not, of course, to be understood as holding that the general statute of limitations will run against the government. That question is in no way involved in this appeal. *331
Appellants further suggest that Lumsdon may have been a lessee. There is no evidence that he was, and we may as well assume that he was a bare licensee. Finding a deed to him from Beckwith, the law will presume that he was in possession under the deed. The thought that he may have been in possession as a lessee is a pure assumption, devoid of support in the evidence.
II. Assuming, for the purposes of the case, that plaintiff and Munzenmaier must show that they paid all taxes on the land after the tax deed was issued, it is sufficient to say, in answer to appellant's contention, that we find all taxes due the state and county were paid, except the tax for the year 1900, which matured — the first installment — in March of the year 1901. The cross-petition was filed September 7, 1900, and appellees filed their original answer, pleading the short period of limitations as against the tax deed, October 9, 1900. On January 29, 1901, they filed a substituted answer and cross-petition, and on this the case was tried. Under the statute they might have paid the taxes on the land, or the first installment thereof, at any time after the first Monday in January, but they were not required to do so. As there were no taxes due when appellees filed their first pleading, and they were not in default when the amended and substituted answer and cross-petition was filed, there seems to be no merit in the proposition relied upon to defeat their claim. Appellant says there is no evidence that all prior taxes were paid. This is a mistake. Munzenmaier expressly stated that he had paid all taxes on the land. True, he did not produce tax receipts 5. PAYMENT for all, but his uncontradicted testimony as to of taxes: payments is sufficient, in the absence of evidence of. evidence to the contrary. There is much doubt in our minds regarding the necessity of any showing as to the payment of taxes by appellees. They are relying simply and solely on the statute of limitations, — a statute of repose, — and are not attacking the *332
tax deed. Under such circumstances, it seems to have been held that nonpayment of taxes is an immaterial matter. Brett v. Farr,
III. Another point made by appellants is that appellees should not recover because they failed and neglected to offer to repay the taxes paid by appellants and their grantors. Appellees, as we have seen, are relying on the bar of the statute against the tax deed, and in such a case they are not required to reimburse the holder. Appellants are defeated because of their laches, and are in no position to say that, in any event, appellees should reimburse them for taxes paid. Appellees are not asking to redeem, and are under no obligations to appellants because of taxes paid by them in the purchase of the tax certificate.
IV. Lastly, it is insisted that appellees are guilty of such laches as that they should not be heard to attack the tax deed. We hardly think appellants' counsel is serious in this contention. 7. TAX deed: Appellees have been in the undisturbed laches: evidence possessionof the land for nearly twenty-five of. years, and the delay, as it seems to us, has been on the other side. Defendants' grantor did not take his tax deed for nearly two years after he was entitled to receive it. For nearly four years thereafter he neglected to record it. Knowing that appellees were in possession of the property, neither he nor his grantees did anything to disturb them until more than four years after the deed was recorded. If there is any laches in the case, it is on the part of the appellants. Indeed, that alone would seem to be good ground for defeating their action. Their claim is stale and without substantial merit, and the decree is AFFIRMED.
BISHOP, J., took no part.
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