180 Mo. 658 | Mo. | 1904
This is an appeal from an order overruling a motion to set aside a sheriff’s sale of real estate for delinquent taxes.
The facts are: that the relator, as city collector of Webb City, brought suit against the defendants, to re
The primary question in this case is whether this court has jurisdiction thereof.
The action of the Kansas City Court of Appeals was justified by the decision of this court in McAnaw v. Matthis, 129 Mo. 142, but the question presents itself whether that case properly declared the law.
McAnaw v. Matthis, supra, was an appeal from an order sustaining a motion to set aside a sale of real estate by a sheriff under an execution upon a judgment, rendered in a personal action, begun before a justice of the peace, and appealed to the circuit court, where the appeal was dismissed for failure to give a new appeal bond. The Kansas City Court of Appeals transferred that case to this court on the ground that title to real estate was involved. This court so stated, and disposed of the question by simply saying, “In which opinion we coincide.”
Now it is clear that title to real estate cannot be involved in a personal action begun before a justice of the peace, to recover $217 from the defendant. A justice of the peace has no jurisdiction of an action which involves title to real estate. In certain cases a justice of the peace has jurisdiction in cases which seek to fasten a lien on real estate, but such cases necessarily presuppose that the title is in the defendant, and the object and purpose of the suit is to fasten a lien on it as the property of the defendant. McAnaw v. Matthis, was not even a suit to fasten a lien on real estate. It was a plain action, in personam, to recover a debt, and did not involve title to real estate in any sense whatever.
The question of when title to real ehtate is involved
In Balz v. Nelson, 171 Mo. l. c. 687, the question of when title to real estate is involved Vas considered, and it was there said: '
“The primary question in this case is whether this court has jurisdiction. It is a bill in equity to declare fraudulent and void the deeds of Neis and Sophie Nelson to Emma Decker, and from Emma Decker to Sophie Nelson, and for an order of sale of the real estate to satisfy the plaintiff’s judgment. Those deeds are muniments of title. They constitute the public record which declares to the world that the title is in Sophie Nelson. Without them, the title would in fact and according to the record be in Neis Nelson. The judgment to be rendered, if the plaintiffs succeed, will therefore strike down and cut out, root and branch, these muniments of title, and the effect of a judgment in plaintiff’s favor will be to divest the title out of Sophie Nelson and revest it in Neis Nelson. The fact that after this is done the land can be sold as the land of Neis Nelson to satisfy the plaintiffs’ judgment, does not change the character of the action, nor take out of the case the main issue in controversy, to-wit, the question whether the land belongs of right, as to these creditors, to the wife or the husband, nor does the fact that if the husband should pay the plaintiff’s judgment and thereby take away the plaintiff’s right to question or controvert the title that is now in Mrs. Nelson, affect the matter. No such issue is raised, and no such condition presented in this case. The only controverted issue is over the title. The subsequent sale of the land will follow of course if the deeds that vested the title in Mrs. Nelson are set aside and the title is thereby revested in Neis Nelson. The title to real estate is thereby directly and necessarily involved in this case, and therefore the appellate jurisdiction is in this court,
“If the suit was simply to establish or enforce a special taxbill, or a mechanics’ or vendor’s lien or any other kind of a lien, the title to real estate would not be involved. [State ex rel. v. Court of Appeals, 67 Mo. 199; Corrigan v. Morris, 97 Mo. 174; Bobb v. Wolff, 105 Mo. 52; Syenite Granite Co. v. Bobb, 97 Mo. 46; Baier v. Berberich, 77 Mo. 413; Bailey v. Winn, 101 Mo. 649.] And the reason is that in all such cases the 'title is necessarily conceded to be in the defendant,-for otherwise the plaintiff would not be entitled to a lien • against the land in that suit, and therefore no judgment that could be rendered in the case could divest the title out of the defendant. The result of the establishment of the lien on the land and the sale of the land to satisfy the judgment might be that the defendant would lose the land, but the same is true in every case of a judgment against one who owns land. In such case the title to the land passes as the legal result of a sale on execution to satisfy the judgment, but the judgment itself rendered in the case does not strike down a muniment of title, or ipso facto and without any execution, divest title from the defendant. ’ ’
The question of when title- to real estate is involved was again considered and the former adjudications col
“As to respondent’s first contention it is only necessary to say that while the subject-matter of the controversy in that suit grew out of the alleged transactions between the parties in the sale and transfer of the lands in Carter, Wayne and Butler bounties, the title to those lands was not involved in the controversy. It was purely and simply a suit in equity operating in personam upon the defendants. That the court had jurisdiction of the persons of the defendants and of the subject-matter of the controversy between them is manifest upon the face of the statement. The only thing that is urged, giving any countenance to the contention
In view of the rules so laid down in the later cases, it follows that McAnaw v. Matthis, 129 Mo. 142, was improperly decided, and, therefore, it is hereby overruled in so far as it touches upon the question of the jurisdiction of this court and upon the question of when title to real estate is involved.
It also follows from the premises that title to real estate is not involved in this case and therefore this court has no jurisdiction.
The reason whereof is plain. This is an action to collect back taxes. The suit necessarily assumes that the title to the land is in the defendants. The purpose of the suit is not to divest title out of the defendants, but to enforce the lien of the taxes on the land, and to sell the land to satisfy the judgment. The plaintiff does not claim any title to the land. He seeks only to charge it with a lien. The enforcement of the judgment by a sale under the execution, may have effect to pass the title to some one other than the defendants, but that does not make the case one which involves title to real estate, anymore than any judgment in personam, enforced by execution, would involve title.
This court has no jurisdiction of the cause, and it is therefore remanded to the Kansas City Court of Appeals.