66 W. Va. 1 | W. Va. | 1908
DISSENTING OPINION.
(dissenting):
I do not concur in the decision, and there is much of the opinion in which I do not concur. The opinion underrates and discredits and casts doubt over much law of good standing long-prevalent constituting rules of real property.
Can the State maintain a bill under Code 1899, chapter 105, to sell land as forfeited for omission in the former owner’s name from the tax books after a sale for taxes to an individual, whose deed is void for defects in the sale, when the tax-purchaser has paid taxes in his own name for the same years in which it was omitted in the former owner’s name?
Cases cited in State v. Harman, 57 W. Va. 447, say that a tax sale breaks up the line of title, creates a new title. I cite also Cooley on Taxation 960, and Hefner v. N. W. Ins. Co., 123 U. S. 751, upon the Iowa statute similar to ours, as stated in the Harman Case. I add that in Rich v. Braxton, 158 U. S. 375, the tax-purchaser claimed that he could take the benefit of
Dnder these authorities the state may claim another title even against her solemn grant. Why, then, logically, can she not claim the better title against a void title under a mere tax sale ? That is no grant by her. The state bought land for taxes. It was put on the tax books, and later sold to an individual. She was held not estopped by the void sale. Totten v. Nighbert, 41 W. Va. 800.
Certain cases are cited to establish estoppel against the state. Cases can be found for everything. Commonwealth v. Andre, 3 Pick. 224. The state it w.as held could not declare her grant void only because the grantee was an alien. That is different. It was not a question whether she could set up a different title, but whether she could impeach that very deed. Besides, in that case the grant was made by the Legislature — that particular grant. Commowealth v. Pejepscut, 10 Mass. 155, was an act of the Legislature that a certain monument was a monument in an Indian deed. Held that this act of the Legislature barred the state from disputing it. This was statute law. Counsel does not seem to rely pointedly on the theory of estop-pel, but contract. He says the state and tax-purchaser made a contract. It was that if the owner should not redeem, the purchaser should have a deed from a public officer. I do not say that an explicit contract does not estop the state; but this is not a contract in such sense. The state simply used legal procedure provided by statute to enforce a lien. Does a creditor make a contract when he sells land or personalty to enforce his lien by decree or execution? I think not.' Likely he could not say his process was void; but could he not set up adverse title to the thing sold? In Forqueran v. Donnally, 7 W. Va. 114, it is said that the sale of land for taxes makes a civil contract between state and purchaser which the state cannot impair. That was a sale in 1860. The law then provided for a deed to the purchaser. A statute repealed that section of the Code, leaving no law to make a deed for land sold that year; but a
But for Simpson v. Edmiston, cited. and other cases, holding the former owner’s title distinct from that of the tax-purchaser, and that the former owner’s title could not be saved by payment of taxes by the tax-purchaser, this difficulty would not exist. It is argued, however, that it is only the former owner who can use that case to show forfeiture, not the state. If there is forfeiture for one purpose, why not for all? The bad tax deed left title in the state. That is forfeited and vested in the state. How can it go from the state to the tax-purchaser? By what process? Does the tax deed do so at the end of five years from the sale ? It did not pass title at its date. It is not the state’s deed. If it is, it has no warranty. At its date the state had not yet acquired title. A quit claim deed would not pass after acquired title. The trouble is the decisions say that the state has one title; the tax-purchaser another.
To hold that the state cannot have a bill to sell such land we must overrule Simpson v. Edmiston, 23 W. Va. 675; State v. Sponaugle, 45 Id. 415; State v. McEldowney, 54 Id. 695; State v. Harman, 57 Id. 447 and Bryant v. Grove, 42 Id. 10. The only way in which the tax purchaser can get the title is by possession and payment of taxes under the first or third class of Article 13.
The Constitution says “it shall be the duty of every oioner of land to have it entered on tire land books.” As the tax deed is void, the purchaser does not become “owner,” but the owner still remains owner. The tax-purchaser is not owner. Nor is he in privity with the owner, even if his deed be valid, since he holds a distinct and hostile title according to law above cited and in State v. Harman, 5 S. E. p. 833. If payment by the tax-purchaser keeps the land from forfeiture his payment pays for the old owner, and destroys himself, because by his very pay
The purchaser under a void tax deed is not “owner” under the Constitution. He could not take title from the owner. Even if his deed were good, he holds not the former title, but a different new one; but how can it be said at all that he holds, or gets, or can claim in privity with, the title of the former owner, when his tax deed is null and void and passes nothing?
A test of, want of privity occurring to me is this: Can a purchaser under a void tax sale tack his possession to that of the former owner for the necessary period of adverse possession ? I think not, for that requires privity. Could even one claiming under a valid deed? A lien against the former owner is gone.
The opinion of - the Court bases on section 29, chapter 31, Code. That is its ground. That section says that a tax deed shall be p-ima facia evidence against the state, that “such estate as is mentioned in the twenty-fifth section of this chapter vested in the grantee in the deed;” that is, that all the title in the former owner vested; but the decision and opinion say that it is conclusive upon the state. No matter that the tax deed was void and passed no title, it is conclusive on the state to prove that it passed the former owner’s title. The Constitution says that title is in the state by forfeiture and must be sold; but in steps section 29 and gives -it to the tax-purchaser by an iron bound estoppel; one says title is in the state, the other operates to say it is not. My position is, that a void tax deed gives no title by common law; but by this section prima fade it does, but the state may prove the contrary. Now, when the state proved that this land was omitted from the tax books in the former owner’s name, and that the tax sale was void, that vest-
Before chapter 130, Acts 1882, section 29 did not apply to the state; it gave the deed no prima facie force against the state, and it did not contain the last clause saving its right to set aside a tax deed; but chapter 22,.Acts 1887, included the State, making such deed prima facie evidence against it; but for caution, perhaps needless, it at the same time reserved right to the state to repel the prima facie case. The fact that ‘for the first time the deed was made prima facie against the state, shows it was also the purpose, by the last clause, to put in a proviso to save the state right to assail a tax deed like a natural person. The argument is made that until 1887 no law
The law required one claiming under a tax sale to prove regularity in every step. Tax titles generally failed under this rigid requirement. The purchaser must prove assessment, delinquency, publication of sale notice, that the officer was sheriff, and that the land was sold and a survey made. This statute was passed to dispense with such full proof of preliminaries by making the deed prima facie good, but never to bind anybody by an iron rule of conclusion. Dequasie v. Harris, 16 W. Va. 345. That case says this section must be construed strictly; this case gives it ultra liberal construction.
I have above spoken of section 29, chapter 31, as found in the' editions of the Code published in 1887, 1891, 1899 and 1906, if that section as in those Codes applies to the void tax deed made in 1869. That section as found in the Code of 1868 was the law in force when the void tax sale took place. Iiow is it under that section? It made the tax deed prima facie evidence against the former owner, • “and conclusive evidence against all other persons,” of certain things. It did not include the state as bound by such prima facie evidence, and I assert that the state could not be bound by it, .unless expressly mentioned. It is not claimed that the state is included in that prima facie clause; but the greater claim is made that the state is a “person” under the other clause, and that the deed is not merely prima facie, but conclusive evidence against it. I deny this. The state is not a person meant and intended by that clause. Why call it a “person?” Why bar the public right and title except by the express mention of the state? It has always been held that the state is not bound by a statute of limitation without express provision that it shall be so bound. Why shall the state be bound under this statute any more than by the statute of limitations? As shown above a tax deed is by common law neither a warranty nor an estoppel against the
I am gratified, as relieving a hardship, that the majority see their way to the decision made; but how as to the law to sustain it?