117 N.W. 777 | N.D. | 1908
Action to determine adverse claims to the SWji of the SWJ4 of section 25, in township 142 N., of range 58 W., in Barnes county. The complaint is in the statutory form. The defendant Seymour Granger alone answers. He denies generally the allegations of the complaint, and that plaintiff has ever been the owner of the land described, or any part thereof, and sets up various forms of defense under the statute of limitations. The only one material to be considered is that he claims title by reason of having occupied, possessed, and paid the taxes on the land continuously for more than ten years prior to the commencement of this suit under color of title by virtue of a tax deed based upon a sale for taxes of 1886; such deed having been issued on the 3d day of October, 1887, to one Bowdle, who quitclaimed to Granger on the 2d day of August, 1890, all his estate, right, title, interest, claim, property, and demand in and to said premises. This action was brought about May 12, 1905, and tried on the 17th day of February, 1906. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff, quieting the title in her, on the 10th day of March, 1906. The defendant appeals, and demands a review of the entire case by this court.
The findings do not materially assist us in determining what the trial court found to be the facts. They are in the main conclusions ■of law. More or less evidence was submitted on all of the defenses raised by the answer, but it is unnecessary to consider any except the one above set out. It is shown that this 40-acre tract of land was included in the grant of the United States to the Northern Pacific Railroad Company to aid in the construction of its line of road. Patent was issued to the railroad company August 22, 1884. November 10, 1879, the railroad company conveyed the premises to George Stiles and George C. Getchell. May 28, 1884, Stiles
Section 4928, Rev. Codes 1905, reads: “All titles to real property vested in any person or persons who have been or hereafter may be in actual, open, adverse and undisputed possession of the land under such title for a period of ten years, and shall have paid all' taxes and assessments legally levied thereon, shall be and the same-are declared good and valid in law, any law to the 'contrary notwithstanding.” This is the statute under which appellant makes his pricipal claim to title. It is shown by competent evidence that
The first question for determination Is whether the purchase at tax sale December 6, 1898, for the taxes of the year 1897, by the appellant, constitutes a payment within the meaning of the statute above quoted. Respondent urges that it is not a payment, and that the deed from Bowdle to appellant does not constitute such color of title as to bring appellant within the terms of the statute referred to. The appellant contends that it does constitute payment, and that the deed held by him is adequate title to sustain his defense. 'When the oversight occurred, and the land was accidentally sold to the appellant, he was in possession, claiming ownership, under his deed from Bowdle. It was his duty to pay the taxes. He had for many years recognized this duty, and had paid them each year, and continued to pay them subsequent to the sale. No question of good faith is involved. He held his certificate nine years after the sale without making application for a deed. The sale of land to the person claiming ownership and in possession, whose duty it is to pay the taxes, is void, and operates as a pay
¡It is equally clear to us that the deed from Bowdle to Granger constitutes color of title, and brings Granger within the terms of section 4928, supra. The facts are almost identical in this respect with those in Power v. Kitching, 10 N. D. 254, 86 N. W. 737, 88 Am. St. Rep. 691. There is no suggestion in the record of any lack of good faith on the part of Granger in his assumption that his deed gave him title at the time he purchased it. While it may be conceded that the tax deed to Bowdle conveyed no title, yet the deed was delivered, as was also the deed from Bowdle to Granger, before the decision in Power v. Larabee, 2 N. D. 141, 49 N. W. 724, was rendered by this court, and the fact that both
The only remaining question which we deem necessary to notice is whether certain conversations or negotiations, if they may be called that, between Granger and Stiles, constitute a recognition of title in Stiles in such a sense as to defeat the claim of Granger under the statute. The authorities on this question are numerous, and it may be admitted that they are not in harmony; but the fact that these negotiations, the evidence regarding the nature of which is conflicting, were not had until after the title had ripened under the statute in Granger, eliminates this question. Cannon v. Stockton, 36 Cal. 535, 95 Am. Dec. 205.
The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the title is quieted in the appellant, Granger, as against all claims of the respondent and persons claiming under her.