41 W. Va. 800 | W. Va. | 1896
Statement of the case by defendant’s counsel.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court of Logan couuty setting aside a tax deed.
In 1879 and 1880 the plaintiff, Totten, was charged on the land books of Logan county with a tract of five hundred acres of land, of which he was the owner in fee; and for both years the laud was returned delinquent, and on the 15th day of November, 1881, was sold for the non-payment of the taxes thereon, and purchased for the state of West Virginia; and, Totten failing to redeem the same within the time required by law, the land thereby became forfeited, and the title of the owner thereto became and was vested absolutely in the state of West Virginia. This tract of land remained on the land books of said county for the years 1881 and 1882 in the name of Totten, and was again returned delinquent, and sold, and purchased for the state of West Virginia, and not redeemed by Totten. And, still remaining on the land books for said county for the years 1883 and 1884 in the name of said Totten, the said tract of land was again returned delinquent, and sold on the 1st day of March, 1886, for the non-payment of the taxes of those years, and was purchased at said sale by the defendant, James A. Nighbert. And, the said plaintiff failing to redeem the same within one year, the said purchaser on
March rules, 1891, plaintiff tiled his original bill, to which defendant demurred. Demurrer sustained, and plaintiff', by leave of court, on 28th April, 1891, filed his amended bill; and on the 1st day of August defendant appeared, and demurred to the amended bill. On the 27th of October, 1891, defendant filed his answer. On the 26th day of April, 1892, the court overruled the demurrer to the amended bill, and permitted the plaintiff' to amend it by the addition of another clause. As this last amendment in no wise affects the decision of this case, it is unnecessary to notice it any further.
The material allegation in the amended bill is as follows, to wit: “The above named plaintiff', by way of amendment to his original bill of complaint herein, further complains, and says that he adopts each and every allegation of said original bill not herein amended or modified, and makes the same a part and parcel hereof, as fully as if the same was herein repeated. And, further complaining, alleges that at the April term, 1889, of the circuit court of Logan county, in said state, TJ. B. Buskirk, commissioner of school lands for said county, tiled his annual petition in said court, asking for the sale of a number of forfeited and delinquent tracts of land situate in said county, for the benefit of the school fund—among them, the said five hundred acres of land belonging to this plaintiff, mentioned and described in Exhibit F. filed with and made a part of his said original bill of complaint, which will more fully appear from a duly authenticated copy of said petition herewith filed, marked ‘Exhibit 101,’ and prayed to be taken and read as part of this bill; and at the April term, 1891, of the circuit court of said county, and during the pendency of the proceedings to sell said five hundred acres of land for the benefit of the school fund, this plaintiff filed his petition asking to be allowed to redeem said tract of five hundred acres of land, which the court, on inspection of the evidence of title of this plaintiff to said land, allowed; and on the 24th day of April 1891, this plaintiff paid to the said commissioner of
The following are the points relied on by the defendant in argument: “(1) This suit having been brought by the plaintiff when he had no legal or equitable right, title, or interest in, or claim to the five hundred acres of land in question, the court below had no jurisdiction, power, or authority to grant him the relief, or any part thereof, prayed for in his bills, or either of them. (2) The sale of the five hundred acres of land in question for the non-payment of the taxes assessed thereon for the years 1883 and 1884, at which sale the defendant became the purchaser thereof, was a legal and valid sale of said land to him; and the court below erred in setting aside the said sale, even if it had jurisdiction to do so, but which it had not. (3) The tax deed by which the clerk of the county court of Logan county conveyed the five hundred acres of land in question to James A. Nighbert, the purchaser thereof, was and is a good and valid deed, under the statute; and the court below erred in setting it aside, even if it had jurisdiction to do so, but which it did not have.”
It is unquestionably true that this suit was instituted at a time when plaintiff had only an inchoate or incomplete right to bring the same. lie had the statutory right to file his petition and redeem the land, which he did after the institution of the suit. In the case of Butler v. Butler, 4 Litt. (Ky.) 202, it is said: “It will be admitted that the trial of an issue in a court of common law determines upon the controversy as it stood at the commencement of the action, except such issues as are founded on the plea of puis darrein eontinmncc, and that if there was, at the commencement of the suit, no cause of action, it is fatal, however strong it may have become afterwards. But the rule in a court of equity is somewhat different. The chancellor is not tied down to such strictness as to refuse relief in all cases where
The amended bill is precise in its object with the original bill, and departs in no particular therefrom, except to introduce new matter which renders plaintiff’s inchoate right to sue complete. The purpose of the suit is solely to cancel the defendant’s tax deed to the land in controversy, for illegality. The state could have instituted this suit before the plaintiff redeemed the land. State v. Eddy, 41 W. Va. 95 (23 S. E. 529). The plaintiff could have filed a supplemental bill or an original bill setting up his completed right. Equity looks not to the name, but to the substance, to determine the character of the paper filed. Strum v. Fleming, 22 W. Va. 412; Lamb v. Cecil, 28 W. Va. 657. Following these decisions, it does not matter whether we regard the plaintiff’s amended bill as a supplemental, amended, or an original bill, as the result must be the same. Defendant was not bound to appear to such bill until served with process, but having appeared and entered a demurrer, thereto on the 1st day of August, 1891, thereby avoiding the necessity for summons, he waived his right to object for failure thereof, and was as completely under the jurisdiction of the court as though summons had been duly served upon him, and was allowed and exercised full opportunity to interpose all his defenses to plaintiff’s suit. For this reason his first objection must be overruled.
His remaining objections to the decree are so dependent on each other that they will be considered together. It is admitted, in accordance with the plain letter of the law,
It has been suggested that his deed might be valid by virtue of chapter 194, Acts 1871. It is entitled “An act to amend the law relative to real estate hereafter sold for taxes,” and is to the effect that purchasers such as the defendant should, by virtue of their deeds, be fully vested with the state’s title. From its purview and title, this act was undoubtedly intended to he an amendment to chapter 31, Code 1868, relating to the sale of real estate for taxes. There is no other law relative to real estate sold for taxes. The act was intended to apply to subsequent, and not to prior, sales. After the adoption of the present Constitution, chapter 31, Code 1868, was wholly re-enacted by chapter 117, Acts 1872-73, styled “An act to amend and reenact chapter thirty one of the Code of West Virginia, concerning the sale of real estate for taxes; forfeiture for non-payment and non-assessment of taxes, and the transfer of title vested in the state.” In this chapter no re-
The defendant’s deed being a nullity, and a cloud on the plaintiffs title, the court committed no error in the decree complained of, as against the defendant, and the same is therefore affirmed.