186 Mo. 388 | Mo. | 1905
— This is a suit, under section •650, Revised Statutes 1899, to ascertain and determine the rights of the respective parties to the southeast quarter of section twenty-seven, township twenty-six north, range five west, in Shannon county. The suit was begun on March 13, 1902, in the manner provided by section 793, Revised Statutes 1899, by the parties voluntarily entering their appearance and filing the following agreed statement of facts:
“Come now the parties and submit the following .agreed statement of facts under section 793, Revised ■Statutes 1899', touching a matter in difference between them regarding the title to the southeast quarter of -section twenty-seven, township twenty-six, range five west, in Shannon county, Missouri, each party hereto •claiming adversely to the other.
“It is agreed that the facts and records regarding •said title are:
‘ ‘ That said lands were entered by David Yinton, .August 20, 1859, and a patent for same duly issued by*392 the United States and delivered to said Vinton on August 1, 1860, hut that said patent has never been recorded in Shannon county.
‘ ‘ That said lands are wild timber lands, no part- of which has ever been enclosed or in cultivation', and no improvements are thereon.
“That both parties claim title through the patentee, David Vinton, as hereinafter set out.
“That plaintiff claims said lands under a general warranty deed made by David Vinton to plaintiff, for a valuable consideration, on September 24, 1859, which deed was duly executed, acknowledged and delivered by said Vinton, and duly filed and recorded in the office of the clerk of the circuit court and ex-officio recorder of deeds of Shannon county, on July 21, 1869.
“That the record of the said deed from Vinton to plaintiff, together with all the deed records of Shannon county, were, without fault of plaintiff, destroyed by fire on December 31,1870; that said deed was never thereafter recorded in Shannon county, and the destruction of said records was“not known to plaintiff until the first day of January, 1890.
“That plaintiff never owned or claimed title to any other lands in township 26, range 5, in said county.
‘ ‘ That defendant claims title as follows:
“First, under a deed duly executed and -acknowledged, dated August 6, 1886, recorded March 17, 1887, from David Vinton to the Central Land Company.
“Second, under a sheriff’s deed dated September 15, 1887, based on a judgment of the Shannon County Circuit Court in a back tax suit against said lands and David Vinton as owner against whom said taxes were assessed; said judgment was rendered September 17, 1886, for the taxes for the year 1884. Said deed purporting to convey all of the interest of said David Vinton in and to said lands. That plaintiff was not named as a defendant in said tax proceedings.
*393 “That defendant claims under said sheriff’s tax deed by mesne conveyances from the grantee therein.
“That the deeds to the defendant purporting to convey said lands also include all the lands indicated on the plat hereto attached, and is dated the fifth day of March, 1897, recorded March 10, 1897.
“That more than one year prior to the commencement of this suit, the defendant constructed and had in operation a tram road across the lands covered by its deed in township 26, range 5, as shown on the plat by red lines also indicated on said plat, but said tram road does not touch or cross the land in controversy; that it built on section 10, as also' indicated on the plat, about 75 tenant houses which have been continuously occupied by its tenants for more than three years last past; that the tenants occupying said houses are employed in cutting and hauling timber from the lands shown on said plat, but are not now cutting or hauling timber from the lands in section 27, but have cut within the last year about 20,000 feet of timber from the land in controversy. That all of the lands shown on the plat are principally valuable for the pine timber thereon, and not for general farming.
“That the defendant is the owner of a large saw- and planing mill at the end of said tram road, and owns large bodies of pine lands adjoining the lands in township 26-5, from which it gets its timber for said mill.
“That defendant and those under whom it claims, except Vinton, have paid all the state, county and school taxes levied against the lands in dispute since 1884.
“That in 1879 judgment was rendered before justice of the peace against said lands in dispute to enforce the lien of the state for taxes for the years 1871 to 1878, inclusive, and the said lands thereafter were sold under said judgment and defendant’s grantor became the purchaser of the same and said purchaser*394 and Ms grantees have paid all taxes on said lands np to the year 1883, and subsequent to the year 1878. It is admitted that the sheriff’s deed based on the judgment of the justice of the peace is void, but this fact is stated as bearing on the question of the non-payment of the taxes.
“It is admitted that plaintiff has tax receipt for the year 1869, but for no subsequent year, and that he would swear as a witness that he thinks he paid the taxes up to the year 1875, but it is not admitted that he did so.
“Defendant admits that it has threatened and is about to cut and remove all of the pine timber from the land in controversy and if the court finds that the plaintiff is the owner of the land in controversy, in addition to decreeing the plaintiff to be such owner, it shall enjoin the defendant from cutting or. removing the timber therefrom.
“Upon the above facts the parties hereto pray the court to determine and decree the title of the parties in and to said lands.
“Jno. C. Brown, Attorney for Plaintiff.
“L. B. Shuck and W. J. Orr, Attorneys for Defendant.
“J. C. Brown, attorney for plaintiff, and W. J. Orr, attorney for defendant, being duly sworn, say the above stated controversy is real, and this submission is made in good faith, for the purpose of determining the interests of the parties herein.
“Jno. C. Brown,1
“W. J. Orr.
“Sworn to and subscribed before me this 12th day of March, 1902.
“S. A. Cunningham,
“Clerk Circuit Court.”
The circuit court adjudged that the plaintiff is the owner of the land and that defendant has no title thereto and that defendant be forever debarred from
I.
The defendant invokes the doctrine announced in Vance v. Corrigan, 78 Mo. 94; Payne v. Lott, 90 Mo. 676; Evans v. Robberson, 92 Mo. 192; and Allen v. Ray, 96 Mo. 547. The doctrine of those cases is, that a purchaser at a tax sale under a judgment in a suit against the apparent owner of the record title, acquires a good title as against the holder of an unrecorded deed from such apparent owner.
But it is apparent from the facts in judgment here that this case does not fall within the rule laid down in those cases. For here, the plaintiff held title under a deed that was properly recorded on July 21, 1869. It is. true that the record of such deed was destroyed, by fire on December 31, 1870. But that did not affect the plaintiff’s rights or title, for, in the first place, he did not know of such destruction until January 1, 1890, which was nearly four years after the defendant’s grantor purchased at the tax sale, and therefore the plaintiff was guilty of no conduct that would estop him from asserting title as against the defendant; and,, in the second place, if the plaintiff had known of such destruction of such record there was no duty cast upon him by law to have his deed recorded again. [Crane v. Dameron, 98 Mo. 567; Geer v. Lumber Co., 134 Mo. 85.] In the last case cited, this court pointed out that the evils and inconveniences resulting from such a condition of titles, and the difficulties of ascertaining who is the owner of the property, for the purpose of assessing or collecting taxes, is a matter for correction by the Legislature and not by the courts. The Legislature will doubtless remedy the trouble by appropriate legislation as soon as its attention is called to it, for it is a matter that will occasion difficulty, loss of
The plaintiff had duly recorded his deed, the land was wild and vacant, and the possession is presumed to follow the record title. He was not a party to the tax suit, and, therefore, is not affected by the judgment or sale of the land under the judgment, and hence he has title and the defendant has none so far as the records show.
II.
The defendant next contends that the plaintiff is estopped by his laches from setting up title at this late day.
Estoppel means that a party has been guilty of some failure 'to assert a right at the time he should have done so, in consequence of which another has so acted with respect to the subject-matter that loss would result to him, if the guilty or silent party was allowed afterwards to assert his right.
Here the plaintiff was guilty of no such estoppel, and the defendant was not misled, to his injury, by the plaintiff’s silence. The plaintiff properly recorded his deed six months before the records were destroyed, and seventeen years before the judgment for taxes was rendered. At that time the plaintiff did not know that the records had been destroyed, and, in fact, did not know it, for nearly four years afterwards. The plaintiff therefore was guilty of no silence, omission of duty or conduct which misled the defendant or its grantors, and hence is not now estopped from asserting title to the land.
III.
Lastly, the defendant invokes the thirty-year Statute of Limitations.
The contention of the defendant is that the title
The title emanated from the government in 1859, and this action was not begun until March 12, 1902, which was thirty-three years after the title emanated from the government. This is the extent of the application of that- statute to this case. Upon the facts agreed upon the plaintiff has had record title to the land since July 21, 1869, when his deed was recorded, and as the land was wild, unimproved land and no one else is shown to have been in the actual possession of it, the possession followed the title, and was therefore in the plaintiff. There is no room for cavil that such was the case until about a year before this suit was brought. Hence the plaintiff was, in contemplation of law, in possession of the land from 1859 until 1901, and therefore was in possession within thirty years before this suit was begun.
The defendant’s grantor purchased the land at the tax sale in 1886, but never took actual possession, and as the tax judgment and sale were void, 'qiwad the plaintiff, he had no record title and hence no presumptive possession. The plaintiff’s deed from Vinton having been properly recorded and being prior in date to Vinton’s deed to defendant’s grantor, the latter had no effect upon the title or upon the plaintiff’s presumed possession. The defendant’s whole contention must therefore rest upon its claim that over a year before the institution of this suit, being the owner and in actual possession of the adjoining land, on which there were houses and a lumber mill, it cut timber from this land, and that under its title to and possession of the adjoining land, to which the plaintiff had no claim, it
Of this it is only necessary to say that defendant had no title to this land, as against plaintiff, and therefore the doctrine invoked has no application to the facts in judgment here. Neither would the fact that the defendant had had possession of the land for a year before this suit was brought affect the case in any way. The statute does not contemplate that possession for one year only before the suit was brought would confer any right upon the defendant or impair any right of the plaintiff. The one year spoken of in the statute was simply a saving clause in favor of persons who might be affected by the statute, and was intended to give them that time, after the statute went into effect, in which to bring suit. [Rollins v. McIntire, 87 Mo. 496; Fairbanks v. Long, 91 Mo. 628.]
The agreed facts, however, do not show any actual possession in the defendant. They simply show that during the year next before the institution of this suit, the defendant had cut timber from the land. Standing alone, this fact is not sufficient, for even a trespasser might, and frequently does, do that.
The agreed facts show that the plaintiff has a tax receipt for the year 1869, and he would swear that he thinks he paid taxes up to the year 1875, but the defendant does not admit that. It is,' however, some evidence that the plaintiff paid taxes within thirty years before this suit was begun.
It follows that the thirty-year' Statute of Limitations is no bar to the plaintiff’s case.
For these reasons the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.