167 Mich. 542 | Mich. | 1911

Ostrander, C. J.

(after stating the facts). Upon the findings of law, and each of them, plaintiff assigned error. No error is assigned upon the findings of fact, nor upon a failure to find other or further facts. It does appear in the record, and we understand the fact is not disputed, that the statutory notice served upon plaintiff April 6, 1910, did not contain the statement that the sum demanded might be paid to the register in chancery, nor was it properly addressed. Act No. 142, Pub. Acts 1905, § 140 (tax law); Act No. 270, Pub. Acts 1909. It was therefore an ineffective notice. Weller v. Wheelock, 155 Mich. 698 (118 N. W. 609). See, also, Dolph v. Norton, 158 Mich. 417 (123 N. W. 13). This notice described 40 acres only. On May 27, 1910, another notice, describing all of the land, was served on plaintiff, but it was not signed by the defendant, or by any one for him.

The statute (3 Comp. Laws, § 11204) makes every person who shall cut down and carry off any wood, trees, or timber on the land of any other person, without the leave of the owner thereof, liable to the owner of the land in three times the amount of damages assessed therefor, in an action of trespass. Plaintiff, relying upon this statute, *546sues as owner of land, treating defendant, who cut the timber, as a trespasser. That defendant was a trespasser is clear. The statute (section 142 of the tax law; 1 Comp. Laws, § 3961), as amended by Act No. 142, Pub. Acts 1905, forbids the tax title purchaser to enter into possession until six months after he has given notice to the parties in interest, or has acquired the title of such parties? In Corrigan v. Hinkley, 125 Mich. 125 (83 N. W. 1020), such a purchaser, who entered into possession of the land, was held to be a trespasser, entitled to no pay for improvements made by him upon the land, and a decree, vacating the tax decree, but imposing upon the owner of the land, as a condition precedent, repayment of the taxes paid by the purchaser, and the value of improvements made by him, was reversed, and a decree entered, vacating the tax decree. In Huron Land Co. v. Robarge, 128 Mich. 686 (87 N. W. 1032), the action was replevin by the owner of land for timber cut thereon by a tax title holder, who had failed to give the statute notice. A judgment for plaintiff, entered upon a directed verdict, was affirmed. It is said that defendant was a trespasser; and that:

“The serving of this notice is a condition precedent to vesting the title under the tax proceedings in the tax purchaser.”

In Hickey v. Rutledge, 136 Mich. 128 (98 N. W. 974), the action was replevin. The plaintiff had cut ties upon land held by the State as State tax land. The ties were seized by the State trespass agent. Plaintiff afterwards acquired the State’s title to the land, and sought to recover the ties. His right to do this was denied. It was said:

“ When this timber was severed, the right of the State to pursue it became fixed. It was no longer a part of the land. The purchaser of the land would not take the timber by purchase from the State. In whom, then, is the title to be vested ? In a naked trespasser ? Clearly, the rights of this plaintiff are no greater under his purchase *547than they would have been had the trespasser been a third party. The State having a title at the time he committed the trespass, and the right to seize and pursue the timber, it does not lie in his mouth to say that that right has been defeated by a sale of something other or different, whether such sale be to another or to himself.”

See, also, Holmes v. Loud, 149 Mich. 410 (112 N. W. 1109).

Assuming that the defendant cut the timber without right — was a trespasser — who may complain ? The State alone might have done so, if the trespass had been committed before defendant, the trespasser, acquired the State’s title. Hickey v. Rutledge, supra; Blake v. Grondin, 141 Mich. 104 (104 N. W. 423). The State had no interest in the land at the time the trespass was committed. The learned trial judge held, agreeably with defendant’s contention, that the owner, at least before he obtained a reconveyance of the land from the tax title purchaser, could not maintain the action. It is attempted to support the ruling by decisions of this court that, after a regular sale of land for taxes, and after the period of redemption has expired, the State possesses the absolute title to the land; the owner has been divested of all interest therein, but acquires, upon a sale of the land by the State, opportunity and privilege of securing a reconveyance. The question of the value and extent of the interest, if any, remaining in the owner of land after sale of the land for taxes was somewhat discussed in the opinions filed in the case of Morse v. Auditor General, 143 Mich. 610 (107 N. W. 317). See, also, Haney v. Miller, 154 Mich. 337 (117 N. W. 71, 745); Haney v. Auditor General, 165 Mich. 681 (131 N. W. 386). In Griffin v. Kennedy, 148 Mich. 583 (112 N. W. 756), many of the previous decisions of the court are referred to and to some extent reviewed, and in the majority opinion it is said:

“After the expiration of his right to redeem from a regularly conducted sale, at which the State has purchased *548—and that is the case with the land in question — it (the State) owns and can dispose of the land as it pleases; and this is true, though the former owner of the land continues in possession, for he is in possession without the right of possession.”

The ruling thus announced was necessary to support the conclusion arrived at by the majority of the justices, and has been considered authoritative and controlling. In the same opinion, the force and effect of Act No. 229, Pub. Acts 1897, is considered, and it is said that by the act, which is the one providing for notice to the owner, and for securing a reconveyance of the land by him, the legislature intended—

“ Merely to give owners the right to redeem after the State tax lands formerly owned by them were sold by the State to private purchasers under the general tax laws. * * * It is undoubtedly true that said Act No. 229 has the effect of giving to the former owner of the State tax lands a title which formerly he did not possess. See Adkin v. Pillen, 136 Mich. 682 [100 N. W. 176]. But this title does not come into existence until the sale described in said act has been made. That, it seems to me, was the legislative intent, and I see no difficulty in giving it effect. It may be said that a sale under the general tax laws transfers all the title of the State; part of the title so transferred passes to the purchaser, and part to the original owner of the land, his mortgagee, or grantee. I shall not undertake to give a technical name to each of these different titles. We can give effect to the legislative intent without performing that undertaking.”

This and the other decisions referred to necessarily affirm the right of the State to sue the original owner of the land, as well as a stranger to the title, for injuring the freehold during the period of State ownership of the title.

There is nothing in the statute which imports the intention of the legislature to reinvest the original owner of the land with such title or right of possession as will support an action of trespass. The purchaser from the State is forbidden to make an immediate entry, and therefore *549he may not lawfully disturb an original owner, who is in possession. And it was pointed out, in the minority opinion in Griffin v. Kennedy, that the tax law contains no provision for dispossessing an owner by the State after the State has acquired its absolute title. But if, as was held, the former owner has no right of possession, and if the State as owner may prevent waste by the former owner in or out of possession, it is difficult to construct a theory of title in such former owner which will support his action for injury to the land so long as he has not secured a re-conveyance thereof from the purchaser from the State. Plaintiff here has not even actual possession of the lands, which are wild and uncultivated. Whether he intends to acquire the lands from the defendant, we do not know. He had the right to do so when the trespass was committed, and when the suit was instituted.

In two cases, namely, in Huron Land Co. v. Robarge, supra, and Holmes v. Loud, supra, the right of the landowner to recover against such a trespasser has been affirmed. In both of these cases, it appears to have been assumed by counsel that if the defendant was held to be a trespasser the original owner of the land could maintain the action — in the first case, the action of replevin, in the other, the action of trespass. The record in Huron Land Co. v. Bobarge does not disclose the fact that plaintiff, the landowner, had paid or tendered the sum necessary to secure a reconveyance of the land. It is to be inferred from the record that he had not done so. In Holmes v. Loud, it appeared that defendants acquired the State tax deed to certain lands, and notified the person who appeared of record to be the original owner. The notice was served July 25, 1902, and it was assumed by defendants that the six months’ period would expire January 25, 1903. Cutting of timber on the land began January 26, 1903. Reckoning from the date of filing proof of service of the notice, the six months expired February 23, 1903. The action was brought for the injury to the freehold, result*550ing from the cutting of timber, begun in January. It appears that the tax title holder conveyed the land in February to the one in whose right the action was begun, who held an unrecorded deed from the owner of record. But in neither case was it contended that the original owner had not such a title to or interest in the land as would support the action.

If the owner may maintain trespass at all, his right of action accrues when the trespass is committed, and cannot be affected by his subsequent refusal to obtain a re-conveyance of the State’s title. If he does not secure a reconveyance of the land, and is out of possession, he has in fact lost nothing by the injury to the freehold, unless he has the right meantime to deal with the land as an owner — to cut and sell timber, for example. On the other hand, if the original owner, in or out of possession, injures the freehold, and fails to pay for a reconveyance, the tax title purchaser is injured, because he does not finally secure what the State, as absolute owner, sold to him. The former owner may obtain a reconveyance of the land, and if he does he is entitled to have reconveyed the property which the State conveyed by its deed, unchanged and undiminished in value by any acts of his vendor. And if he does not redeem, the purchaser from the State is entitled to the land, uninjured by acts of the former owner thereof, committed after the State acquired the title. We are necessarily brought to this conclusion by the language of the statute and the decisions of this court. If the purchaser from the State acts promptly, or if the former owner pays, as he may, to the register in chancery, the sum necessary to secure a reconveyance, the interval of time is short. And we perceive no reason for saying that, once the rights of the parties are determined, an action may not be maintained by the proper party to recover damages for any injury to the freehold by the other party, or that meantime threatened injury to the freehold may not be restrained by either, by the process of the *551court of chancery. But we are of opinion that the trial court was right in holding that the former owner could not, before securing reconveyance of the land, maintain this action.

The judgment is therefore affirmed.

Steers, Moore, Brooke, and Stone, JJ., concurred.
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