47 W. Va. 794 | W. Va. | 1900
In the case of Leland R. White and Lohnier White, infants, against William M. Straus and others, from the circuit court of Wood County, the principal question is as to the right of the infant plaintiffs to redeem a certain lot from a tax sale made during the life of their father, nut which, by reason of his death within the year of redemption, became their property. The facts are as follows: Arthur L. White, the father of plaintiffs, was the owner of a house and lot in the city of Parkersburg. Being in the government employ, he moved to the West, and placed his property in the care of agents, to be rented or sold. They permitted it to be returned delinquent for the taxes of 1S93 and 1894, and in December, 1895, twenty-three teet thereof
Straus appeals, and insists that the plaintiffs are not entitled to redeem the property now, but that his title became indefeasible one year after his purchase. This question depends on the construction of section 30, chapter 31, Code, which provides that “an infant, married woman or insane person whose real estate may have been so sold ■during such disability, may redeem the same by paying to the purchaser, his heirs or assigns, within one } ear after the removal of the disability the amount for which the same was sold,” etc. The appellant claims that this only applies to such sales where the infant owns the real estate in his own name at the time the sale was made by the sheriff, and not to real estate inherited by him after such sale, yet within the period of redemption; that is, if. he inherits the land just before the sale is made, the law applies, but,
Objection is made that the bill alleges that the property was sold only for the taxes of 1894, whereas the deed, which is an exhibit with the bill, shows that it was for the years 1893 and 1894. This is an error that is self-correc-tory. The deed amends the bill. It is not necessary to enter into the question of fraud, for, if it existed, the law as heretofore expounded has rendered it abortive.
There was no appealable error committed'in this case against the appellant, but there is error against the infant defendants. The sale of their property should not have been authorized until all liens against the same for taxes or otherwise were first ascertained and determined. The
Modified.