60 P. 734 | Kan. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On the 4th day of August, 1898, one H. O. Pershing obtained a tax deed on part of a town lot in the city of Salina and immediately entered into peaceable possession. Thereafter, on August 22,1893, Pershing conveyed the premises to Charles H. York and delivered to him the possession thereof. York commenced an action against A. C. Barnes and others in the district court to quiet his title to the premises. During the pendency of the action, defendant below, L. A. Will, was, by an agreement between the parties to the suit, placed in possession of the property as the agent of York, with authority to collect and receive the rents already accrued and thereafter to become due, to make leases of .the same, and gen
The question involved is whether the plaintiff Ritchie is entitled to recover the value of the use of said premises from the time that Will was placed in the possession thereof by plaintiff’s assignor to the time when the amount of the taxes was tendered to said assignor by Barnes. In other words, is the holder of a tax deed who is in possession of the premises entitled, as against the holder of the legal title, to the rents thereof which have accrued during the pendency of the action brought by said tax-deed holder to quiet his title to the premises and prior to the judgment holding the tax deed to be invalid?
If Barnes had brought an action of ejectment
No good reason can be advanced why the holder of a tax deed who goes into possession of land should not account for the value of the use to the holder of the better estate when it is finally adjudicated that the tax deed was void as an instrument of title and a right to possession under it denied. Such liability exists in other cases, and the law is well settled that recovery for the use may be had therein. (Rabb v. Patterson, 42 S. C. 528, 20 S. E. 540.) In Green v. Biddle, 8 Wheat. 75, 5 L. Ed. 547, it was said:
“Nothing, in short, can be more clear, upon principles of law and research, than that a law which denies to the owner of land a remedy to recover the possession of it, when withheld by any person, however innocently he may have obtained it; or to recover the profits received from it by the occupant; or which clogs his recovery of such possession and
“A right to land essentially implies a right to the profits accruing from it, since, without the latter, the former can be of no value.” (See, also, Trubee v. Miller, 48 Conn. 347 ; Campbell, Adm’r, v. Brown, 2 Woods [U. S. C. C.] 349.)
The petition filed in the court below did not, in our opinion, state a cause of action. The judgment of the court of appeals will be reversed, and the judgment of the district court affirmed.