Williams v. Oates

96 So. 880 | Ala. | 1923

Lead Opinion

Statutory ejectment, instituted by appellee against appellants. The plaintiff was given the affirmative instruction requested for him. The defendants rely upon the short statute of limitations provided by Code, § 2311. The court erred in so instructing the jury, because the evidence required the application of the cited short statute of limitations of three years. Long v. Boast, 153 Ala. 428, 44 So. 955; Howard v. Tollett, 202 Ala. 11, 79 So. 309; Doe ex dem. Evers v. Matthews, 192 Ala. 181, 186, 68 So. 182. There are expressions or conclusions in other cases inconsistent with the construction of Code, § 2311, taken in the cases cited; but the later decisions noted above conclude to the effect that the short statute of limitations thereby provided is a bar to an action for the recovery of the subject of a tax sale except in the particular instances described in that statute (section 2311). Howard v. Tollett, supra.

The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.

Reversed and remanded.

ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.

On Rehearing.






Addendum

The court en banc has reconsidered the question, elaborately discussed in the briefs of counsel, whether the cited short statute of limitation of three years (Code, § 2311) is applicable to a tax sale where, as here, the assessment of the land was made in the name of and against a person who had no right, title, or interest in the land, and the purchasers went into adverse possession under their tax deed and remained in such possession for three years and more before action commenced by the owner of the land at the time the sale for taxes was had; the owner not being shown to be or to have been within any of the exceptions provided in the statute. Code, § 2311.

Under a statute in present respects substantially similar to Code, § 2311, this court decided in Lassitter v. Lee, 68 Ala. 287,291, that, notwithstanding the tax sale is void, the short statute of limitation is operative and effective, and, "whether the sale be valid or void, the occupancy of the land under a tax deed, executed and delivered in conformity to law, for a period of five years [now three years] from such delivery, would be a good defense to the action." This deliverance was made at the December term, 1880. In nature the present statute (section 2311) is the same as its predecessor considered in 1880; the just exceptions have been since introduced. The court is not thought to be now at liberty to depart from the rule of Lassitter v. Lee, supra; so notwithstanding the Iowa court, whence it is said the original statute came, has accepted the view that a similar limitary statute in respect of tax sales has no application to a sale that was void. Long v. Boast,153 Ala. 428, 430, 44 So. 955; Howard v. Tollett, 202 Ala. 11,79 So. 309.

The application for rehearing is hence overruled.

ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, GARDNER, THOMAS, and MILLER, JJ., concur.