Bell v. Coats
Bell v. Coats
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In May, 1860, the plaintiff in error obtained a tax-deed to a quartex-section of land in Pontotoc County, owned and occupied by the defendant in error. In 1873, he brought his. bill in the Chancery Court for the purpose of confirming his tax-title, under and by virtue of sect. 1753, Code of 1871, making the defendant in error a party. The litigation was protracted for several years, and culminated in a decision of this court confirming the tax-deed. Bell v. Coats, 54 Miss. 538. Thereupon he brought this action of ejectment to recover possession of the land, his title to which had thus in the chancery proceedings been adjudged and declaimed perfect. Moi'e than ten years having intervened (exclixding the period dining which the statute was suspended on account of the war) between the acquisition of the tax-title, in 1860, and the institution of the action of ejectment, in 1878, the defendant interposed the plea of the Statute of Limitations, or.rather interposed this defence of the statute under the plea of not guilty, as is proper in the action of ejectment. Hutto v. Thornton, 44 Miss. 166.
The controlling question in the case, presented in vai’ious
The decree of confirmation relates back, of course, to the date of the tax-deed, and its effect is to establish that from that time the complainant has been the true owner of the land, and it defeats and destroys all claims of title held and owned by any defendant to the bill before or at the time of the sale for taxes. But the successful complainant must still bring his action at law to recover possession, unless in some way he has already obtained it; and when he does so, he is liable to be defeated by an adverse holding sufficiently pro
However this may be, it is manifest that if such occupant can show, to the satisfaction of the jury, that his occupancy has been openly and notoriously adverse, he must defeat a recovery just as he would defeat any other holder of the true title. Whether the defendant in error did remain in possession of the land, in this instance, in hostility and opposition to, or in recognition of, the superior title of plaintiff, was fairly submitted to the jury, under instructions which certainly enunciated the law with sufficient favor to plaintiff. The jury, upon evidence which warranted their verdict, have found the fact for defendant. We will remark that the court below, and we ourselves, in giving to plaintiff the same position upon the question of adverse holding by defendant as if he had been the grantee in a deed from the latter, have considered the question in the most favorable light possible for plaintiff. While it is true that the statute declares that the tax-title, when confirmed, shall convey to the purchaser a title as perfect and valid as if the owner had executed to him a deed with covenants of warranty, it is probable that this means only that it shall operate as completely to invest the title, but not that it shall create the technical relation of vendor and vendee, so as to make the one, for any purpose, the tenant of the other, or to establish any relation of trust between them. We are not called upon by this record to settle this question.
There was no error in the admission of the title-bond, to
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- E. C. Bell v. A. A. Coats
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Limitation of Actions. Ejectment. Tax-title. Confirmation. The running of the Statute of Limitations in favor of the owner in adverse possession of land is not stopped by a statutory proceeding, to which he is a party defendant, to confirm a tax-title held by the complainant in such proceeding. 2. Same. Adverse possession. Color of title. A defective title-bond is admissible in evidence for a defendant in ejectment, to show the nature of his holding.