Little v. Herndon
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The principal question is, whether there is anything in the act of February 21st, 1861, indicating an intention, on the part of the legislature, to change the course of decision which the courts of Illinois had made, on the subject of a tax deed, made without evidence of a preceding judgment, and to give validity and effect to the naked deed of the officer ?
The argument in favor of the construction of the statute which the plaintiff in error would establish is placed upon the introductory words of the act: “All deeds hereafter made by the proper officer in pursuance of sales of real estate for the non-payment of taxes shall be held,” &c. It is contended that the words should be construed as meaning
In the case of Spelman v. Curtenius
We regret that this statute has not come under the review of the courts of the State, as we should have been relieved from this examination of it. But, after a diligent search into the reports of their decisions, we have not been able to find any case involving its construction except one, which holds that the act is not retrospective.
A minor objection below was to the admission of one of the' patents, on the ground of an erasure: The court left the question to the júry, which was quite as favorable a ruling as the defendant could ask. In the absence of any proof on the subject the presumption is that the correction was made before the execution of the deed. In a recent case in the Queen’s Bench, Lord Campbell, Chief Justice, in delivering the opinion of the .court, after- referring to the note in Hargreve & Butler’s Coke Littleton, 225 6, where this rule was asserted, observed: “This doctrine seems to us to rest on principle. A deed cannot be altered after it is •executed without a fraud or wrong;- and the presumption is against fraud or wrong.”
JüDSMENT AEEIRMED,
12 Illinois, 411.
Conway v. Cable, 37 Illinois, 90.
Doe v. Catomore, 16 Adolphus & Ellis, New Series, 745.
Lewis v. Payn, 8 Cowen, 76; Jackson v. Jacoby, 9 Id. 126; Hatch v. Hatch, 9.Massachusetts, 312.
Secrist v. Green, 3 Wallace, 744; Carpenter v. Dexter, 8 Id. 513.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent from the opinion óf the court in this case on the. construction of the statute of Illinois of February 21, 1861.
That act mentions certain facts which may be shown without any condition precedent in order to establish the invalidity of a tax deed. These are: 1. That the tax had been paid before sale. 2. That the land was not subject .-to taxation. 3. That it had been redeemed from the tax sale. 4. That the notice inquired by the constitution had not been given. 5. That the description of the land was not sufficiently definite.
It then provides that a tax deed, made after the passage of that act, shall not be questioned in any suit for any other cause, unless, the party wishing to' contest the same shall tender to the claimant under the tax deed, or deposit in the court in which the suit is pending, for his-use, the amount of redemption-money required by law to redeem, and ten per cent, per annum interest.
The defendant in this case offered his tax deed, and required of the court to have the amount which he showed by the deed and tax receipts paid or deposited, before the plaintiff should be permitted to question it. The court refused to receive the tax deed in evidence, and permitted the plaintiff to contest it and exclude it from the jury on the ground that no judgment was produced by defendant under which the tax sale was made. The absence of such a judgment is not one of the grounds mentioned for which a deed may be
Reference
- Syllabus
- 1. A defendant, claiming under an Illinois tax-deed, who would avail himself of the statute of Illinois, of February 21st, 1861, setting forth what facts may be shown to establish the invalidity of such a deed, and pre- * eluding, except upon certain conditions, a.question of it for any other cause, must show ncft only a tax-deed in proper form, but show-also a judgment under Which the tax sale was made. 2. On an objection to the admission of a deed because of an alleged erasure and interlineation-apparent\on its face