Stout v. Mastin
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of seven lots in Kansas City, Kansas. Defendant rested his .defence on tax deeds for the several lots, and the single question is as to the validity of those tax deeds. A jury being waived, the case was tried by the court; and findings of fact were made, from which the court, as a conclusion of law, held
From these findings it appears that the present value of the lots is- in excess of five- thousand dollars. This suit was commenced prior to February-12, 1881. It further appears that in ■ 1818 sale was made for the taxes of 1811; that thereafter the purchaser paid the taxes of 1818, 1819 and 1880; and that his total investment for these taxes was $101.80. The statutes of Kansas in force at the time of these proceedings gave to an-investor in taxes twenty-four per cent interest. It certainly is a large demand on an investment of $101.80 to insist upon title to property worth more than five thousand' dollars; and when by the laws of the State there is given a fixed and prior lien for the investment, and interest thereon at twenty-four per cent, it is impossible not to observe that the large interest ought to satisfy any reasonable person. But the purchaser rests on the letter of his bond, and he has a legal right so to do; but under such circumstances he must rest alone on its letter. He has no overpowering equity to justify a large and liberal interpretation of statutory proceedings. Surrounding circumstances may sometimes sustain an imperfect description in a voluntary deed by a grantor, but seldom one made in hostile tax proceedings. In Tallman v. White, 2 Comstock (2 N. Y.) 66, it-was said that “an assessment for taxes of non-resident land is fatally defective if it contains such a falsity in the description of the parcel assessed as might probably mislead the owner, and prevent him from ascertaining by the published notices that his land was to be sold or redeemed. Such a mistake or falsity defeats one of the obvious and just purposes of the statute — that of giving to the owner -an opportunity of preventing the sale by paying the tax.” In Hill v. Mowry, 6 Gray, 551, the rule is laid down that a tax deed, “ taking effect only as the execution of a statute power,, should be construed with some strictness, so as to enable the grantee to identify the land, and to enable the owner to redeem it; ” and it was held that a deed which
In that case the description in the assessment roll and prior tax proceedings was of a lot in Challiss’s addition; that in the deed was of a lot of the same number in L. C. Ohalliss’s addition. Plats of two additions to the city of Atchison had been filed — one named “ Challiss’s addition ” and the other “ L. C. Challiss’s addition.” There was an error in recording the first plat, which was attempted to be corrected by the second, which also included territory other than that described in the first; and the latter plat, with its description, became the recognized plat of the entire addition. So, to perfect the description, which in the assessment roll was Challiss’s addition, in the tax deed the clerk described the lot as in L. O. Challiss’s addition. In respect to this departure, that court observed in an opinion by Chief Justice Horton: “ It is unnecessary for the purpose of this case to decide whether the tax-toll, of 1872, or the tax certificate of May 15, 1873, sufficiently described lot 19, in block 16, in L. C. Challiss’s addition to the city of Atchison. A tax
That case is decisive of this. For while the tax deed describes lot 246, Armstrong Street, the assessment roll describes the property as lot 246, Armstrong block. • It is true the ninth finding of fact shows that “upon the plat of Kansas City, Kansas, and in conveyances of land and in tax-sale proceedings, in the old city of Kansas City, Kansas, the lots are numbered by streets and not by the block, and ‘Ewing,’ ‘Jo}^,’ ‘James,’
From the findings of fact the conclusion of the Circuit Court cannot be adjudged erroneous, and, therefore, its judgment for the plaintiff must be Affirmed.
Sec. 6993. No irregularity in the assessment roll, nor omission from the same, nor mere irregularities of any kind in any of the proceedings, shall invalidate any such proceeding or the title conveyed by the tax deed; nor shall any failure of any officer or officers to perform the duties assigned him or them, upon the day specified, work an invalidation of any such proceedings or of said deed.”
“ Sec. 7008. In all advertisements, certificates, papers or proceedings relating to the assessment and collection of taxes and proceedings founded thereon, any description of lands which shall indicate the land intended with ordinary and reasonable certainty, and which would be sufficient between .grantor and grantee in an ordinary conveyance, shall be sufficient.”
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I think that under the General Statutes of Kansas, secs.
Reference
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- In Kansas, if the description in a deed of land sold for non-payment of taxes departs from the description contained in the assessment roll and the prior tax proceedings, such prior description, if imperfect and insufficient, avoids the deed, although the description in the latter may he sufflcieiit and complete.