Johnston v. Thompson
Johnston v. Thompson
Opinion of the Court
The special verdict is peculiarly defective. For, although it is possible that the conveyance from Mary Dudgeon, the executrix of Richard Dudgeon, may have been an effectual execution of the power given by the will, yet as it is neither found that John Dudgeon renounced the executorship, nor was dead before the sale was made by her, I conceive this to be a defective finding in the verdict. Nor can this defective finding be aided by the length of time since the plaintiff’s possession under that conveyance begun, unless the court will infer, which I apprehend they cannot, that his possession continued for twenty years before the day of the ouster alledged in the declaration, which is laid to have happened on some day in 1795, which is less than eighteen years. For it is not found when the defendant entered; but barely, that he was in possession when the ejectment was brought. I doubted at first, whether since the special verdict shew's a derivative title from the plaintiff to be in the defendant, this circumstance might
But if the title of the plaintiff is defectively found, that of the defendant is not less so. It is distinctly found, that the plaintiff entered and was possessed of the lands under his deed from Mary Dudgeon. That the lands were taxed to him; and that they were sold by the high sheriff for the taxes due for the year 1786. Now,' the taxes for the year 1786, became due on the 1st of January, 1787, Virg. Laws, 1785, ch. 38: but, although they became due on that day, they might have been paid on that, or any subsequent day; and the verdict does not find that they were in arrear and unpaid; nor can the court infer it. And, unless they were in arrear, not only at the time of advertizing the lands, but at the time of the sale, the sheriff had no authority to sell. The law gives the sheriff power to distrain the lands; and if the tax be not paid within five days, he may then proceed to advertize them, at the church, on the next Sunday, or other public places within the parish, after the expiration of the said five days. But it is not found that he did distrain the lands, nor that he did advertize them, after the expiration of the five days, either at the church, or at any other public places, (of which there ought to be two at least, for the act is in the plural number,) within the parish: such an advertizing, even within the county, would not have been sufficient, unless it was also within the parish. The law directs that the sheriff shall give at least four weeks notice in the public papers; which, I apprehend, means notice for four weeks successively; but, at all events, the notice must be given in more than one public paper; for the act is plural in this respect also: but only one advertizement is
Where an act is so highly penal, as that a man may absolutely lose his whole property for a few days neglect in the payment of a tax which has never exceeded one hundredth part of the valuation thereof by sworn commissioners; and where the law has left the power of enforcing that penalty, in the hands of a mere ministerial officer, who may, as in the present case, become the purchaser of the land himself, for the bare amount of the tax thereon due, I deem it indispensably necessary, that every previous circumstance which might authorize the proceeding, and every subsequent step necessary to its legal consummation, should be made clearly and distinctly to appear to the court, that they may judge thereof.
I will mention another circumstance which occurred to me in perusing this record. The quantity of lands advertizéd, or so much thereof as will be sufficient to pay the taxes thereon, is 300 acres only, and the quantity expressed
I am therefore of opinion, that there should be a venire facias de novo.
I have not considered the defendant’s title; but the deed being made by the executrix only, was not a sufficient execution of the power, as the jury have not found whether the other executor renounced, or not. The special verdict is therefore defective in a material point; and consequently there must be a venire facias de novo.
Concurring Opinion
I concur, with the other judges, that the verdict is imperfect; and that there ought to be a venire facias de novo. The principal doubt, with me, is respecting the title of the plaintiff, who claims'under.a conveyance made by one of the executors only, when the testator directed that his executors shall sell his lands, and appointed two executors. That doubt would, perhaps, have been removed, if the jury had found, whether John Dudgeon, the other executor was dead; or had refused to qualify previous to the sale and conveyance of the land to Thompson.
The judgment of the district court is to be reversed; the verdict set aside; and a venire facias de novo awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.