An averment of diverse citizenship by the plaintiff, necessary
to confer a jurisdiction, not being controverted by the defendant,
must be taken as true under the practice in the courts of
Nebraska.
When the jurisdictional allegations of the plaintiff are not
traversed by the defendant, no question involving the capacity of
the parties to litigate in the federal courts can be raised before
the jury or treated as within the issues they are empanelled to
determine.
The objection, under section 5, of the Act of March 3, 1875, c.
137, 18 Stat. 472, that parties to a suit have been improperly or
collusively made or joined for the purpose of creating a case
cognizable under the act should be taken at the first opportunity,
and delay in its presentation will be considered in examining into
the grounds upon which it is alleged to rest.
A suit cannot properly be dismissed by a circuit court as not
involving a controversy within the jurisdiction of the court unless
the facts, when made to appear on the record, create a legal
certainty of that conclusion.
In Nebraska, a tax deed not executed by the county treasurer
under his seal of office is void.
In Nebraska, a tax deed, though void on its face, is sufficient
color of title to support an adverse possession to the property
therein described.
The adverse possession which bars a recovery in an action of
ejectment must be continuous, uninterrupted, open, notorious,
actual, exclusive and adverse.
Where the rightful owner of real estate is in the actual
occupancy of a part of his tract, he is in the constructive and
legal possession and seisin of the whole unless he is disseised by
actual occupation and dispossession, and where the possession is
mixed, the legal seisin is according to the legal title.
A power from an owner of real estate authorizing the donee to
make and execute deeds to convey the real estate to purchasers as
the same may be sold to such purchasers in tracts by a third party
who acts under a contract with the donor of the power, is a naked
power to convey as sales may be made, and a deed made by the donee
to a person who was not such a purchaser is a fraud upon the
power.
In the case of a naked power not coupled with an interest, every
prerequisite to the exercise of that power should precede it.
In Nebraska, the title of a purchaser at an executive sale
depends not alone
Page 134 U. S. 242
upon his bid or payment of the purchase money, but upon the
confirmation of the sale by the court.
One purchasing at an execution sale in Nebraska submits himself
to the jurisdiction of the court as to matters affecting that sale,
and as the court has power during the term to vacate or modify its
own orders or to rescind a decree affirming the sale, he is
concluded by the result of the proceedings to confirm or annul
it.
This was an action of ejectment brought in the Circuit Court of
the United States for the District of Nebraska, June 14, 1884, by
Rowena Young, a citizen of Ohio, against John C. Deputron, a
citizen of Nebraska, to recover certain premises in the petition
named. The defendant answered, denying plaintiff's ownership and
right to possession, and setting up title under a tax deed and
purchase in good faith, and without notice, for $10,000 paid, being
the full value, and ten years' adverse possession. To this answer a
reply specifically denying its averments was filed by the
plaintiff. At the November term, 1885, of said court, a trial was
had, which resulted in a verdict for the defendant, and judgment
thereon, which was set aside on motion of plaintiff, and a new
trial awarded. In March, 1886, the cause was tried a second time,
and a special verdict of 41 findings rendered by the jury, as set
forth in the margin.
*
Page 134 U. S. 243
The defendant excepted to the tenth, seventeenth, moved to set
aside each of the same, and
Page 134 U. S. 244
for a judgment for the defendant, and against the plaintiff,
upon the verdict as thus amended, and the plaintiff filed his
Page 134 U. S. 245
motion for judgment on the verdict according to the prayer of
the petition. On the 10th day of May, 1886, these motions
Page 134 U. S. 246
coming on to be heard, were submitted to the court on briefs to
be filed within sixty days, and on the 24th day of June,
Page 134 U. S. 247
1886, the court entered an order, by agreement of the parties,
that the time to settle and sign a bill of exceptions be, and
the
Page 134 U. S. 248
same was thereby, extended to the second Monday in November
following. The record contains no such bill of exceptions.
Page 134 U. S. 249
On the 9th day of November, 1887, Deputron filed his petition,
alleging that Rowena Young was not the real party in interest and
that the title of the property in controversy was collusively and
fraudulently transferred to her for the sole purpose of vesting
apparent jurisdiction in the federal court; that the case did not
really and substantially involve a dispute or controversy properly
within its jurisdiction, and that Rowena Young had been improperly
and collusively made a plaintiff for the purpose of creating a case
cognizable under the laws of the United States, and praying that
the cause be dismissed, to which the plaintiff answered, denying
any fraud and collusion and averring that she was the real party
interested. On the 16th day of November, 1888, the following order
was entered:
"This cause, coming on for hearing on the petition and
application of the defendant to dismiss for want of jurisdiction,
was tried by the court, Messrs. Hall and Webster appearing for the
plaintiff, and Messrs. Lamb, Ricketts and Wilson, and Harwood, Ames
and Kelly, for the defendant; whereupon, after hearing the evidence
and argument of counsel, and being fully advised in the premises,
it is now, on this day
Page 134 U. S. 250
ordered and adjudged by the court that said petition and
application be, and the same are hereby, denied; to which ruling
and order of the court said defendant, by his attorneys, then and
there duly excepted."
An opinion on the merits was given by the circuit judge December
17, 1888, 37 F. 46, and thereupon the motion of the defendant for
judgment was overruled, the motion of the plaintiff for judgment
sustained, and judgment entered that the plaintiff recover from the
defendant the real property described in the petition and the costs
of the action. A bill of exceptions, containing the petitions,
answers, and proceedings and evidence adduced upon the question of
jurisdiction, was signed and filed in due time. The pending writ of
error was then sued out from this Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts as above,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is contended that the circuit court erred in entering
judgment on the special verdict, because the citizenship of the
parties was not found by the jury. But that fact stood admitted on
the record. The plaintiff averred in her petition that she was "a
citizen and resident of the State of Ohio," and that the defendant
was "a citizen and resident of the State of Nebraska." The answer
set up three defenses: (1) an affirmative claim of title under a
tax deed; (2) ten years' adverse possession; (3)
"and this defendant, further answering, denies that the said
plaintiff is the owner of the premises described in her petition,
and this defendant also denies that the plaintiff is entitled to
the possession of the said premises, and prays to be hence
dismissed with his costs, to be taxed."
The averment of diverse citizenship was not controverted by the
answer,
Page 134 U. S. 251
and, as the petition would have been insufficient without that
allegation, the averment must be taken as true under the practice
in the courts of record in Nebraska. Neb.Code Civil Proc.
§§ 134, 135; Comp. Stat. 1885, p. 645.
Clearly, where the jurisdictional allegation is not traversed,
no question involving the capacity of the parties in the cause to
litigate in the circuit court can be raised before the jury,
Railroad Co. v.
Quigley, 21 How. 202,
62 U. S. 214,
or treated as within the issues they might be impaneled to
determine. The circuit court properly proceeded to judgment,
although the special verdict contained no finding upon this
point.
After the case had been twice tried on its merits, and stood on
the special verdict upon motions by the parties for judgment in
their favor, respectively, the defendant assailed the jurisdiction
of the court by petition upon the ground that the title had been
placed in the plaintiff collusively, and with the view of enabling
suit to be brought in the United States court, when in fact the
plaintiff did not own the property, and had accepted the title only
for the collusive purpose aforesaid. Prior to the passage of the
act of 1875, such a question could only be raised by a plea in
abatement in the nature of a plea to the jurisdiction, but the
fifth section of that act provided that if
"it shall appear to the satisfaction of said circuit court at
any time after such suit has been brought or removed thereto that
such suit does not really and substantially involve a dispute or
controversy properly within the jurisdiction of said circuit court,
or that the parties to said suit have been improperly or
collusively made or joined, either as plaintiffs or defendants, for
the purpose of creating a case cognizable or removable under this
act, the said circuit court shall proceed no further therein, but
shall dismiss the suit; . . . but the order of said circuit court
dismissing or remanding said cause to the state court shall be
reviewable by the supreme court on writ of error or appeal, as the
case may be."
18 Stat. 472. The application here was made more than a year and
a half after the second trial, and, although the petitioner avers
that he "did not have knowledge of the above facts before the trial
of this cause," we remark in passing that such an objection ought
to be raised at the first opportunity, and delay in its
presentation should be considered
Page 134 U. S. 252
in examining into the grounds upon which it is alleged to
rest.
The issue of fact raised upon this petition was tried by the
circuit court without a jury, and the application denied. No
question of law was reserved by the defendant during the hearing,
but he entered an exception to the final order, and now asks us to
hold that it was the duty of the circuit court to dismiss the case
because collusively brought. We do not care to enter upon a
discussion as to how far in an action at law, where there are no
special findings upon an issue of fact such as this, a party has
the right to demand a review of the final order of the circuit
court on the merits, as, upon the evidence in this record, we are
content with the conclusion arrived at. In
Barry v.
Edmunds, 116 U. S. 550, it
was held that a suit cannot properly be dismissed by a circuit
court of the United States as not involving a controversy within
the jurisdiction of the court unless the facts, when made to appear
on the record, create a legal certainty of that conclusion.
"Nothing less than this," said MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS, "is meant by
the statute when it provides that
the failure of its
jurisdiction on this account' shall appear to the satisfaction of
said circuit court."
The question was whether the conveyance by Jane Y. Irwin to
Rowena Young was colorable merely. The plaintiff testified
positively that she was the real owner of the land, and that it was
conveyed to her by her sister, Mrs. Irwin, partly in consideration
of what Mrs. Irwin owed her and partly because she herself had a
share in it; that "the land was entered with money coming out of my
father's estate belonging in part to me, being the joint fund of
Jane and myself." And her testimony is corroborated by that of her
brother, William P. Young.
We have carefully examined the evidence, and especially the
matters urged as constituting badges of colorable transfer, but do
not find any substantial ground for overthrowing the deed or
questioning the passing of the title. Such conflict as exists has
been determined by the circuit court, and it would subserve no
useful purpose to restate the circumstances
Page 134 U. S. 253
in detail, as we think the facts fell far short of establishing
petitioner's contention.
Upon the rendition of the special verdict, the defendant moved
to set aside the tenth, seventeenth, and nineteenth findings as not
supported by the evidence, and for judgment upon the verdict as so
amended, but the court overruled the motion, and entered judgment
for the plaintiff upon the special verdict as returned. We cannot
review the action of the court in reference to the findings
objected to, and, no exceptions having been saved, are restricted
to the question whether there was error in giving judgment for the
plaintiff upon the facts as found.
From the first finding, it appears that Jane Y. Irwin
"obtained title to said lands by patent from the United States,
December 15, 1862, and on the 9th of August, 1867, conveyed the
same to William P. Young, who, on the 5th of February, 1874,
reconveyed the same to Jane Y. Irwin, who, on the 11th day of June,
1884, conveyed said lands to the plaintiff, Rowena Young."
This made out the title of defendant in error, and to prevent
her recovery the plaintiff in error was obliged to sustain one or
more of his affirmative defenses, in respect to which he had the
burden of proof.
These defenses were: claim under two tax deeds, coupled with ten
years' adverse possession; conveyance by Jane Y. Irwin, by William
T. Donavan as her attorney in fact; sheriff's deed on execution
sale to Curson; deed of Curson to Little, and of Little to
plaintiff in error.
As to the tax deeds, it was found that one was issued upon a
sale made for the taxes of a year when the land was not assessed
for taxes, and that neither of them was "sealed by the county
treasurer with his official seal, nor did the county treasurer then
have an official seal." The circuit court held that under the
decisions of the Supreme Court of Nebraska, these tax deeds were
void for want of the seal, and cited many decisions of that court
to that effect. In
Gue v. Jones, 25 Neb. 634, 637, January
term, 1889, the court said:
"At the trial, the defendant produced a tax deed covering the
premises in question, issued to Smith by the Treasurer of Douglas
County, August 4, 1865, for the taxes of 1862. This deed
Page 134 U. S. 254
was objected to by the plaintiff on several grounds, among
others, that it was not executed under the official seal of the
treasurer. The act of 1861, under which the deed was executed,
provides at section 60, 'that such conveyance shall be executed by
the county treasurer under his hand and seal.' Then follows the
statutory form of such deed, concluding with the words of
attestation: 'In testimony whereof the said _____, Treasurer of
said County of _____, has hereunto set his hand and seal, on the
day and year aforesaid. [Seal.]' The statute has been substantially
carried forward throughout all the changes of the revenue laws to
the present day. Under its provisions, it has been held by this
court, in cases too numerous for citation, of which several are
cited by counsel for defendant in error, that
a tax deed not
executed by the treasurer under his seal of office is void. It
will not be expected that this line of decision can be departed
from now. The deed introduced in the case at bar, if legal and
proper in all other respects -- as to which we pass no opinion --
is open to the fatal objection that it does not purport to have
been executed by the county treasurer under his seal of
office."
No title therefore was transmitted by these deeds, but a tax
deed, though void upon its face, is sufficient color of title in
Nebraska to support an adverse possession to the property therein
described,
Gatling v. Lane, 17 Neb. 77, while a tax
certificate is not,
McKeighan v. Hopkins, 14 Neb. 364. The
possession, however, which bars a recovery must be continuous,
uninterrupted, open, notorious, actual, exclusive, and adverse.
Armstrong v.
Morrill, 14 Wall. 120,
81 U. S. 145.
From the findings it appears that Little was holding in January,
1875, which was within ten years prior to the commencement of this
suit, under a tax certificate; that up to the year 1876, the
possession of the land in dispute was "mixed," but it "was open,
vacant, and unoccupied, except by the city pest house, and was used
as a common;" that some portions of the whole tract were in
possession of squatters, some portions in possession of parties
holding under Mrs. Irwin, and a part in the possession of the
grantee in the tax deeds or under him, and the jury find the
possession of the premises delivered
Page 134 U. S. 255
to the defendant and held by him to have been only a mixed
possession. Where the rightful owner is in the actual occupancy of
a part of his tract, he is in the constructive and legal possession
and seisin of the whole unless he is disseised by actual occupation
and dispossession, and where the possession is mixed, the legal
seisin is according to the legal title, so that in the case at bar
there could be no constructive possession on the part of the
defendant or his grantors, even if that might exist if he had had
actual possession of a part, and no one had been in possession of
the remainder.
Hunnicutt v. Peyton, 102 U.
S. 333,
102 U. S. 368;
Barr v. Gratz,
4 Wheat. 213,
17 U. S. 223.
Nothing is clearer upon the face of this record than that the jury
refused to find the possession relied on by defendant to have been
actual, undisputed, exclusive, open, notorious, and adverse, but
found, on the contrary, that the possession was mixed. The judgment
cannot be reversed on the ground of error in this regard.
The plaintiff in error also asserted title under a conveyance by
Donavan as her attorney in fact. The second 3d 4th, 13th, 14th,
16th, 28th, 29th, 30th, 37th, and 40th findings present the facts
on this branch of the case, and establish that on the 31st day of
March, 1874, Jane Y. Irwin entered into a contract with Scott,
Boyd, and La Master for the subdivision and sale of this and other
land, and that they entered upon, platted, and surveyed it by the
last of May, 1875; that (4th and 28th),
"on the 12th of August, 1875, Jane Y. Irwin and her husband
executed a power of attorney to William T. Donavan to enable him to
make conveyances to purchasers when sales were made by Scott, Boyd,
and La Master, and to facilitate their operations under their
contract of March 31, 1874;"
that on the 25th day of October, 1879, a deed was executed by
Donavan, as attorney in fact for tracts which included that in
dispute, to one Lantz, for "the purported consideration, as
expressed upon the face of said deed, of $1,000," and on the same
day Lantz, "for the consideration of $1,000, as expressed in said
deed, paid by Samuel W. Little to said John P. Lantz," conveyed the
same to Little; that these deeds were parts of one transaction, and
the entire
Page 134 U. S. 256
property conveyed was worth over $100,000; that the conveyance
by Donavan to Lantz
"was a fraud upon the power held by said Donavan, and was given
by Donavan and taken by Lantz with the intention of defrauding Jane
Y. Irwin, and that Samuel W. Little had full knowledge of such
fact, and procured such conveyance to be made with such knowledge
and design;"
that the defendant had full knowledge of the revocation of the
power of attorney aforesaid upon the record by Jane Y. Irwin, and
of the facts therein stated prior to any purchase by him; that
Little and wife, for the recited consideration of $10,500, sold and
conveyed to Deputron, who was a brother-in-law of Little, "and that
there is no proof of any consideration paid by Deputron to Little
for such conveyance." It is not pretended that the deed to Lantz
was made to carry out or effectuate any sale of the property which
had been made by Scott, Boyd, and La Master, and the findings show
that it was made in fraud of the power of attorney, and with the
intention of defrauding Jane Y. Irwin. We cannot agree with the
counsel for plaintiff in error that it is to be inferred that the
power to Donavan was a power to convey generally and at discretion.
We do not understand the language of the fourth and twenty-eighth
findings, which are identical, as merely indicating the purpose for
which the power of attorney was given, but regard it as expressing
the limitations of the power. It was the scope of the power that
the jury must have had in mind in stating that it was executed to
enable Donavan to make conveyances to purchasers "when sales were
made by Scott, Boyd, and La Master, and to facilitate their
operations under their contract of March 31, 1874." We think it
sufficiently clear that it was only a naked power to convey when a
sale had been made. The deed by Donavan was a fraud upon the power,
because it was in violation of the authority thereby vested. The
rule is well settled that
"in the case of a naked power not coupled with an interest, the
law requires that every prerequisite to the exercise of that power
should precede it. The party who sets up a title must furnish the
evidence necessary to support it. If the validity of a deed depends
on an act
in pais, the
Page 134 U. S. 257
party claiming under it is as much bound to prove the
performance of the act as he would be bound to prove any matter of
record on which the validity of the deed might depend."
Williams v. Peyton's
Lessee, 4 Wheat. 77;
Ransom v.
Williams, 2 Wall. 313,
69 U. S. 319.
It behooved the plaintiff in error to have the power made part of
the findings, if the conclusion we have reached as to its contents
was open to dispute, and not to have accepted the fourth and
twenty-eighth findings without objection. In the language used in
Williams v. Peyton's Lessee, the power was a link in his
chain which was essential to its continuity and which it was
incumbent on him to preserve. The findings in reference to this
power not only do not justify the contention of plaintiff in error,
but are inconsistent with it, for the Donavan deed was not simply
found fraudulent in fact but "a fraud upon the power." This,
coupled with the finding that the power was to enable Donavan to
convey when sales were made by Scott, Boyd, and La Master, shows
that Donavan's act, when compared with the words of the power, was
not warranted by the terms used. Nor under those findings is there
any ground for the assumption that Deputron believed that Scott,
Boyd, and La Master had made sale of the property to Lantz or
Little.
Even if the power had been general, the conveyance was found
fraudulent, and no estoppel arises in favor of plaintiff in error
in the absence of findings that he paid value without notice.
It is impossible to conclude that the circuit court erred in
putting aside this attempt to bolster up the title by the deed of
Donavan.
In addition to the Donavan deed and the tax deeds, it is urged
on behalf of the plaintiff in error that he made out title under a
sale on execution. One Sessions, on May 19, 1877, recovered a
judgment in the District Court of Lancaster County, Nebraska,
against Jane Y. Irwin, upon which execution was issued and levied
on forty acres, of which the premises in controversy were a part,
and sale made to one Curson for $30, which sale was confirmed
October 10, 1877, and a
Page 134 U. S. 258
deed of the forty acres made by the sheriff, and recorded on the
same day, the land being worth at that time $20,000. The order
confirming the sale was set aside by the court, November 3, 1877,
before Curson "had made any conveyance to anyone, and was never
afterwards confirmed." On the 9th of November, 1877, Curson
conveyed this land for $30 to S. W. Little, which deed was recorded
on the 26th day of November.
The opinion of the circuit court upon this point is as
follows:
"It is the settled law of Nebraska that the title of a purchaser
at an execution sale depends not alone upon his bid or payment of
the purchase money, but upon the confirmation of the sale; also
that one purchasing at an execution sale submits himself to the
jurisdiction of the court as to matters affecting that sale, and
that a court has power during the term to vacate or modify its own
orders or to rescind decrees.
Phillips v Dawley, 1 Neb.
320;
Bank v. Green, 10 Neb. 134;
Volland v.
Wilcox, 17 Neb. 50;
Gregory v. Tingley, 18 Neb. 322.
It follows from these facts and decisions that the sale, though
temporarily confirmed, was finally set aside, and that no rights of
a third party accrued during the time that the sale was apparently
confirmed. Hence, this chain of title presented by defendants must
fail."
We are entirely satisfied that this expresses the law on the
subject in the State of Nebraska. In
Bank v. Green, 10
Neb. 130, the Supreme Court of Nebraska says:
"Under our law governing sales of real property on execution,
the title of the purchaser depends entirely upon the sale's being
finally confirmed, . . . and until this was done, the rights of the
execution debtor are not certainly divested."
The final order confirming is subject to review as the
confirmation of a sale in equity is,
Parrat v. Neligh, 7
Neb. 459, and the purchaser submits to the jurisdiction of the
court as to all matters connected with such sale or relating to him
in the character of purchaser. This order of confirmation was
vacated before there was any change in the relation of the parties,
and the sheriff's deed fell with it. Counsel for plaintiff in
Page 134 U. S. 259
error refers to section 508 of the Civil Code, which reads as
follows:
"If any judgment or judgments in satisfaction of which any lands
or tenements are sold shall at any time thereafter be reversed,
such reversal shall not defeat or affect the title of the purchaser
or purchasers, but in such case restitution shall be made by the
judgment creditor of the moneys for which such lands or tenements
were sold, with lawful interest from the day of sale."
Comp.Stat. 1885, p. 695. This section relates to the judgment,
as to which the purchaser is not affected by irregularity or error,
and to which he is not a party; but we are considering the order of
confirmation, which may be reviewed on appeal,
Parrat v.
Neligh, ubi sup., though the merits of the original case are
not open to reexamination,
Bank of Lincoln v. Scofield, 9
Neb. 499.
The cases cited by the circuit judge show that the purchaser can
move for confirmation or to set the sale aside, and can appeal from
the order thereon; that he may be compelled to perform his bid, and
that he is concluded by the result of the proceedings to confirm or
annul the same.
And see Paulett v. Peabody, 3 Neb.
196-197;
Shann v. Jones, 19 N.J.Eq. 251;
Requa v.
Rea, 2 Paige 339;
Barker v. Richardson, 41 N.J.Eq.
656. That such is the rule in Nebraska is quite convincingly shown
by the case of
Sessions v. Irwin, 8 Neb. 5, which was an
appeal by Curson from the order setting aside the confirmation and
the sale under consideration here, which order was, however,
affirmed. If Sessions, the judgment creditor, received $30 from
Curson, respecting which there is no finding, he became Curson's
debtor to that amount, and, as argued for defendant in error,
Curson might have a right to be compensated out of the moneys
collected upon the judgment, but the operation of the order setting
aside the confirmation was to defeat any claim of title on the part
of Curson or his grantee. This accords with the decisions and
settled practice of the state courts in reference to sales under
process issuing out of them.
Finally, it is said that the judgment embraces property not
described in the petition. The description was "the west half of
the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section
twenty-four."
Page 134 U. S. 260
The jury found title thereto in defendant in error, and also by
the thirty-seventh finding described what was stated to be "the
premises in dispute" by metes and bounds, as conveyed to Deputron.
The judgment, though using somewhat different language, conforms to
the finding. There was no motion to set aside the verdict and for a
new trial, nor can we discover that any suggestion of mistake in
its terms was made below.
The governmental subdivision would be, if accurate, eighty rods
long by forty rods wide, and the finding and judgment describe a
tract fourteen hundred feet in length by seven hundred fifty feet
in width, less a parcel in the southwest corner; but excess in
acreage frequently occurs in government surveys, and, as the
finding is that the description there given and followed in the
judgment is the description of the premises in dispute, we perceive
no ground for interference.
There being no error, the judgment is
Affirmed.
*
"1st. That Jane Y. Irwin obtained title to said lands by patent
from the United States, December 15, 1862, and on the 9th of
August, 1867, conveyed the same to William P. Young, who, on the
5th of February, 1874, reconveyed the same to Jane Y. Irwin, who,
on the 11th day of June, 1884, conveyed said lands to the
plaintiff, Rowena Young."
"2d. On the 31st of March, 1874, Jane Y. Irwin and husband
entered into a contract with N. S. Scott, Samuel Boyd, and Milton
La Master for the selling and subdivision of said lands."
"3d. And said Scott, Boyd, and La Master soon after entered upon
said lands under said contract, and staked out the block corners
and street intersections, being engaged in the survey on the lands
in controversy and other lands for a period of about two months,
finishing their survey about the last of May, 1874."
"4th. On the 12th of August, 1875, Jane Y. Irwin and her husband
executed a power of attorney to William T. Donavan to enable him to
make conveyances to purchasers when sales were made by Scott, Boyd,
and La Master, and to facilitate their operations under their
contract of March 31, 1874."
"5th. We find that there was no assessment of the land in
controversy for taxes in the year 1867, nor was the same borne upon
the tax list of that year."
"6th. We find the tax deed of June 12, 1871, executed by John
Cadman, county treasurer, was not sealed by the county treasurer
with his official seal, nor did the county treasurer then have an
official seal."
"7th. We find that the county treasurer's deed executed by R. A.
Bain, dated September 15, 1871, was not sealed by the county
treasurer, nor did the county treasurer then have an official
seal."
"8th. We find the forty acres of land sold by the sheriff to E.
J. Curson, and conveyed by deed October 10, 1877, was at that time
of the value of $20,000."
"9th. That the confirmation of sale was set aside by the
District Court of Lancaster County, in which it had been made
November 3, 1877, before E. J. Curson had made any conveyance to
anyone, and was never afterwards confirmed."
"10th. The jury find that Nelson C. Brock, and his grantees had
mixed possession of the west half of the southwest quarter of
section 24, township 10, range 6, in Lancaster County, Nebraska,
for ten years prior to the commencement of this suit, but the jury
find that parties claiming under defendant's grantors held portions
of said property, and parties holding under plaintiff's grantors
held portions of said property, so that said possession was in
controversy and disputed, and mixed down to the year 1877."
"11th. That up to the year 1876, the said defendants and their
grantors had mixed possession of the land in dispute, to-wit, the
northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township
10, range 6, but said land was open, vacant, and unoccupied, except
by the city pest house, and was used as a common."
"12th. The jury also find that parties held mixed possession of
portions of the west half of the southwest quarter of section 24,
township 10, range 6, during the years 1874 and 1875, who did not
attorn to or acknowledge possession in either the plaintiff or the
defendants, or anyone under or by whom they claim."
"13th. The jury find that the conveyance from Jane Y. Irwin and
John Irwin by William T. Donavan, attorney in fact to J. P. Lantz,
was a fraud upon the power held by said Donavan, and was given by
Donavan and taken by Lantz with the intention of defrauding Jane Y.
Irwin, and that Samuel W. Little had full knowledge of such facts,
and procured such conveyance to be made with such knowledge and
design."
"14th. That the said deed by Donavan to Lantz, and the deed of
same by Lantz to Little, were executed at the same time, and were
parts of one transaction, and that the northeast quarter of the
southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6, was on the
25th day of October, 1879, worth $30,000, and that the balance of
the land then by Donavan conveyed would exceed $70,000 in value at
that time."
"15th. That during the years 1874, 1875, and 1876, parties
holding under the grantors of plaintiff held portions of the west
half of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6."
"16th. We find that all the defendants had full knowledge of the
revocation of the power of attorney aforesaid upon the record by
Jane Y. Irwin, and of the facts therein stated prior to any
purchase made by them or either of them."
"17th. That one N. C. Brock, through whom the defendant traces
one chain of his title, on the 12th day of June, 1871, received
from the County Treasurer of Lancaster County, Nebraska, a tax deed
of that date of the north half of and 20 acres off the west side of
the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24,
township 10, range 6 east, in Lancaster County, Nebraska, the
premises in controversy being in the northeast quarter of the
southwest quarter aforesaid, which tax deed purported to be issued
for the taxes assessed against the above-described parcels of land,
respectively, for the year 1867, which tax deed was on the 13th day
of June, 1871, recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster
County, Nebraska"
"18th. That on the 15th day of December, 1871, the County
Treasurer of Lancaster County, Nebraska, delivered to said Nelson
C. Brock a second tax deed of that date covering the northeast
quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6 east, in Lancaster County, Nebraska, including the property in
dispute, which deed was issued for the tax of the year 1868, and
which tax deed was on the 18th day of December, 1871, recorded in
the county clerk's office of Lancaster County, Nebraska"
"19th. That on the 18th day of December, 1871, said Nelson C.
Brock made, executed, and delivered to one Charles T. Boggs a lease
in writing of that date of the north half of and the southwest
quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6 east, in Lancaster County, Nebraska, for the term of two years
from that date, which lease contained a leave or license to the
lessee to remove all buildings placed upon said premises by him on
or before the termination of said lease, which said lease was
recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster County,
Nebraska, on the second day of January, 1872."
"20th. That on the 18th day of December, 1873, the said Nelson
C. Brock made, executed, and delivered to said Charles T. Boggs a
second lease in writing of that date of the north half and the
southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township
10, range 6 east, in Lancaster County, Nebraska, for the term of
two years from that date, which said lease contained a similar
provision permitting the lessee to remove all building and
improvements by him erected or permitted to be erected on said
premises off from the same at any time before the expiration of the
said term therein granted, which lease was on the 5th day of
January, 1874, recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster
County, Nebraska"
"21st. That in the month of December, 1871, the said Charles T.
Boggs, claiming title under the said lease first aforesaid, entered
into the mixed possession of the said premises by assuming control
and ownership over the same, and by collecting rents from squatters
and persons then located upon said premises, and subleased other
portions of said premises, and continued to exercise mixed
possession of said premises down to the time he yielded his mixed
possession of the same to Samuel W. Little, and that he paid the
rent to N. C. Brock for the said premises during the terms of the
two leases above mentioned."
"22d. That at the expiration of his term under said leases, he
yielded his mixed possession of the said premises to Samuel W.
Little."
"23d. That on the 18th day of May, 1874, said Neison C. Brock
and his wife, by their deed of quitclaim, conveyed all the said
premises, the north half of the southwest quarter and the southwest
quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6 east, to Samuel W. Little, which deed was duly recorded in the
county clerk's office of Lancaster County, Nebraska, on the 26th
day of May, 1874."
"24th. That in or about the month of May, 1873, Charles T. Boggs
subleased the north half of the southwest quarter of section 24,
township 10, range 6 east, to one D. A. Gilbert, who, on or about
that date, entered upon the mixed possession of the same, and
erected a ranch for cows, or milk ranch, on the northwest quarter
of said quarter section, all the said north half of said southwest
quarter being at the time he entered therein wholly vacant and
unoccupied lands, and that he continued under said lease in the
mixed possession and occupation of the same until in or about the
year 1878, when he moved off his cattle ranch, and surrendered his
mixed possession of the same at the instance of S. W. Little,
having during that period attorned and paid rent to Charles T.
Boggs."
"25th. That in the year 1876, Samuel W. Little began breaking up
and actually improving the northeast quarter of said quarter
section, and erected windmills and placed other valuable
improvements thereon, planted trees and shrubbery, and set out
hedges and other fences, and thence, until he delivered his mixed
possession of the said property to his several grantees, had the
mixed possession of the said premises, said northeast quarter of
the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6
east."
"26th. That on the 19th day of May, 1877, in the District Court
of Lancaster County, in the State of Nebraska at the April term of
the said court, in a certain action therein pending, wherein Milo
H. Sessions was plaintiff and John Irwin and Jane Y. Irwin were
defendants, a judgment was obtained in the said action in favor of
the said H. M. Sessions and against said John Irwin and Jane Y.
Irwin, by the consideration of said court, wherein it was
considered by said court that the said plaintiff therein should
recover from and against the said defendants, John Irwin and Jane
Y. Irwin, the principal sum of $350, besides costs therein, taxed
at the sum of $41.38, and for which said sums execution was awarded
out of the said court; that thereafter execution was issued upon
said judgment against the said John Irwin and Jane Y. Irwin, and
the same coming to the hands of the sheriff of the said county, for
want of goods and chattels whereon to levy the said writ, he seized
and caused to be appraised, advertised, and sold, as the property
of the said Jane Y. Irwin, the northeast quarter of the southwest
quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6, to one E. J. Curson,
for the sum of $30; that thereafter he made due return of his said
sale unto the said district court, and afterwards, on the second
day of October, 1877, the followings proceedings were had in the
said court, to-wit:"
"H. M. Sessions against John Irwin and Jane Y. Irwin. This case
comes on upon motion of plaintiff for confirmation of sale
heretofore had in this case, and it is hereby ordered by the court
that cause be shown by Tuesday next, October 9th, why sale should
not be confirmed."
"That afterwards, on the 10th day of October, 1877, that being
the 9th day of the October, 1877, term of said court, the following
proceedings were had in said action therein:"
"Milo H. Sessions v. John Irwin and Jane Y. Irwin. This case
comes on upon the motion of plaintiff for confirmation of sale
heretofore had under former order of this Court, and the court,
upon a careful examination of the proceedings thereof, finds that
the same have been had in all respects in conformity to law and the
orders of this court. It is ordered that the said proceedings and
sale be, and they are hereby, approved and confirmed, and it is
further ordered by the court that the said sheriff convey to the
purchaser, by deed in fee simple, the lands and tenements so
sold."
"That afterwards, and on the 10th day of October, 1877, pursuant
to the foregoing proceedings, Sam. McClay, sheriff of said county,
made, executed, and delivered to said E. J. Curson, purchaser, a
sheriff's deed of conveyance of the said premises, the northeast
quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6 east, in Lancaster County, Nebraska; which deed was by the said
E. J. Curson filed and recorded in the county clerk's office of
Lancaster County, Nebraska, on the 10th day of October, 1877 at 5
o'clock P.M."
"27th. That on the 9th day of November, 1877, said Elijah J.
Curson and Anna M. Curson, his wife, by deed of general warranty,
and for the consideration of the sum of $30, expressed to be in
hand paid, granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed the said
premises, the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section
24, in township 10, range 6 east, to Samuel W. Little; which deed
of conveyance was, on the 26th day of November, 1877, filed and
recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster County,
Nebraska"
"28th. On the 15th of August, 1875, Jane Y. Irwin and her
husband executed a power of attorney to William T. Donavan to
enable him to make conveyances to purchasers when sales were made
by Scott, Boyd, and La Master, and to facilitate their operations
under their contract of March 31, 1874."
"29th. That on the 25th day of October, 1879, the said Jane Y.
Irwin and John Irwin, by W. T. Donavan, their attorney in fact, for
the purported consideration, as expressed upon the face of said
deed, of $1,000, made, executed, and delivered to one John P. Lantz
their warranty deed conveying the northeast quarter of the
southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6 east, and all
that portion of the west half of the said southwest quarter of
section 24, township 10, range 6 east, lying north of the center
line of R Street, in the City of Lincoln, extended east through
said lands, and also the following described parcels of land,
situated in the southwest quarter of said southwest quarter of
section 24, township 10, range 6, aforesaid: commencing at the
southwest corner of said section 24; thence running east 520 feet;
thence north 460 feet; thence west 520 feet; thence south 460 feet,
to the place of beginning, and also commencing at a point 460 feet
cast of the southeast corner of block No. 38, in the City of
Lincoln, and 470 feet north of the south line of O Street in said
City of Lincoln; thence running east 760 feet; thence north 400
feet; thence west 760 feet; thence south 400 feet, to the place of
beginning; which said deed was recorded in the county clerk's
office of Lancaster County, Nebraska, on the 25th day of October,
1879 at 4 o'clock and 25 minutes P.M."
"30th. That on the 25th day of October, 1879, said John P. Lantz
and Hannah Lantz, his wife, by their deed of general warranty and
for the consideration of $1,000, as expressed in said deed, paid by
Samuel W. Little to said John P. Lantz, conveyed the property in
the last finding above described to the said Samuel W. Little,
which deed was, on the 25th day of October, 1879 at 4 o'clock and
30 minutes P.M., recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster
County, Nebraska"
"31st. That neither Jane Y. Irwin nor John Irwin, nor anyone for
them, ever paid any taxes on any portion of the north half and the
southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township
10, range 6 east."
"32d. That Nelson C. Brock and Samuel W. Little and their
respective grantees of any property in dispute herein have paid all
taxes assessed against the said property since the entry thereof to
the year 1884, under claim of title to said premises."
"33d. That on the 9th day of August, 1867, John Irwin and Jane
Y. Irwin, by their deed of general warranty, conveyed to one
William P. Young the north half of the southwest quarter and the
southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township
10, range 6 east, for the purported consideration expressed on the
face of the said deed of $490, which said deed was filed and
recorded in the county clerk's office of Lancaster County,
Nebraska, on the 10th day of August, 1867."
"34th. That on the 9th day of January, 1875, said Samuel W.
Little, by a deed of quitclaim, pursuant to an arrangement made
between Jane Y. Irwin and one George Smith and said Samuel W.
Little, made, executed, and delivered, for the consideration of
$100, a part of the southwest quarter of the southwest quarter of
section 24, township 10, range 6 east; that said S. W. Little had
consented to the entry of said George Smith upon the said parcel of
land under the contract for the purchase of the same from Messrs.
Scott, Boyd, and La Master."
"35th. That in the year 1873, one Hickman entered upon the
northeast quarter of the south west quarter of section 24, township
10, range 6 east, under a lease from Charles T. Boggs, and erected
thereon stables for a milk ranch, and paid rent thereon for said
premises at the rate of $12 per annum, and continued to occupy the
said premises for such purposes, and for feeding and herding his
stock thereon, for a period of about two years."
"36th. That from May 31, 1874, continuously down to the time of
the commencement of this suit, June 14, 1884, Charles T. Boggs and
Samuel W. Little, and his and their lessees and grantees, under
claim of title thereto, held mixed possession of all of the north
half of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6
east, and that no other person occupied the same or entered thereon
under claim of title to any part thereof."
"37th. That on the 25th day of September, 1883, Samuel W. Little
and Mary D. Little, by their deed of general warranty, and for the
consideration of the sum of $10,500, sold and conveyed to the
defendant, John C. Deputron, all that part of the northeast quarter
of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range 6 east,
described as follows, and being the premises in dispute: Beginning
at a point in the center of R Street, in said city, 150 feet east
of the east line of Seventeenth Street; thence east, along the
center of R Street, 600 feet, to the center of Nineteenth Street;
thence north at right angles with R street, 1,400 feet; thence
west, parallel with R street, 750 feet, to the east line of
Seventeenth Street, extended north through R Street; thence south,
along said east line of Seventeenth Street, 790 feet; thence east,
parallel with R Street, 94 feet; thence south, parallel with
Seventeenth Street, 247 feet; thence east, parallel with R Street,
38 feet; thence south parallel with Seventeenth Street, 163 feet;
thence east, along Leighton's north line, 18 feet; thence south,
along Leighton's line, 200 feet, to the place of beginning,
containing 22.15 acres of land; also part of the said northeast
quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 10, range
6 east, described as follows: for a starting point begin at a point
400 feet east of Grand Avenue and 200 feet north of R Street at C.
M. Leigh ton's northwest corner; running thence north 410 feet;
thence east 94 feet; thence south 247 feet; thence east 38 feet;
thence south 163 feet; thence west along Leighton's north line to
the place of beginning, the north and south limits to be parallel
with Grand Avenue, and the east and west limits to be parallel with
R Street, which said deed was recorded on the 6th day of September,
1883, in the county clerk's office of Lancaster County,
Nebraska"
"38th. That said Samuel W. Little delivered to the said John C.
Deputron the mixed possession of the said premises at the date of
the execution of the said deed, and that the said John C. Deputron
thence and hitherto has held the mixed possession of the same."
"39th. That the value of the said premises at the present time
is the sum of forty thousand dollars."
"40th. We find that John C. Deputron, defendant, is a
brother-in-law of S. W. Little, his grantor, and that there is no
proof of any consideration paid by Deputron to Little for such
conveyance."
"41st. That the value of the land claimed by John C. Deputron,
defendant, being 22.15 acres, was worth (40,000) forty thousand
dollars. January 29, 1875, S. W. Little was holding said premises
as purchaser at tax sale under certificate of purchase, May 26,
1874, for tax of 1872. If the court is of the opinion that on these
facts the plaintiff is entitled to possession of the property in
dispute, then we find for the plaintiff."