This is a suit in equity instituted by appellants against appellee to quiet title to several tracts of land in Woodruff County, aggregating 400 acres. They deraign title from the Government, alleging in their complaint that the lands are unimproved and uninclosed, and seek to cancel appellee’s adverse claim as a cloud upon their title. Appellee asserts title to the lands under several tax sales in June, 1896, for the taxes of the previous year. He exhibits with his answer five tax deeds executed by the county clerk pursuant to the aforesaid sales, one dated June 18, 1898, conveying the north half of the southwest quarter of section 36, township 7 north, range 1 west; and the other four dated August 25; 1899, and January 30, 1900, conveying the other four tracts, aggregating three hundred and twenty acres.
This action was commenced on June 6, 1905. Appellee also pleads the two-years statute under the tax deed dated June ,18,, 1898, as to the tract embraced in that deed; and as to the other tracts pleads the payment of taxes for seven years in succession under color of title. His answer contains a prayer for the quieting of his title. Appellants then filed a reply stating that “said lands were not sold for the taxes for said year 1895, nor for the taxes of any other year, and that the clerk of the county court of said county had no authority in law to issue any deed therefor, and that any deeds which he may have executed are wholly null and void.”
The case was heard by the court on the morning of December 4, 1906, in the absence of the plaintiffs and their solicitors, and defendant, was permitted to introduce the oral testimony of the defendant, William Penrose, which was reduced to writing in open court and filed as a part of the record. A decree was then entered in favor of the defendant dismissing the complaint for want of equity and quieting defendant’s title to the lands in controversy. During the afternoon of the same day plaintiffs’ solicitors appeared, and the court on their motion set aside the decree, and the case was re-submitted, and a decree was again entered in favor of the defendant to the same effect as the former one.
The defendant was permitted, over the objection of plaintiffs, to read in evidence the testimony of defendant taken during the forenoon, and the plaintiffs excepted to this ruling.
Inasmuch as the testimony of witness Penrose was the only evidence introduced tending to establish his possession of the land described in the first-mentioned deed, it is important to inquire whether or not the chancellor erred in permitting it to be read. Counsel for appellants urged this as ground for reversal of that part of the decree affecting the tract in question. It should be noted that appellants did not request the court to give them an opportunity to cross-examine the witness, but contented themselves with an exception to the introduction of the evidence which had already been taken in open court, reduced to writing, and filed as a part of the record. This evidence had then become, by order of the court, a part of the record in the case. The effect of the last order of the court was to set aside the former decree and submission of the case and to allow the plaintiffs to be heard. The trial had commenced in the forenoon, and the proceeding in the afternoon was a continuation of that which had now already been commenced. There is nothing in the record to show that the chancellor abused his discretion in causing the trial to proceed in the absence of the ■ plaintiffs. If they failed to appear when the case was regularly called, he could have dismissed the complaint for want of prosecution,, but the defendant prayed for affirmative relief, and was entitled to a hearing on his plea. Whether or not it would have been error to refuse the plaintiffs an opportunity to cross-examine the witness, we do not feel called upon, in the present state of the record, to decide.
Statutory provisions concerning the taking of depositions and exceptions thereto have no application to the taking of oral testimony at the trial of causes in chancery. When testimony is thus taken at the trial of causes in chancery in the absence of one of the parties, the regularity of the proceedings in that respect is dependent solely upon the question whether or not the court is rightfully proceeding with the trial of the cause. For, if the court can rightfully permit the trial to proceed, it may permit the introduction of oral testimony. Now, as we have already said, there is nothing in the record to show that the court committed any error in allowing the trial to proceed in the absence of the plaintiffs, and its action in setting aside the decree so as to allow the plaintiffs to present their side was a matter of grace which did not give them the right to demand that oral testimony regularly taken in open court and filed as a part of the record be excluded because they were absent when it was taken.
The testimony establishes the fact that the defendant has had actual possession of the said north half of the southwest quarter of section 36 under tax deed for a period of more than two years before the commencement of the action, and the decree in his favor as to that tract is affirmed.
The other tracts stand in a different attitude. These tracts were unimproved and uninclosed, and the defendant paid taxes the'reon for seven years in succession, part of that time under certificates of purchase at tax sale and the remainder of the period under the tax deed. The payments made under the certificates of purchase must be taken into account to make the seven years requisite payments, and the question arises whether or not such certificates of purchase amount to color of title, within the meaning of the statute which provides that “unimproved and uninclosed land shall'be deemed and held to be in possession of the person who pays the taxes thereon if he have color of title thereto.” Kirby’s Digest, § 5057.
This court, in White v. Stokes, 67 Ark. 184, and in Beasley v. Equitable Securities Co., 72 Ark. 601, defined the words “color of title” as “that which in appearance is title, but which in reality is no title; that is, that which in appearance purports to vest title, but in reality is no title.” And the court in these last-mentioned cases held that, those words having received judicial interpretation, they were presumed to have been ttsed by the Legislature in that sense in a statute, when there is nothing to indicate a contrary intent. Citing Sutherland on Statutory Construction, § 255; Black on Interpretation of Laws, pp. 130, 131; Endlich on Interpretation of Statutes, § 367.
A certificate of purchase at tax sale does not fall within the definition just stated. It is not the appearance of title, nor does it “in appearance purport to vest title.” The deed executed pursuant to.the statute is the sole evidence of title under a tax sale. Kirby’s Digest, § 7104; Stephens v. Holmes, 26 Ark. 48.
The Supreme Court of Illinois holds, under a somewhat similar statute, that a certificate of purchase at tax sale does not constitute color of title. Harrell v. Enterprise Savings Bank, 183 Ill. 538. See also McKeighan v. Hopkins, 14 Neb. 361.
There is language in the opinion in Worthen v. Fletcher, 71 Ark. 386, to the contrary, but it is dictum, as the reversal of that case was based upon the failure of the proof to establish actual possession of the particular tract. We hold that a certificate of purchase at tax sale does not constitute color of title within the meaning of the statute, and the language used in Worthen v. Fletcher, supra, expressing a contrary view is now disapproved.
The tax sale under which appellee claims title is void for two reasons. The clerk failed to keep a record of the tax sales in compliance with the statute. Kirby’s Digest, § 7092; Quertermous v. Walls, 70 Ark. 328. The clerk also failed to make and certify a record, before the day of sale, of the list of delinquent lands and notice of sale as required by statute. Kirby’s Digest, § 7086; Logan v. Eastern Ark. Land Co., 68 Ark. 248; Hunt v. Gardner, 74 Ark. 583. Either of these defects in the proceedings is sufficient to avoid the sale.
Opinion delivered November 23, 1907.Counsel for appellee contends that neither of these defects was properly raised in the pleadings. The only record kept by the clerk was introduced in evidence, and it shows that it was not certified in accordance with the requirements of the statute. The pleadings were sufficient to raise the question. Appellants in their pleadings attacked the validity of the tax sales in general terms, but no effort was made by appellee to have them make the attack more specific, and it is too late now to question the sufficiency of the pleadings. The decree, as to all the lands in controversy except, said north half of southwest quarter of section 36 is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter a decree in favor of appellants as to these tracts, subject, however, to a lien in appellee’s favor for all taxes ascertained to have been paid on the lands by him.