delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was a bill in equity, to set aside, as invalid and a cloud upon the complainants’ title, a sale for taxes, and a deed thereunder, of certain real estate in Cook county, owned by the complainants and of which they were in possession, on the ground of certain irregularities in the proceedings whereby the tax deed was acquired, the bill alleging that the Illinois Land and Loan Company claimed the land in fee under the tax deed.
The first error assigned is, that the return of service was insufficient to authorize the entry of the default of the Illinois Land and Loan Company. The sheriff’s return on the summons is: “ Served this writ by reading to the within named William Kelsey Reed and to George W. Reed, and to William Kelsey Reed, cashier of the Illinois Land and Loan Company, the president not found in my county, he being a non-resident, and delivered to each of them a copy thereof, March 25,1870.” The statutory requirement in cases of this kind is, that “ process shall be served upon the president of such company, if he reside in the county in which suit is brought, and if such president be absent from the county, or does not reside in the county, then the summons shall be served by the proper officer, by leaving a copy thereof with any clerk, cashier,” etc. Gross’ Stat. 506.
The objection taken is, that the return does not show that the president did not reside in the county. The whole return is to be taken together. The sheriff of Cook county, to whom the writ was directed, had just mentioned “my county” in his return, and when he undertakes to tell why the president was not found in his county, by stating that he was a nonresident, he could mean nothing else than that he was a nonresident of Cook county. That such was the reasonable and proper construction of the return we have no doubt. Words may be implied in an officer’s return, as well as in other written evidence, where such implication is justified by what is expressed. Farnsworth v. Strasler, 12 Ill. 482.
All the defendants were properly in court, and the bill was regularly taken for confessed against them.
The next error assigned is, that a court of equity should not take jurisdiction of a case of this kind, but should leave the party to his remedy at law.
The appellants’ counsel, in support of his position, insists that it is the province of a court of law, and not of equity, to try the validity of a tax title; that the complainants had an immediate remedy at law; that they might have brought an action of ejectment to test their title at once against the Illinois Land and Loan Company, although the latter were not in possession and reference is made to the decisions of different courts, under statutes similar to our own, that ejectment will lie against a party out of possession, where he claims title to unoccupied land. Admitting that to be the construction of our statute in the case of unoccupied lands, we do not understand that ordinarily a party in the actual occupation of land can maintain ejectment against one out of possession, who only claims title to the land. The specific relief of canceling the deed could not be had at law. Although contradictory decisions are to be found on the point of jurisdiction, it appears to be now fully established, that where the claim of an adverse party to land is valid upon the face of the instrument or the proceedings sought to be set aside, and it requires the establishment of extrinsic facts to show the supposed conveyance to be inoperative and void, a court of equity may interfere to set it aside, as a cloud upon the real title to the land, and order the same to be delivered up and canceled. Hamilton v. Cummings, 1 Johns. Ch. 517; Pettit v. Shepherd, 5 Paige, 493; 9 id. 388; Piersall v. Elliott, 6 Pet. 95; Ward v. Dewey, 16 N. Y. 519. In the present case, the only inquiry involved is the regularity of a tax sale proceeding and a deed thereunder; by the showing of the bill the deed is void. Ro defense is attempted to be made in its favor, but the bill is taken as confessed. The complainants, being in actual occupation, can bring no suit at law to test the title; the defendants will not do so, conscious of the invalidity of their title, and by the lapse of time vital proof may be lost. The deed is good on its face; its presence on the record would be likely to have the effect to deter from the purchase and impair the market value of the land; it is useless in the hands of the holder, except as a means of annoyance and extortion; and it seems a fit case for the interposition of the power of a court of chancery to deprive the instrument of its means of mischief, by its cancellation.
Although two former decisions of this court have been referred to, which seem opposed to the exercise of this jurisdiction, it has been directly asserted in recent decisions of the court, from which we do not feel disposed to depart. Gage v. Rohrbach, ante, p. 262; Gage v. Billings et al., ante, 268, decided at the present term.
Before filing the bill, the complainants tendered to the defendants the amount of redemption money, and ten per cent interest, in pursuance of an act of the general assembly, approved February 21, 1861, requiring the same as a prerequisite to questioning the validity of the deed (Sess. Laws, 1861, 170); and it is assigned for error, that the court erred in not requiring the complainants to keep their tender good by bringing the money into court for the use of the defendants, or some of them, and in not requiring any money to be refunded to the defendants.
In Wilson et al. v. McKenna, 52 Ill. 44, it was held, that the provision of the general revenue law (Rev. Stat. 448, § 73), requiring payment of all the taxes due and assessed upon land before a tax title to it can be questioned, was unconstitutional, the effect of it being to compel a party to buy justice. For the same reason, the requirement in the act of 1861, of the payment of the redemption money and interest, as therein named, as a condition precedent to questioning the validity of a tax deed, must be held to be nugatory. The redemption money and interest, although tendered, was not brought into court; and the mere tender of it would not create a liability to pay it, where none existed before, and in this respect no error is perceived.
But the interference of a court of equity, in such a case, is a matter of discretion, and the court will, in granting relief, impose such terms upon the party as it deems the real justice of the case to require, the maxim here being emphatically applied, that he who seeks equity must do equity (2 Story’s Eq. Jur., § 693); and the condition of relief in this case should have been the refunding to the Illinois Land and Loan Company of all taxes paid on the land.
It is lastly assigned for error, that the court should have done equity to all parties by its decree, and should not have declared void the deed from William Kelsey Eeed to the Illinois Land and Loan Company, without at the same time decreeing a return of the consideration paid by the company to Eeed.
It is sufficient to say, that it does not appear that any consideration was paid, nor that there were any covenants in the deed.
For the error before indicated, the decreé is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, in conformity with this opinion.
Decree reversed.
Mr. Justice Walker:I am not able to concur in the decision of the above case.