Stanton v. Thompson

LAMM, J.

— The petition in this case is in two counts — the first, ejectment for lot 12 in block 16 in Goodrich’s addition to Kansas City; the second, under old section- 656, now Revised Statutes 190-9, section 25-35, as amended, to try and determine title.

The joint answer alleges that Levy is owner and in lawful possession of the lot; that his co-defendants are his tenants; and that plaintiff has been guilty of laches barring recovery. By way of “cross bill,” it then alleges that Levy acquired the property in good faith, constructed improvements (a house and barn) thereon, of a given value, which improvements plaintiff ‘ ‘ stood by and permitted; ’’ and that Levy had paid $250 taxes, general and special, and made “other improvements and paid taxes in good faith,” believing he had good title and having-no notice of any claim of plaintiff. Wherefore, Levy, if judgment of ouster go, prays judgment against plaintiff for $1250 as compensation “for his improvements.”

A reply came in denying allegations of new matter, and the cause was submitted on an agreed statement of facts, other admissions and certain documen*9tary proof. Therefrom it appears that defendants have possession; that one Brooks was the common source of title; that in September, 1889, he mortgaged the premises to plaintiff to secure $6000' due in one year; that in 1891, he conveyed to one Wheeler, subject to the incumbrance; that in 1896, Wheeler conveyed to plaintiff; that plaintiff never afterwards conveyed, and now has title unless Levy got title by a certain special tax proceeding, presently noted; that during all times plaintiff was a resident of Grand Rapids, Michigan, and Wheeler of Massachusetts; that in 1891 Kansas City duly issued a special taxbill against the lot for $5.99, bearing ten per cent interest, for constructing a sidewalk in front,' and delivered the same to the sidewalk contractor, Barnes; that Barnes built the sidewalk by virtue of a city ordinance; that on November 2, 1893, Barnes sued plaintiff and Wheeler on the taxbill before one Browne, a justice of the peace of Kaw township (which includes Kansas City) in Jackson county, Missouri, to enforce a lien on the lot. The petition in that suit is not assailed and does not concern us further than that there was no allegation therein nor was there any affidavit filed that defendants Stanton and Wheeler were non-residents of the State of Missouri. The justice of the peace at sundry times issued original, alius and pluries summonses, in turn, against defendants as residents, and delivered them in turn to one Heacock, constable of Kaw township. These summonses were severally returned, executed by Heacock, viz., “by making diligent search and failing to find defendants in Jackson county, Missouri.” Finally, on February 18, 1894, the justice made an order of publication, based on an entry reading: “It appears to the satisfaction of the justice from the constable’s return that the defendants herein are non-residents of the State of Missouri and cannot be served by the ordinary process of the law, the court makes the following order of publication, *10to-wit” (Here follows the order of publication!, reciting tbat defendants are non-residents of tbe State of Missouri and cannot be summoned in this action). Tbat order is not .criticised, except in the foregoing particulars,' hence need not be reproduced. It is agreed tbat proof of publication was made; tbat there was no personal service on any of tbe defendants; tbat a judgment followed tbe proof of publication against tbe lot for the face of tbe special taxbill and interest, viz., $7.25; tbat a certified transcript thereof was duly filed in tbe office of tbe circuit clerk; tbat such clerk issued execution thereon in due form and it was delivered to tbe sheriff; that tbe latter made levy and advertisement and knocked the lot down to Levy as tbe highest and best bidder at sheriff’s vendue; tbat a certificate of sale was issued; and tbat six months thereafter a sheriff’s deed followed, which was duly acknowledged, delivered and recorded. It was further admitted tbat monthly rents and profits are $10; tbat Levy paid $250' in taxes and made improvements on tbe lot of tbe value of $500; tbat tbe facts and proceedings mentioned were all tbe facts and proceedings relied upon by Levy to divest title out of plaintiff and into him. Tbe sheriff’s deed to Levy and other deeds and exhibits were put in evidence, but their contents are afield in tbe light of tbe foregoing admissions.

Tbe court found tbe issues for plaintiff as to title, right to possession and rental value, and for defendant Levy as to tbe good faith of bis claim of ownership and tbe value of bis improvements ($500'), and declared a lien in bis favor for tbat sum less rents and profits ($416) — it found tbe rental value at $10 per month until possession be restored to plaintiff. And having so found, decreed accordingly and ordered executions in ■ favor of plaintiff and defendant Levy to follow the separate findings.

*11Defendant Levy on due steps taken brought the case np by appeal.

The questions are: (1) Is the tax judgment void for want of jurisdiction (and herein of collateral attack); and (2) is plaintiff guilty of laches defeating recovery.

My brethren all agree with me that the decree was right and must be affirmed. This, because:

(a) . The charter of Kansas City ordains that, in suits before a justice of the peace to enforce special taxbills, service by publication may be had as in suits in the circuit court. The policy of this State has been to allow cities to regulate matter of purely municipal concern by charter provision (State ex rel. v. Field, 99 Mo. 352; Brunn v. Kansas City, 216 Mo. l. c. 117, et seq.), and the enforcement of the lien of special taxbills for sidewalk construction is such matter. [Harris v. Hunt, 97 Mo. 571; Carpenter v. Roth, 192 Mo. 658. See, on a kindred matter, Lynch v. Donnell, 104 Mo. 519.]

(b) . By force then of express charter terms, service by publication may be had only as in suits in the circuit court. That call points to the general statutes for the conditions under which effective newspaper service may be had. In going there, we go quickened by the cardinal precepts, first, that where a statute creates a new right and prescribes the remedy, the remedy prescribed is preclusive and must be followed ; and, second, that service of process by newspaper publication is allowed as of necessity. It is due process of law more in form than substance. However convenient, it is a harsh and highly technical substitute for service of process; therefore, is strictissimi juris, and (being of rigid right) a party invoking' it is entitled to cold law — no less, no more. [Parker v. Burton, 172 Mo. l. c. 91, et seq.; Morrison v. Turnbaugh, 192 Mo. l. c. 446; Davis v. Montgomery, 205 *12Mo. l. c. 283, et seq.; Ohlmann v. Sawmill Co., 222 Mo. l. c. 67 et seq., and cases cited.]

Attending to the statutes — by section 1770, Revised Statutes 1909, it is ordained, among other things, that an order of publication may be made in a suit to establish a lien against real estate “ . . . if” (Take notice of that “if,” for there is weighty matter coiled up in it) “the plaintiff or other person for him shall allege in his petition, or at the time of filing the same, or at any time thereafter shall file an affidavit stating, that part or all of the defendants are nonresidents of the State ... or have absconded or absented themselves from their usual place of abode in this State, or that they have concealed themselves so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon them.”

In this case there was no affidavit of non-residence filed with the justice at any time prior to the order of publication, nor was there any allegation in the petition of such non-residence. Absent a compliance with the imperative provision in that behalf in section 1770, we must go elsewhere for warrant for the order. It is nothing to the point that the agreed statement of, facts shows plaintiff and Wheeler were non-residents in fact. That admission is ex post facto. It has no retroactive virtue. We have it, but the justice did not. His act must be judged in his light, not ours.

(c). Going elsewhere for statutory warrant for the order, we find section 1772, ibid, ordaining that: “When, in any of the cases contained in section 1770, summons shall be issued against any defendant, and the sheriff to whom it is directed shall make return that the defendant or defendants cannot be found, the court, being first satisfied that process cannot be served, shall make an order as is required in said section. ’ ’

Recurring to section 1770, in obedience to the call in section 1772, we find that an order of publication *13may go on any one of several hypotheses. First, when defendants or part of them are non-residents. Second, when they have absconded or absented themselves from their usual place of abode in this State; and, third, when they have concealed themselves so that the ordinary process of law cannot be served upon them. Observe, the court may act under section 1772 only when a return of non est invents comes in. Such return is a condition precedent to any action at all. When that return comes in the court takes the matter in hand, under section 1772.

There is such a great body of judicial exposition on those two sections that new exposition by way of threshing over the old learning in a somewhat vain hope to add aught of value to jurisprudence smacks of vanity. To sum up: The rule to go by (under the facts of our case) is that the mere non est return of the officer, absent an affidavit of non-residence, or other grounds of judicial satisfaction, is not, ex proprio vigore, enough for an order of publication against defendants as non-residents of the State. Such return furnished occasion for judicial investigation and the court going on to investigate becomes “satisfied” therefrom and issues or withholds its order on a judicially determined fact, viz., “that process cannot be served.” To illustrate: A non est return by an officer (tied by a short tether like a constable, as in this case) might be a link in the chain of evidence tending to show that defendants had absconded or absented themselves from their usual abode if they had any in Jackson county, or that they had concealed themselves so that the ordinary process of law could not be served upon them. But what evidence of probative force-would it be of the fact that defendants were non-residents of the State — especially so when plaintiff refused to make an affidavit to that effect as contemplated by the statute?

*14The fact the court must first be satisfied of (under Sec. 1772) was “that process cannot be served.” In the case at bar the order recites: “It appears to the satisfaction of the justice from the constable’s return that the defendants herein are non-residents of the State of Missouri and cannot be served by ordinary process of law.” Thereby the justice announced satisfaction of something, but what was that something? It was that from the constable’s return certain things appeared, and then goes on to recite what appeared there. If the justice had stated what the constable’s return actually showed and then gone on to recite and find from the court’s own investigation that it appeared process cannot be served and that defendants were non-residents of the State, we would have a different case to deal with. But confining ourselves to the officer’s return, as the justice did, we find it reads that he made “diligent search and failed to find defendants in Jackson county, Missouri.” It was not a particle of proof of non-residence and an order of publication built, as here, on such, foundation condemns itself. It is nonsense. Here was a plaintiff suing certain defendants as residents and issuing summons against them as such'. Finally, the case proceeds to-judgment against them as non-residents. That ‘1 about face,” it is sought to justify by a constable’s return affording no basis for the fact.

Clearly, the order of publication did not comply with the statute. Therefore, Justice Browne got no jurisdiction of the case. His judgment was coram non judice, and of no account. Therefore the sheriff’s deed conveyed nothing to Levy and is wide open to collateral attack. The propositions announced are well within the reasoning and holding of a line of cases, such as: Cummings v. Brown, 181 Mo. 711; Tooker v. Leake, 146 Mo. 419; Van Natta v. Real Estate Co., 221 Mo. l. c. 378, et seq.; Land Co. v. Land & Cattle *15Co., 187 Mo. l. c. 435; Harness v. Cravens, 126 Mo. 233; Kelly v. Murdagh, 184 Mo. l. c. 381, et seq.

The broad language of the principal opinion in Harness v. Cravens in certain other particulars ha,s been doubted and much shaken (Mangold v. Bacon, 229 Mo. l. c. 472), but the case has been constantly cited and followed on the point now up — exempli gratia, by Brace, P. J., in Tooker v. Leake, supra, p. 434; by Burgess, J., in Young v. Downey, 150 Mo. 328; by Marshall, J., in Feurt v. Caster, 174 Mo. 303; by Valliant, J., in Kelly v. Murdagh, 184 Mo. 381; by Fox, J., in Vincent v. Means, 184 Mo. 344; by Valliant, J., in Land & Mining Co. v. Land & Cattle Co., 187 Mo. 435; by Woodson, J., in Hinkle v. Lovelace, 204 Mo. 219; by Woodson, J., in Davis v. Montgomery, 205 Mo. 284; by Gantt, P. J., in Lumber Co. v. Keener, 217 Mo. 530.

(d). When laches appear a court of equity remains passive and refuses to grant relief although statutory limitation has not run. But that statute cannot be ignored, except on equitable grounds appealing strongly to a court of conscience. Sometimes laches rise almost to the dignity of estoppel and are akin to it. The doctrine of laches is the handmaid of equity, comes from her workshop and may be invoked only in aid of an existing equitable right. If plaintiff had “stood by” as the answer alleges, knowing Levy was in possession and claiming title in good faith, and had permitted him without protest or notice to make valuable improvements, we would have a different case to deal with, but this plaintiff stood afar off in far country. There is nothing to show.she had notice of improvements or that Levy put any reliance on her non-action, or that she was remiss in proceeding. We see no laches in the case. [Rutter v. Carothers, 223 Mo. l. c. 640; Dexter v. McDonald, 196 Mo. l. c. 399 et seq; Shelton v. Horrell, 232 Mo. 358.]

*16(e). Counsel for plaintiff claim the deed was further void because of a certain charter provision they say was violated. That provision seems to require a plaintiff within a time certain after the receipt of a taxbill to file a certain written statement in the office of the city treasurer — failing which, the land is freed from the lien and may not be sold under the judgment. Counsel for Levy contend such charter provision should have been specifically pleaded as a defense, and insist there have been charter changes operating to avoid the force of the point. But we need not pursue the matter. If the tax deed be void because the court was without jurisdiction to render the judgment, as we have already held, it cannot become any more void for judicial purposes because of another ground — once void is enough. If a man is drowned in the shallow water of ebb tide, what does it matter to him that presently flood tide may come in with more water? The point is reserved for decision in some case turning on it.

The premises considered, the decree did equity. Accordingly, it' is affirmed.

All concur, except Vallicmt, J., who is absent.