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Baldwin v. Miss. State Hy. Dept

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Feb 19, 1940
187 Miss. 642 (Miss. 1940)

Opinion

No. 33998.

February 19, 1940.

1. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The effect of a condemnation proceeding, in its operation, is the same as if a deed were made conveying the same rights that the highway department gets through a condemnation proceeding.

2. EMINENT DOMAIN.

The effect of condemnation proceeding is to acquire the right of easement from the defendant to the proceeding, and, if the defendant is a purchaser at a tax sale, the body condemning is entitled to take possession and use the property for the purpose condemned and is vested with all the rights that the party having title would have, among which is the right to enter possession if it can peaceably do so and hold possession for statutory period of three years (Code 1930, secs. 1493, 1494, 2288).

3. EMINENT DOMAIN.

Where tax sale was void but state highway department in proceeding against purchaser at tax sale condemned strip of land and occupied the land condemned for more than three years after expiration of two years allowed for redemption from the tax sale, the state highway department secured a title which original owner was barred from challenging (Code 1930, secs. 1493, 1494, 2288).

APPEAL from the chancery court of Desoto county; HON. L.A. SMITH, SR., Chancellor.

E.J. Pollard and Holmes Bowdre, all of Hernando, for appellant.

The tax deed conveying to W.L. Farley Lots 341 and 342 was void on its face.

McGehee et al. v. Martin, 53 Miss. 520; Brougher v. Stone, 72 Miss. 650; Planters Gin Co. v. Greenville, 138 Miss. 876; Metcalf v. Wise, 150 Miss. 56; Johnston v. Lake, 162 Miss. 227.

The eminent domain proceeding against W.L. Farley and others, and the judgment therein, deprives appellant of her property without due process of law.

Secs. 14 and 17, Miss. Const. of 1890; 10 R.C.L. 16, Sec. 14.

The eminent domain proceedings and the judgment therein is void.

Secs. 1482, 1483, 1487, and 4998, Code of 1930; 10 R.C.L., p. 78, Sec. 65, and p. 88 et seq., Sec. 78, and p. 91, Sec. 80.

At the time of the condemnation W.L. Farley had no rights or "property" in Lot 341 which he could successfully enforce in the courts against Addie Baldwin, because Farley had never been in possession, and any attempt by him to enter into possession of said lot could be successfully resisted by Addie Baldwin, who was in possession.

Furthermore, as to the color of title taken by the Highway Department from Farley, it was not a right or "property" which the Highway Department could enforce in the courts, at the time of the taking. It would have been successfully resisted by Addie Baldwin.

And the color of title of Farley did not include the fee in said lot, so far as the eminent domain proceedings were concerned, but if anything was condemned it was color of title to an easement over said lot with the fee remaining in Farley, but in Addie Baldwin, and the right to possession of said easement postponed for three years.

10 R.C.L., p. 88 et seq., sec. 78.

Having insisted that at the time of the taking, Farley had no interest or "property" in said lot which he could successfully enforce against Addie Baldwin, the appellant, and that the Highway Department acquired no interest or property at the taking which it could then successfully enforce against the owner in possession, can it be said that there was a taking? Do not the statutes contemplate that there be something to take, not a shadow, not so called color or title under a tax deed void on its face, but a taking which acquires a substantial thing, a taking of such an interest in property that delivers to the condemnor the property itself with the right to possession without having to depend upon a three-year statute of limitation before there is in contemplation of law even hope of any claim to title.

The Highway Department did not take even the right to go into possession of said lot, because the appellant had possession and the right of possession. The appellee did not acquire anything that would entitle it to a writ of possession.

Appellee did not acquire title to the right of way over Lot 341 by virtue of eminent domain proceedings against Farley, coupled with possession under Section 2288, Code of 1930.

Sec. 2288, Code of 1930; Byrd v. Dickson, 152 Miss. 605 et seq.

Russell Wright, Assistant Attorney-General, for appellee.

The title acquired by eminent domain is set out by Corpus Juris (20 C.J. 1221): "While it has been said that if there is such a thing as a new title known to the law, one founded upon a taking by the right of eminent domain is as clear an example as can be found, yet it is generally held that condemnation proceedings are no more than a compulsory sale of all the owner's interest in the property appropriated and there is privity of estate between the condemnor and the owner whose land is condemned."

In the case of Byrd v. Dixon, 152 Miss. 605, 120 So. 562, the rule is set out that in order to get the benefit of the three year statute of limitations, the purchaser must have the legal title from either the municipality or the state, or from the purchaser at the tax sale, and that there must be privity of estate. In this case there was privity of estate between the Highway Department and the condemnee, W.L. Farley, the purchaser at the tax sale, and, therefore, the learned chancellor was eminently correct in holding that when the Highway Department condemned against Farley, even though Farley's tax title was void, the Highway Department stepped into Farley's shoes and at the end of three years was protected by the statute of limitations.


The appellant filed a bill in the Chancery Court to cancel a tax deed to a certain lot bought at a tax sale by W.L. Farley, and to cancel the tax deed and a judgment in an eminent domain court rendered in a condemnation proceeding in favor of the State Highway Department as clouds upon title of the complainant. Farley failed to appear and a decree pro confesso was taken against him and relief granted as against him. But the court held the condemnation proceeding with occupancy thereunder by the State Highway Department for more than three years after the expiration of two years allowed for redemption under the statute, Code 1930, Section 2288, had vested in the Highway Department the strip of land condemned in the eminent domain proceedings. It is conceded by the appellee that the tax sale to Farley was void, but it is contended that by virtue of the condemnation proceedings to which Farley was a party vested in the State Highway Department his interest in said strip, and that such interest was sufficient when occupied for three years to vest complete right in the State Highway Department to the said strip.

Farley never went into the actual possession of the lands involved, owned by Addie Baldwin at the time of the assessment and sale and occupied by her since said time, and Addie Baldwin was not a party to the eminent domain proceedings, but after the eminent domain proceedings in March, 1935, the Highway Department took possession of the strip and constructed a highway, including the concrete pavement, thereon. It is the contention of the appellant that the tax sale being void, and Farley or the tax purchaser never having gone into possession, there was nothing in the way of interest for the Highway Department to condemn, and that the Highway got nothing by virtue of the condemnation proceedings as against Farley under the said void tax deed. It appears from the chancellor's opinion in the record that it was conceded in the argument that if the Highway Department had purchased the right of way from Farley and had gone into possession and remained in possession for three years after such condemnation proceedings that it would have secured a title to the right of way so long as the highway was used as such. We think this proposition is sound because either Farley or any vendee of Farley's going into possession after the period for redemption expired, and remaining in possession for more than three years would have precluded the owner from challenging any irregularities in the tax assessment, or sales. The three year statute of limitations, Section 2288 of the Code, provides that actual occupation for three years, after two years from the day of sale of land held under a conveyance by a tax collector in pursuance of a sale for taxes etc. shall give title, saving to minors and persons of unsound mind, the right to institute proceedings after the removal of such disabilities.

In our opinion the condemnation proceeding was equivalent to a deed or lease from Farley to the strip condemned. The effect of a condemnation proceeding, in its operation, is the same as if a deed were made conveying the same rights that the Highway Department gets through a condemnation proceeding. Farley had a right to convey such interests as he acquired at the tax sale, and among the rights was the right to enter upon the land if he could obtain peaceful possession thereof and remain thereon for three years more, claiming the land, after the expiration of the two years allowed by law for redemption of land from tax sales.

In the chapter on eminent domain in the Code of 1930, Chapter 26, being Section 1493, providing for the judgment upon the verdict in an eminent domain proceeding, it is provided among other things: "Now, upon payment of the said award, applicant can enter upon and take possession of the said property and appropriate it to public use as prayed for in the application." And in the following Section 1494, Code of 1930, it is provided: "Upon the return of the verdict and entry of the judgment, if the applicant pay the defendant whose compensation is fixed by it, or tender to him the amount so found and pay the costs, he or it shall have the right to enter in and upon and take possession of the property for such defendant so condemned, and to appropriate the same to the public use defined in the application" etc.

The effect of the eminent domain proceeding is to acquire the right of easement from the defendants to that suit, and if the defendant is the purchaser at a tax sale, the corporation or body condemning (the Highway Department in this case) is entitled under the statute to enter and take possession and use the property for the purpose condemned, and is vested with all the rights and privileges that the party having the tax title would have, among which is the right to enter possession if it can peaceably do so, and hold possession for the statutory period of Section 2288.

The chancellor's views were in accord with what we have said. The appellant stood by for the three year period and brought no action to challenge the right during that time, and her right to do so vanished on the expiration of the three year period allowed by Section 2288 to bring actions in such cases. Accordingly the judgment of the chancery court is affirmed.

Affirmed.


Summaries of

Baldwin v. Miss. State Hy. Dept

Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B
Feb 19, 1940
187 Miss. 642 (Miss. 1940)
Case details for

Baldwin v. Miss. State Hy. Dept

Case Details

Full title:BALDWIN v. MISSISSIPPI STATE HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT

Court:Supreme Court of Mississippi, Division B

Date published: Feb 19, 1940

Citations

187 Miss. 642 (Miss. 1940)
193 So. 789

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