Citation Numbers: 36 S.E. 44, 126 N.C. 541, 1900 N.C. LEXIS 279
Judges: Montgomery
Filed Date: 5/15/1900
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
At July Special Term, 1898, of Buncombe Superior Court a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs to the effect that they were the owners of the land in dispute; that the alleged tax title under which the defendant Lyman claimed and the proceedings and sale were null and void, and that the possession of the defendants was wrongful and unlawful, and that the plaintiffs recover of the defendants possession of the land and their costs.
On appeal by defendants the judgment of the Superior Court was affirmed by this Court at February Term, 1899, and the certificate (542) sent down. Merrimon v. Lyman,
At August Term, 1899, of the Superior Court, the plaintiffs moved for judgment according to the certificate of the Supreme Court, when the defendant Lyman made an application to be allowed to set up a lien on the land for the taxes of 1892, which the defendant, in his answer, averred that he had paid when he bought the land at the tax sale. The judgment was entered and the application of the defendant was denied, and he appealed.
A bond to stay the execution of the judgment was allowed by the court below to be filed by the defendant, notwithstanding the refusal of *Page 342 the court to grant the defendant's application to set up a lien on the land for the taxes alleged to have been paid by him.
The application of the defendant was, in effect, a motion to be allowed to amend his answer and to raise an issue upon a matter which had been decided against him by the jury in the former trial, viz., that the land had been redeemed from tax sale at the time the defendant bought and took his deed. Certainly such a proceeding would have been an unheard of one in North Carolina. In Calvert v. Peebles,
It seems that the defendant's claim to be reimbursed for the amount which he paid for the land at the tax sale is based on the case of Huss v. Craig,
The decision of this Court affirming the judgment below was properly entered in the Superior Court of Buncombe County, and the application of the defendant was properly refused.
The stay of execution ought not to have been allowed, and that was the only error in the proceedings. With that exception, they are
Affirmed.
(544)