14 F. 281 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1882
The constitution provides as follows:
“A mortgage, deed of trust, contract, or other obligation by which a debt is secured, shall, for the purposes of assessment and taxation, be deemed and treated as an interest in the property affected thereby. Except as to railroad and other quasi public corporations, in case of debts so secured, the value of the property affected by such mortaage, deed of trust, contract, or obligation, less the value of such security, shall be assessed and taxed to the owner of the property, and the value of such security shall be assessed and taxed to the owner thereof, in the county, city, or district in which the property affected thereby is situate. The taxes so levied shall be a lien upon the property and security, and may be paid by either party to such security. If paid by the owner of the security, the tax so levied upon the property affected thereby shall become apart of the debt so secured; if the owner of the property shall pay the tax so levied on such security, it shall constitute a payment thereon, and, to the extent of such payment, a full discharge thereof: provided, that if any security or indebtedness shall be paid by any such debtor or debtors after assessment and before the tax levy, the amount of such levy may likewise be retained by such debtor or debtors, and shall be computed according to the tax levy for the preceding year.” Const. Cal. art. 13, § 4.
Under this provision of the constitution it was the duty of defendant to pay this tax. He was the party, and the only party, personally liable. It was his debt, and not the debt of plaintiff. The tax, however, is made a lien upon complainant’s property as a means of securing its payment to the state. As it is a lien upon the land, the statute and constitution gives the mortgagor the right to pay the tax, as a means of relieving his land — a means of securing a speedy discharge of the lien — and allows him to deduct the amount so paid from the amount of his debt secured by the mortgage. But it is insisted that the right under the constitution is strictissimi jmis; and that as the constitution only provides that, “if the owner of the property shall pay the tax so levied! on such security, it shall constitute a payment thereon, and to the extent of such payment a full discharge thereof,” he must pay the tax before he pays the debt, and, on the subsequent payment of the debt, deduct the amount before paid for taxes therefrom, but cannot pay the whole debt to a creditor who demands the whole, and repudiates any liability on his part to pay any part of' the tax, and afterwards, when compelled to pay the tax in order to relieve the property from the lien, in addition to the whole debt, recover the amount from the party whose debt it is; that a payment under such circumstances is a voluntary payment of another’s debt, which creates no liability. To adopt this view would be not only to regard the right as strictissimi juris, but also, in construing the constitution, to “stick in bark.” Qui hceret in litera, hceret in cortice.
There is no impairing of the obligation of a contract in this case by these constitutional provisions. The new constitution had been adopted at the date of the mortgage, although but partially in force at, the time. But, doubtless, the contract was made in anticipation of its going into effect, as it provided in express terms that the mortgagor should not pay the money in question, and by implication that the mortgagee should. The mortgagee was therefore bound to pay the tax under the contract, as well as under the constitution and statutes.
Let the demurrer be overruled, with leave to answer in the usual time and on the usual ternas.