295 N.W. 884 | Neb. | 1941
This is an action instituted by H. J. Coffin against the Old Line Life Insurance Company, a corporation, et al., to quiet his title in and to a fractional tract of land situated in Custer county, Nebraska, against the claims of defendants evidenced by a decree foreclosing certain tax liens upon said premises, rendered in the district court for Custer county on April 2, 1929, in favor of plaintiff in a case wherein E. B. Cowles was plaintiff and Christie Pool, Mary E. DeBusk et al., were defendants, and of which decree the Old Line Life Insurance Company was and is the assignee and owner. A trial to the court resulted in a finding and judgment in favor of defendants and against plaintiff. Plaintiff appeals.
It appears without question that defendant insurance company’s rights as assignee are based upon the following, viz.: A purchase by E. B. Cowles of the real estate in suit at a tax sale duly held by the county treasurer of Custer county on March 8, 1926, for the delinquent taxes for the years 1920, 1921, 1922, 1923, 1924 for the sum of $190.53 and the subsequent payment by E. B. Cowles of the taxes assessed thereon for the years 1925 and 1926. A tax foreclosure proceeding was instituted thereon in the Custer county district court on February 12, 1929, by E. B. Cowles against Mary E. DeBusk and-DeBusk, first name unknown, her husband, as owners of such real estate. In said court and in said cause, after service of process had been duly had upon said defendants above named and each
Preliminary to a discussion of the issues on appeal presented by the record, it is to be noted that our revenue act provides that “Taxes on all real property shall, be a first lien thereon from and including the first day of December of the year in which they are levied until the same are paid,” etc. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 77-203. See Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co. v. Siefken, 1 Neb. (Unof.) 860, 96 N. W. 603; Merriam v. Goodlett, 36 Neb. 384, 54 N. W. 686; Douglas County v. Shannon, 125 Neb. 783, 252 N. W. 199.
This court is committed to the view that “The lien for taxes is not satisfied by a statutory sale of the property for the same, nor by the payment of prior or subsequent levies by the purchaser. Such sale only operates to transfer the lien to the purchaser.” City Safe Deposit & Agency Co. v. City of Omaha, 79 Neb. 446, 112 N. W. 598, 21 L. R. A. n. s. 72.
The sale of real property by the county treasurer to a tax purchaser does not divest the lien of taxes. It merely transfers it'to the tax purchaser. It is well settled in this jurisdiction that, even where the certificate of tax sale and the sale are void, the lien , of the “legal tax then due and de
The consensus of judicial opinion under statutes similar to our own has been stated as follows: “ ‘Tax liens,’ it is said, ‘take priority in the reverse order of other liens. As to all other liens the first in order of time is prima facie superior to those of a later date. In the case of tax liens, however, the “last shall be first and the first last.” The general and universal rule is that in proceedings in rem to enforce the payment of taxes the last tax levied and sought to be enforced is superior and paramount to the lien of all other taxes, claims, or titles.’ This rule is well settled.” 3 Cooley, Taxation (4th ed.) sec. 1242.
Agreeable to this view, this court in Medland v. Van Etten, 75 Neb. 794, 106 N. W. 1022, announced as the principle here applicable, “Taxes levied and assessed for general revenue purposes constitute a lien superior to the lien of a tax sale certificate issued (prior) thereto.”
It would seem that the lien possessed by Coffin by virtue of his certificate of tax sale, received by him on November 5, 1928, was clearly senior and superior to the rights and liens possessed by E. B. Cowles. ■
If it be conceded that this tax lien of H. J. Coffin was, at the date of the institution of the tax foreclosure by Cowles, senior and superior to the rights sought to be enforced by Cowles in that proceeding, do the allegations of the latter’s petition form sufficient basis for an effective Us pendens as against Coffin? The allegations of this petition, as already summarized herein, relate simply to the purchase by Cowles at a tax sale, the payment of taxes subsequently assessed thereon by him, the ownership of the premises taxed by the DeBusks, and the seniority and priority of the lien for taxes paid to the right and title of fee simple owners thereof. This petition does not name Coffin as a defendant, and in no manner refers to the tax sale certificate which was owned by the latter when the petition was filed.
“It will be observed that the petition was insufficient, there being no appearance on the part of the Farmers Loan & Trust Company to sustain a decree cutting off its rights. It was neither a proper nor a necessary party, because its lien for taxes on the land itself was paramount and superior to all others. The object of the mortgage foreclosure suit was to sell the property and convey the interest of the mortgagor at the time of making the mortgage which passed under it to the mortgagee. There was no question of priority, and could be none as between the mortgage lien and the lien of the taxes upon the premises. Stratton v. Reisdorph, 35 Neb. 314; White v. Bartlett, 14 Neb. 320; Forrer v. Kloke, 10 Neb. 373.
“In order to support a decree against the Farmers Loan & Trust Company its interests should have been carefully and completely stated in the petition. Such was not the case and, although it was made a party defendant, it was not even called upon to set up its interest in the cause of action. Therefore, the decree could in no way cut off or bar the tax lien.”
The principle here involved was adhered to in Shafer v. Wilsonville Elevator Co., 121 Neb. 280, 237 N. W. 155, and in connection therewith it was there announced: “The fil
Query: There being no cause of action of any kind pleaded by Cowles in his petition as against Coffin, does the filing of the lis pendens by Cowles give to Coffin notice of the pendency of that proceeding?
Waiving the question of the sufficiency of the petition of Cowles to support the Us pendens filed, in the instant case under the admitted facts of the record it is ineffective because we are here dealing with an independent title vested in Coffin, which is wholly unconnected with and not derived from any of the parties to the Cowles proceeding.
On this subject our court has approved the following statement: “Again, the appellant claims title under a decree foreclosing a tax lien. The title conveyed under a tax sale is not derivative, but a new title in the nature of an independent grant by the sovereign authority, and the purchaser takes free from any encumbrances, claims or equities connected with the prior title. Crum v. Cotting, 22 Ia. 411. Had proper service been made to give the court jurisdiction in the tax foreclosure proceedings, the deed issued therein would have given -appellant perfect title to the land and cut off every prior claim or equity existing against it. The appellant was not concerned with the record title to this land further than to see that the proper parties were made defendants in the tax foreclosure suit.” Topliff v. Richardson, 76 Neb. 114, 107 N. W. 114. See, also, Sanford v. Scott, 105 Neb. 479, 181 N. W. 148.
The nature of the rights here presented for our consideration invokes the application of the following principle: Since the scope of lis pendens is determined by its end and purpose, it has no application to independent titles not derived from any parties to the suit or in succession to them. 17 R. C. L. 1027, sec. 24; Harrod v. Burke, 76 Kan. 909, 92 Pac. 1128, 123 Am. St. Rep. 179; Merrill v. Wright, 65 Neb. 794, 91 N. W. 697, 101 Am. St. Rep. 645; In the Matter of Smith, 4 Nev. 254, 97 Am. Dec. 531; Green v. Rick, 121 Pa. St. 130, 15 Atl. 497, 6 Am. St. Rep. 760, 2
In 1 Freeman, Judgments (5th ed.) sec. 529, it is stated: “The rule of lis pendens has no application to independent titles not derived from any of the parties to the action or from any one in privity with them. * * * So, according to the weight of authority, a person who purchases property ■involved in litigation at a tax sale is not regarded as a purchaser pendente lite, and his title is not affected by the result of the pending litigation, since such a sale is made under the paramount power of the state and on grounds which are adverse to all parties to the litigation and which are not in any way involved in it.”
In the note on page 78 of Ann. Cas. 1918C, we find the following: “A sale for taxes being based on grounds which are adverse to all parties to aii action involving the title, and which are not in any way involved in the action, the weight of authority is to the effect that the filing of- a lis pendens does not make the purchaser at the tax sale a purchaser pendente lite.”
In Merrill v. Wright, 65 Neb. 794, 91 N. W. 697, the question here presented was determined by this court in harmony with the authorities above cited. It is to be remembered in this connection that our lis pendens statute, now section 20-531, Comp. St. 1929, was amended by chapter 92, Laws 1887 (approved March 31, 1887). This was passed without the emergency clause, but the legislature enacting the same finally adjourned March 31, 1887. This enactment increased the scope of this statute to substantially as it exists at present, and was in force and effect during the entire period during which the proceedings in the Merrill case above referred to were had. In that case it appears that suit was brought in 1892 to foreclose a tax lien. The owners of the property and those in possession under them were duly made parties. Due to time consumed in litigation, a sale of the property under this proceeding was not had until 1902. Meanwhile one Scott had purchased the 'property for taxes subsequently assessed and afterwards
In this Merrill case it was determined that the rights of Scott, gained by virtue of his tax purchase, were in no manner affected by or through the doctrine of Us pendensIn the instant case the matter involved being an independent title, in effect derived exclusively from the sovereign power, the State, we hold the rights of H. J. Coffin wholly unaffected by the Us penaens filed by Cowles and proceedings had by him subsequent to such filing.
Nor can we agree with the determination of the district court that there has been a merger in Coffin of the title derived by him through his tax foreclosure with the fee title as it previously existed. The service of due process upon the owners of the fee simple title to the premises by Coffin at the institution of his suit is not questioned. The land was within the jurisdiction of the court. The confirmation of the sale and the sheriff’s deed executed pursuant thereto gave Coffin, not a derivative title, but a new title in the
A situation comparable to that here presented was considered by this court in the case of Merriam v. Goodlett, 36 Neb. 384, 54 N. W. 686. In the Merriam case we announced the principle: “If parties affected (by a tax foreclosure and sale) are not before the court their remedy is an action to redeem. If the court had jurisdiction the decree cannot be treated as void.” See, also, Gillian v. McDowall, 66 Neb. 814, 92 N. W. 991; Smith v. Potter, 92 Neb. 39, 137 N. W. 854.
It follows that the trial court erred in the entry of the decree appealed from. The judgment is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in harmony with this opinion, with directions that upon application of the parties amended pleadings may be filed.
Reversed.