45 Mich. 113 | Mich. | 1881
Bulte brought ejectment against the Insurance Company and one Hebert, its tenant, to recover certain lots in the city of Detroit. The facts out of which the litigation arose are the following:
On September 11, 1872, the lots were owned by one John P. Mack. On that day he executed to the plaintiff Bulte a mortgage on the lots for the sum of $1750, and on November 25, 1871, he gave another mortgage to the Insurance Company for $9000. Both mortgages were duly recorded. In May, 1877, the Insurance Company foreclosed its mortgage by ex parte proceedings and became the purchaser at the sale, and received a deed which became absolute May 26, 1878. In October, 1877, the land was sold for delinquent state and county taxes assessed in 1876, and William A. Moore became purchaser, subject to a year’s redemption. No redemption ever took place. In December, 1877, Bulte foreclosed his mortgage by ex pa/rte proceedings, became the purchaser and took a deed which became absolute December 15, 1878. December 21, 1878, Moore gave a quit-claim deed to the Insurance Company. His relations to the company at that time are explained in his evidence, which, being important, and all there was on the subject, is given in full.
Mr. Moore testified that he was a lawyer by profession; that he had made loans for the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company since 1871; that he had been their attorney in some suits at law, and had had some suits against them; that he did considerable general business for them as attorney; that the firm of Moore, Canfield & Warner, with which he is connected, have been the attorneys for said company in many cases for six or seven years past; that ho negotiated the loan to Mack from the said company; that after making said loan the papers were all sent to the office of the company at Hartford, and the money was all payable
On cross-examination witness testified that at the time of the purchase of this tax-title he had no contract or arrangement with the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company with regard to the purchase of this tax-title and no understanding with them about it; that the company knew nothing about it, and that the company never made any ■objection to his obtaining or holding title under the tax deed; that after he had conveyed to the company he told the president that he had done so.
On redirect examination witness testified that he did not consult with the company in each particular case of a tax-title.
N ovember 29, 1878, the Insurance Company leased a portion "of the premises to Hebert, who took possession, and this suit was subsequently brought. On the trial the controversy appears to have centered entirely on the tax purchase by Mr. Moore, and the effect of the subsequent conveyance by Mr. Moore to the Insurance Company.
The following instruction, requested by the defendant, the circuit judge refused to give :
“ The tax deed offered in evidence by the defendants is prima facie evidence of title in fee to the premises in question in 'William A. Moore, and the Insurance Company, as the grantee of said Moore, is entitled to assert all the title which the tax deed vested in said Moore.”
The following, requested by the plaintiff, was given:
“ If the jury find that at the time William A. Moore bid the premises off at tax sale, and took the tax deed, he was acting as the agent of the Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, in reference to its mortgage interest in the premises, and in reference to its foreclosure by said company, and really acquired said tax bid and tax deed for the protection of the interests of said company, such tax deed vested no title or interest in Mr. Moore or in the defendants which will prevent the recovery by the plaintiff in this action.”
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff.
We shall spend no time on a discussion of Mr. Moore’s-relations to the Insurance Company, because we think his deed to the company and the acceptance thereof was a recognition of his agency in the purchase and renders immaterial the question what would otherwise have been the rights of Bulte. It will therefore be assumed in whatever we shall say of the case, that the question of the right of a sepond mortgagee to rely upon a tax purchase as against the right of the first mortgagee to recover in ejectment after foreclosure, is the question, and the only question in the case.
It is conceded that there are a great many cases in which parties standing in particular relations to the land, or to the owner or other person interested therein, are not suffered to-acquire tax-titles and rely upon them as against other claimants. Some of those are very plain, and it is quite unneces-. sary to dp more than name them. A tenant for example, who has covenanted to pay the taxes cannot be suffered to-neglect this duty, and then acquire a tax-title which shall cut off the title o£ his landlord. Neither shall the purchaser in possession under an executory contract be allowed to cut off the rights of his vendor by a like purchase, nor a mortgagor that of his mortgagee. A tax purchase made while such a relation exists is made in wrong; and the law in circumvention of dishonesty will conclusively presume that it was made in the performance of duty, and not. in requdiation of it; But other cases are not so plain. A tenant in common, for example, who finds his interest taxed inseparably with that of his co-tenant, may advance plausible reasons why, if he buys the whole land at the tax sale, he should be at liberty to claim title to the
But it is possible for parties to have antagonistic claims in lands, which place them neither actually nor constructively in confidential relations. In some such cases no doubt either is at liberty to strengthen his title as against the other by a tax purchase: Blackwood v. Van Vleit 30 Mich. 118. It is claimed that a second mortgagee occupies this position in respect to the first mortgagee, and if the latter does not protect his lien by payment of the taxes or by attending as purchaser at the tax sales, the former is under no obligation to do so for him. And it is no doubt true that he is under no obligation to protect the first mortgagee; but the real point in controversy is, whether, if the second mortgagee pay the taxes or bid off the land, the payment or purchase will not ipso facto constitute a protection ?
It certainly cannot be said that the second mortgagee owes any duty to the first mortgagee to protect his lien as against
But in equity this can only be so when the party paying is in position to add the amount of the payment to the amount of his lien. It is never held that any other person can have the benefit of the mortgagee’s payment or purchase without being under any obligation to repay him the cost. Horton v. Ingersoll 13 Mich. 409, on which much reliance is placed, is far from so holding. In that case the owner of an interest in the equity of redemption was also owner of a tax-title. By reason of his tax title he denied the right of the mortgagee to make him defendant to a bill to foreclose. The court decided he was a proper party by reason of his interest in the equity of redemption; and there was also a dictum that the tax title he had purchased “simply inures to the protection, not the destruction, of the regular title.” The dictum is sound, but it falls short of the necessities of this case.
In this case the second mortgagee had acquired a tax-title,
Bulte acquired his title December 15, 1878. On the supposition, apparently, that his foreclosure had extinguished both the Insurance Company mortgage and the tax purchase, and that the tax deed was wholly inoperative as against him, Birlte brought ejectment, without tendering any repayment of the tax or of any part thereof, but leaving the whole to be borne by the Insurance Company as a total loss. Is there any equity in this ? Can a principle of law which purports to be an equitable principle support his suit ? "Why should the Insurance Company be charged as trustee for Bulte, and required to bear the burden of the trust for a party who takes all the benefits and assumes no part of the obligations %
There is no answer to such questions. Sometimes a party by the force of circumstances is placed in a position where another may take the profit of his losses without being under obligation to make return; but the adjustment of legal rights on equitable principles is never meant to work such a result. The foreclosure of Bulte’s mortgage no doubt would cut off that of the Insurance Company, but when he claims anything more than that, it is necessary to look about and see how and why he becomes entitled to it. The tax purchase was made before the sale on his foreclosure, but Moore, not the Insurance Company, was purchaser, and whatever the equities between him and the company, it cannot be pretended that Moore was obliged to resign to the company, and the company to take and pay for the tax title in order that Bulte
Had Bulte. redeemed, the question now presented would not have arisen. He did not redeem his purchase on foreclosure and at the time his title became absolute the tax-title had become perfected. This title would relate back to the tax purchase in October, 1877, for all purposes of effecting-substantial justice, but the fiction of relation will not be suffered to work a wrong: Blackwood v. Brown, 29 Mich. 483; Flint & Pere Marquette Railway Co. v. Gordon 41 Mich. 420. If Bulte took the land discharged of the Insurance Company mortgage he had no shadow of claim to take it discharged of the tax purchase also. If the tax purchase attached itself to the Insurance Company mortgage as so much money, it would leave the mortgage, at least to that extent, unextinguished by the Bulte foreclosure, and if Bulte repudiated the tax purchase, and refused to recognize it as having been made for the common benefit, and made no offer to assume the expense, it would stand as a tax purchase against him. And at law, the tax deed giving a prvmafaeie title, would constitute a perfect defense to the action of ejectment.
This disposes of the present suit. It seems proper to say, however, in view of all the facts, that there seems to be no difficulty in each party preserving all his equities. If Bulte claims that the tax purchase was made for the common protection of all interests in the estate, and proposes to accept all-the burdens and responsibilities that flow from that fact, the Insurance Company cannot insist upon the tax-title as a title against him. But he will make the claim for the first
The judgment must be reversed with costs and a new trial ordered.