54 P. 952 | Or. | 1898
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit to foreclose a deed intended as a mortgage. The facts are that on October 28, 1892, the Portland Savings Bank, a corporation, loaned to defendant the sum of $5,000, and agreed to advance the further sum of $7,500, to secure the payment of which she on that day executed to H. C. Stratton, in trust for said bank, a deed which purported to convey certain real property situated in the Town of Sellwood, in the counties qf Clackamas and Multnomah, in the State of Oregon; that on December 27, 1892, the bank also loaned to
The title of the act which included Section 2736, supra, reads: “An act to define the terms ‘land’ and ‘ real property ’ for the purpose of taxation, and to provide where the same shall be assessed and taxed, and to declare what instruments whereby land and real property is made security for the payment of a debt, shall be void, and to repeal Sections 2 and 7 of Chapter LVII of the Miscellaneous Laws of Oregon :” Laws 1882, p. 64. Section 1 of this act, after defining “real property” and “ land,” contains the following provision : “And a mortgage, deed of trust, contract, or other obligation, whereby land or real property situated in no more than one county in this state, is made security for the payment of a debt, shall, for the purposes of assessment and taxation, be deemed and treated as real property.” It will be seen, from the title of the act and the language quoted, that the words “mortgage, deed of trust, or other instrument,” etc., are, for the purpose of taxation, defined to mean “land” or “real property.” The legislative assembly declared by statute that a lien was land — that the shadow was the substance — only for the purpose of assessment and taxation, and not that a mortgage embracing lands in more than one county was to be deemed void for the purpose of taxation. If such a construction of the statute had been permissible, mortgages prohibited thereby would have been taken for the purpose of avoiding the assessment and taxation of such securities. Plaintiff’s counsel argues, however, that the statute rendering a mortgage on real property situated in more than one county void is in the nature of a penalty, and, this being so, the mortgagee would be compelled to pay in each county the whole amount of taxes which might be assessedjNereon in other counties. Section 2
Section 2736, supra, so far as it applies to the case at bar, reads as follows: “All mortgages, deeds of trust, contracts, or other obligations hereafter executed, whereby land situated in more than one county in this state is made security for the payment of a debt, shall be void.”' The argument of plaintiffs’ counsel proceeds upon the theory that the word “void,” in this clause of the statute, should be construed to mean “voidable” only, and that, giving to the statute such an interpretation, the defect in the trust deed was cured by the repeal of the mortgage tax law, and also by the change in the boundary of Clackamas County. In Van Shaack v. Robbins, 36 Iowa, 201, Mr. Justice Cole, after citing many cases to illustrate the rule for construing the word “void” when used in a statute, says : “These cases abundantly show that the word ‘void’ does not always mean ‘null and incapable of confirmation;’ but its true meaning is always to be determined from all the language used, and the intent thereby manifested. Where the word is used to secure a right to or confer a benefit on the public, it will, as a rule, be held to mean ‘null and incapable of confirmation.’ But, if used respecting the rights of individuals capable of protecting themselves, it will often be held to mean ‘voidable’ only; just as the word ‘may’ will be construed to mean ‘must,’ where that appears to be the intent of the statute, and, generally, where the public
Reversed .