This action involves the right to effect a partition of three vacant lots in the city of Los Angeles, the facts being undisputed. Plaintiff’s claim stems from the ownership of three unpaid street improvement bonds which were issued as liens, respectively, on each of the three lots—one in 1924, *612 and two in 1928—pursuant to the Improvement Act of 1911 (Stats. 1911, p. 730; Leering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 8199), as amended. No foreclosure proceedings were instituted following the maturity dates of said bonds. Meanwhile the county and city taxes on the three lots became delinquent and under the statutes then in force, the lots were “sold to-the state” (Pol. Code, § 3771) and five years thereafter in each case— 1937, 1938, and 1939, respectively—were deeded to the state pursuant to the prior sales thereof (Pol. Code, §§ 3771a, 3785). In 1945, defendants Missler purchased two of the lots and defendant Snow purchased the other at respective tax sales, and received deeds accordingly from the state in pursuance of division 1, part 6, chapter 7, of the Revenue and Taxation Code.
In 1946, plaintiff commenced the present action “for partition and declaratory relief.” Following a trial, the court denied plaintiff’s right to partition, but found that a bona fide controversy did exist and rendered its judgment quieting title in the defendant tax buyers against all parties, subject to the lien of plaintiff’s bonds for “all amounts unpaid” thereon. From such judgment, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
As authority for its procedure, plaintiff relies on section 752 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1943, which provides, so far as here material, that “. . . an action may be brought . . . where real property is subject to a lien on a parity with that on which the owner’s title is based, by the owner or by the holder of such lien, for a partition thereof according to the respective rights of the persons interested therein and for a sale of such property ... if it appears that a partition can not be made without great prejudice to the parties.” Upon the premise that the lots here in question f‘can not be physically partitioned without injury” thereto “and without great prejudice to the parties,” plaintiff urges the propriety of a “decree of partition . . . ordering [the] property sold and the proceeds distributed on the basis of the bond liens being on a parity with the tax titles.” As a further consideration, plaintiff claims the right to an allowance for the costs of this action, including “reasonable counsel fees” (Code Civ. Proe., § 796) and the expense of “abstracts of title” on the three lots (Code Civ. Proe., § 799). Plaintiff’s “right” to the remedy of partition and to the recovery of the mentioned litigation expenses incident to the prosecution of such action is not open -to dispute in the light of prevailing judicial decisions and the applicable statutory law, but there *613 are certain limitations to be recognized as affecting the measure of its relief, as will hereinafter appear.
The proposition is well settled in this state that liens for general taxes and liens for special assessments stand upon an equal footing before the law.
(La Mesa Lemon Grove & Spring Valley Irrigation District
v.
Hornbeck,
So in considering the pertinency of the Monheit case, defendants properly attach significance to the fact that there the rule of parity was applied in disposition of the rights of the litigants under recognized
coexisting title claims
derived from
deeds
executed by the various taxing agencies in consequence of the respective delinquency sales, while here a variant premise prevails between the parties where an
unforeclosed bond lien
is urged as on a “complete parity” with a
deed
based on a tax sale. In short, the parity principle operates to prevent the extinguishment of existing liens standing “upon an equal footing before the law”
(La Mesa Lemon Grove & Spring Valley Irrigation District
v.
Hornbeck, supra,
Section 752 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as above quoted, precisely contemplates the situation here presented, where plaintiff as the holder of “a lien on a parity with that on which the owner’s title is based” seeks partition of the property so encumbered.. As heretofore recited, the state, upon expiration of the five-year period of redemption, acquired by deed “absolute title to the property, free of all encumbrances, except [certain specified] liens” (Pol. Code, § 3787; Rev. & Tax. Code, § 3520;
Mercury Herald Co.
v.
Moore,
Likewise without force is defendants’ reliance upon the bar of the statute of limitations applicable to the maintenance of proceedings to foreclose the lien of a bond following “the expiration of four years after the due date of the last installment” thereon. (Sts. & Hy. Code, §6610; see, also, Code Civ. Proc., § 337.) Plaintiff does not seek foreclosure of its bond liens, but rather a partition of the property pursuant to statutory authority as a “holder of [street improvement] lien[s] ”—subsisting claims against the property and “on a parity with [the liens] on which [defendants’ respective] title[s] are based” pursuant to the tax deeds. (Code Civ. Proc., § 752, as amended in 1943, supra.) The cited statute, in its provision for the remedy of partition, does not contain a period of limitations, and there is no other statute which specifically limits the time for the commencement of any action for partition. If it be claimed that the general four-year limi *617 tation is applicable to such actions (Code Civ. Proc., § 343), it is a sufficient answer here to state that since plaintiff’s action for partition, instituted in pursuance of the 1943 statutory enactment, was commenced in 1946, the timeliness of its procedure is not open to dispute. Defendants’ citation of section 329 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1945, for the proposition that since no “action [has] ever been brought to foreclose the lien of [plaintiff’s] bonds,” they “should, therefore, now be declared as 1 conclusively presumed paid’ ” obviously has no relevancy. That section expressly relates to “proceedings . . . prescribed by legislation of [a] political unit other them the State,” and since plaintiff’s bonds were issued under authority of the Improvement Act of 1911, a state law, they are manifestly excepted from the operation of the "cited code provision.
With plaintiff’s statutory right to bring a partition action so established, there remains for consideration the matter of effecting the sale of the three lots in question—designated in this action as Parcels Nos. 1, 2 and 5—since “it appears that a [physical] partition can not be made without great prejudice to the parties.” The statute expressly provides “for partition . . . according to the
respective rights
of the persons interested” in the property. Plaintiff’s rights stem from unforeclosed liens for delinquent street assessments against each of the parcels, while defendants’ respective liens have been carried into claims of title by virtue of deeds from the state on sale of the lots for delinquent taxes— the tax titles of defendants Missler relating to Parcels Nos. 1 and 2, and the tax title of defendant Snow relating to Parcel No. 5. If plaintiff’s liens had been carried into title, then there would have been created a tenancy in common as to each of the parties involved. Such was the situation in
Monheit
v.
Cigna, supra,
At this point consideration must also be given to plaintiff’s claim for “attorney’s fees and court costs” incurred in the prosecution of this litigation. Section 796 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “costs of partition, including reasonable counsel fees, expended . . . for the common benefit -. . . and other disbursements, must be paid by the parties respectively entitled to share in the lands divided, in proportion to their respective interests therein, and may be included and specified in the judgment.” Section 799 of the same code allows reimbursement for “an abstract of title of the property to be partitioned,” procured by plaintiff and open to “use of all the” litigants. In its complaint plaintiff alleged the necessity of having “abstracts of title to [the] properties” here involved and their availability for “the inspection and use of all parties to this action”; and such abstracts were introduced in evidence. The propriety of such allowances is recognized as consistent with a “just and equitable” division of the “expenditures entailed in the maintenance of [partition] actions for the common benefit among those who shall have been found to be entitled to their respective shares and interests in said property by the ultimate judgment of the court. . .”
(Capuccio
v.
Caire,
Consistent with these observations then, it follows that in effecting the sale of the three lots in question, the trial court should order the separate sale of each lot and the discharge on a parity basis of the liens of the parties on such lot, after payment of costs of sale and the appropriate portion of plaintiff’s costs allocable to such sale, and before payment of the balance of the proceeds of the sale to the holder of the legal title to such lot. In the event of the sale of any lot for an amount insufficient to pay such costs and to discharge such liens, the amount available for the discharge of the liens on such lot should be divided on a parity basis in proportion to the amount due on each lien upon such lot.
The judgment is reversed with directions to the trial court to take any additional evidence which may be required to determine the amount of the respective liens and plaintiff’s reimbursement claims, and thereafter to modify its findings and to enter its judgment in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., and Schauer, J., concurred.
