36 A.2d 227 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued December 7, 1943. Defendants bought land in Philadelphia in 1925 subject to a mortgage. On defendants' default in the terms of payment, plaintiff, the holder of the mortgage, foreclosed and bid in the property at sheriff's sale on January 4, 1937. Defendants while owners had failed to pay city and school taxes assessed against the land for eight consecutive years beginning with 1930; plaintiff was obliged to pay all of these taxes when he bid in the property. He then brought this action in assumpsit against defendants for reimbursement and obtained a judgment against them for $975.61. Execution issued *472 on the judgment whereupon each of the defendants claimed an exemption of $300 under the Act of April 9, 1849, P.L. 533, § 1, 12 PS 2161. Plaintiff then petitioned the court to set aside the claims and on its refusal this appeal was taken.
A tax is not a debt in an ordinary sense and liability to pay taxes does not arise from a contractual relationship between the parties. Derry Twp. S. Dist. v. Barnett C. Co.,
The Act of 1849 exempts property to the value of $300 *473 on execution "issued upon any judgment obtained upon contract." (Italics added). The lower court on the above authority construed the obligation of defendants as an implied contract, and, concluding that there was a contract, though by implication of law, enforceable in assumpsit, held that the defendants are within the provisions of the act and are entitled to exemptions.
We are of the opinion that the device or fiction of an implied contract does not bring defendants within the act and they are not entitled to exemptions on that theory. Exemption statutes are in derogation of common law and although, once the right is established, some liberality may be allowed in accomplishing their purpose (Maschke v. O'Brien,
Defendants are in no better position if the question is considered solely from the viewpoint of plaintiff's rights as subrogee. The relationship between a land owner and a taxing authority is not contractual. Derry Twp. S. Dist. v. Barnett C.Co., supra. Liability is imposed wholly by operation of law and an exemption against the collection of taxes by a municipality does not exist. A plaintiff who is required to pay taxes "steps into the shoes of the municipality, and is subrogated to its rights, which, of course, includes the right to proceed against the title holder . . . . . . upon doing so, [paying the taxes] he takes the place of the municipality for recoupment from the registered owner under the principle of subrogation":Pennsylvania Co. Trustee v. Bergson, supra. Because of the personal liability of the owner the municipality has a right of action against him for taxes, in addition to the other remedies authorized by law. This right vested in plaintiff by subrogation. Subrogated rights may rise as high, (except where sovereign rights of the State are involved, Franklin Trust Co. of Phila.Case,
Order reversed.