117 P. 874 | Utah | 1911
The plaintiff on the 26th day of January, 1909, purchased from the defendant a parcel of land 69 by 228 feet in Ogden City. The deed was made and delivered on the 11th day of February of the same year. It was a statutory" short: form warranty deed. Such'a deed has the effect of warranting the premises conveyed free from all incumbrances. The controversy is over the taxes for the year 1909. The defendant claimed that they were no lien on the property at the time of the purchase and conveyance, and refused to pay them. The plaintiff paid them, and then brought this action on breach of warranty to recover from the defendant the amount paid by plaintiff, with interest and an attorney’s fee. The plaintiff was given a judgment for the full demand, from which the defendant has prosecuted this appeal.
Three questions are presented: (1) Were the taxes an incumbrance when the land was purchased? (2) If so, was there a breach before the taxes became delinquent and the property sold for nonpayment of them? (3) Was the plaintiff entitled to an attorney’s fee as part damages ?
Under our tax laws the assessor is required “before the first Monday of May in each year” to ascertain the names of all taxable inhabitants and all property in the county subject to taxation, and to “assess such property to the person by whom it was owned or claimed or in whose possession or control it was at twelve o’clock m. of the second Monday in January .next preceding and its value on that date.” Before the first Monday in May the assessor is required to list in the' assessment book .all taxable property in the county,
The property purchased by the plaintiff from the defendant was a part of a larger tract owned by the defendant. The whole of the tract,' including the portion sold to the plaintiff, was assessed for the year 1909 in the name of the defendant. The defendant, claiming that it was not liable for the taxes on the portion sold to the plaintiff,
Its chief contention, however, is that the tax, not assessed and levied, the rate not determined, and the tax not due until after the purchase by plaintiff, was not a lien on the property wben the purchase was made, and that a tax or an assessment cannot become a lien or incumbrance
the further contention that no breach -arose until after the tax became delinquent and the property exposed to sale, or until the plaintiff was evicted, is, under the circumstances, untenable. the plaintiff paid the tax a month after it was due, and -after the defendant itself bad refused to pay it and bad disclaimed all liability in respect of it. the plaintiff, to protect the title which the defendant
The court, in addition to allowing the plaintiff a judgment for the amount of taxes paid by it and interest, also allowed seventy-five dollars attorney’s fee. We do not see any authority to allow an attorney’s fee. In some jurisdictions attorney’s fees incurred by the covenantee in an action defending or asserting his title in good faith are recoverable by him from the covenantor in a subsequent action on the covenant. (8. Am. & Eng. Ency. L. [2d Ed.], 190; 11 Cyc. 1178.) But counsel fees in the action against the covenantor are not. (11 Cyc. 1178.)
As a general rule, in an action for breach of the covenant against incumbrances, where the plaintiff purchased or extinguished the outstanding incumbrance, he is entitled to recover with interest the reasonable price
The judgment of the court below is therefore modified in that particular, and the case remanded, with directions to enter a judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the amount paid by it, with interest, and costs. Neither party is given costs on the appeal.