106 Wis. 525 | Wis. | 1900
The purchase of the tax certificate by Buf-fington must, under our statute and decisions, be held to have amounted to the payment of the tax for the protection of the estate, and for the mutual benefit of both of the mortgagees and the mortgagor. Buffington could not thereby acquire a tax lien upon the land paramount to that of the first mortgagee, nor could he take a tax title which would cut off the first mortgagee or the owner of the equity of redemption. He acquired thereby simply a “further lien” upon the'land as against the mortgagor and all persons then claiming under him; not a lien independent of his mortgage lien, or superior to it or to that of the first mortgage, but of the same nature as his mortgage, and constituting simply an addition to the mortgage debt of the amount due on the certificate when he acquired it. Stats. 1898, sec. 1158; Burchard v. Roberts, 70 Wis. 111. His lien by virtue of the tax certificate which he held was apparently paramount to the lien of the plaintiff’s prior mortgage, but not really so. But the fact that such lien was not paramount to plaintiff’s mort
Reference to a well-established principle of equity jurisprudence as applied to the law of principal and agent will throw light upon the question. While an - agent charged with the duty of caring for his principal’s real estate cannot acquire a valid tax title thereto, still, if he does acquire a tax deed, equity will content itself with setting aside the tax title upon condition only of the principal’s reimbursing the agent for the money he would himself have been obliged to expend to discharge the lien had the agent not acquired it, with interest thereon. Dana v. Duluth T. Co. 99 Wis. 663. The principal must do equity by rehnbursing his unfaithful agent so far as the agent’s expenditures were beneficial and •necessary to protect the principal’s title. The present case would apparently call for the application of equitable principles more loudly than the case of the agent, because in the agent’s case there is an attempted fraud and breach of trust, which element is entirely lacking in the case before us.
It was strongly argued, however, that the defendant was barred from making any claim by the judgment of foreclosure of the plaintiff’s mortgage, because the defendant was made a party to that action and the judgment therein
Furthermore, the relief granted by a default judgment cannot exceed that demanded by the complaint.
Upon the whole case the judgment is right and must be affirmed, irrespective of the fact that Buffington has no lien on the property that could be enforced under his mortgage or otherwise, but merely controlled a situation clouding the plaintiff’s title, which cloud, under the circumstances, a court of equity might properly refuse to remove except upon condition that the party invoking and receiving its aid do equity to Buffington by reimbursing him for an outlay which inured to his benefit.
By the Oourt.— Judgment affirmed.
I heartily concur in the affirmance of the judgment in this case, and much that is said in the opinion of my brother Winslow; but I am unable to understand some of the reasoning by which such conclusion is reached. If the tax certificates held by Buffington were not liens upon the land “superior to the plaintiff’s first mortgage;” if they were only “ apparently paramount to the lien of the plaintiff’s prior mortgage, but not really so; ” if “ the tax lien, as well as the second mortgage lien, had ceased to exist— then I am unable to perceive any ground, legal or equitable, for holding that the plaintiff should repay to Buffington what he had advanced for such tax certificates, and interest thereon, as a condition of setting, them aside as
The sense in which the word “ lien ” has been used may account for some of the differences of opinion, and perhaps some confusion in the discussion of the question. If it is used in the sense that when Buffington, as such mortgagee, purchased such tax certificates they continued as liens at law, drawing the high rate of interest as such certificates, entitling him to tax deeds, with the right to enforce the same, then I apprehend that under the decisions of this court all would agree that such tax certificates were not such liens. But if it is used in the sense that such tax certificates were liens superior to the plaintiff’s mortgage, but cognizable only in a court of equity,— as I think they were,— then, as it seems to me, the judgment in favor of Buffington was eminently proper and should be affirmed. But, if such certificates were not liens in equity superior to the plaintiff’s mortgage, then I see no reason why they should not be set aside without the condition of repayment.
Our statutes did not, in my judgment, prevent such tax certificates from continuing to be liens in equity paramount to the plaintiff’s mortgage. The original statute authorized any person who had a lien by mortgage upon any lands on which the taxes had not been paid to “pay such taxes, and
Counsel for the plaintiff seemingly rely upon a Michigan case, where the mortgagees, after having redeemed the mortgaged premises from a tax sale, foreclosed their mortgage, and bid in the land for the amount due on their mortgage, without any reference to what they had paid to redeem the
Where a person having a lien or interest in or title to land acquires a tax certificate or other lien upon the same land, and justice and good conscience require it, it is the
Eor the reasons given I think the judgment of the superior court of Douglas county should be affirmed.