18 Wash. 332 | Wash. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
In March, 1889, L. M. Robbins and Eliza J. Robbins, husband and wife, executed a mortgage on lot 4 in block 47 of A. A. Denny’s addition to the city of Seat-
Substantially but two questions are presented for our consideration; one is a contention by the respondent that he should have been made a party defendant in the proceedings to foreclose the assessment lien, and that the same are void because he was not; the second is that the city had no authority to become a purchaser of the property, and could transfer no title or interest to Mary B. Gardner, the appellant’s grantor. While the mortgage lien was prior in point of time to the lien of the assessment, it was yet subordinate thereto. This proposition is not disputed by the respondent. The general rule that the holder of a paramount lien is not required in an action to foreclose it to make the holder of a subordinate lien a party to such suit is conceded, but it is contended by the respondent here that, under section 10 of the charter of said city (Laws 1886, p. 243), he was a necessary party in a proceeding to foreclose such a lien, in view of the following provision in said section:
“ . . . it shall be a sufficient statement of the cause of action in the complaint to allege the making and completion of the improvement, describing it, and the amount of the assessment on the premises proceeded against, giving an accurate description thereof, and the amount of such assessment remaining unpaid, and the names of the owner of, and each person having an interest in such premises at the time of commencing the action or suit.”
Undoubtedly the holder of a mortgage would be a proper and desirable party defendant in an action to foreclose an assessment lien, but we do not think that it was the inten
Of course the rights of one not a party to the proceedings would not be concluded by such a foreclosure, but the same would be effectual to foreclose the lien against the owner of the premises. The holder of the subsequent incumbrance would, within the time allowed by the statute of limitations, be entitled to redeem. In relation to mortgages he would seem to be confined to that right. 2 Jones, Mortgages (5th ed.), § 1395; Bliss, Code Pleading (3d ed.), §101; Gower v. Winchester, 33 Iowa, 303; Goodman v. White, 26 Conn. 317; Farwell v. Murphy, 2 Wis. 533; Jenkins v. Newman, 122 Ind. 99 (23 N. E. 683); Bradley v. Snyder, 14 Ill. 263 (58 Am. Dec. 564).
We are of the opinion in this instance that he might go further, and in a proper action contest the validity of the assessment,- if he had had no opportunity or was not called upon to do so pending the proceedings, for he had a right to á hearing in that matter so far as his interests were affected. But his further contention that the proceedings were entirely ineffectual for any purpose as against him, and that, the statute of limitations having run at the time
In support of the contention that the city had authority to purchase, the appellant has cited no direct provision of law in force when the foreclosure proceedings were commenced, but contends that it would follow from the right of the city to foreclose the lien. He further contends that the freeholders’ charter adopted in 1890, which was in existence at the time the sale was made, conferred sucli authority, but we find no direct provision authorizing it. In section 8 it is provided in substance that such assessment shall be collected as other taxes shall be collected, and sold at the time and in the manner and by the same authority as lands and lots are sold for general taxes. Although art. 9, sec. 28, provides that at a general tax sale property may be struck off to the city, we have found no direct provision
The case of New Whatcom v. Bellingham Bay Imp. Co., 16 Wash. 131 (47 Pac. 236), has also been called to our attention. The court held in that case that a decree authorizing the city to purchase was not erroneous. It was not one of the principal questions in the case and perhaps did not receive due consideration, at least in expressing the reasons in the opinion for the holding. The provisions of the charter mentioned would seem to apply only to property acquired for municipal purposes, and the section cited from the laws of 1893 (p. 379, § 122, Bah Code, § 1760) is limited to the city’s own delinquent special assessments, and might apply to a case where the city was constructing an improvement for which it was directly liable, and payable in the first instance out of its general funds, but where as a part of the scheme, and for reimbursing itself, the city should make the same a charge upon the property benefited. What was said in the case was not with reference to the question that the city might become an absolute owner of the property, but was with a view of preserving the proceedings, and as stated in the respondent’s brief, citing Black on Tax Titles (2d ed.), § 301, only for the purpose of holding it until some person should be found who would take the land and pay the charges. If the city could be an ordinary purchaser, liabilities would grow out of it not contemplated in the making of the improvement, and entirely inconsistent with the theory of making the same a charge upon the property benefited, for the city would of course become liable to the warrant holder for the sum bid, but no such question was involved in that case nor here.
We do not'find it necessary to decide in this case whether
The sale to Mary B. Gardner appears to have been duly made and authorized by a city ordinance passed for the purpose. The fact that the lot was struck off to the city and by the city transferred to her was substantially only as if she had purchased it at the sheriff’s sale. The reasons given in some of the authorities cited, as expressed in Borer on Judicial Sales (2d ed.), §§ 413 and 414, relating to a purchase by a party in interest, do not obtain in a proceeding like this, for the interest of the city in collecting such assessment was only nominal. The fund to be provided thereby was for the benefit of the contractors. Section 10 aforesaid provided for authorizing a suit to foreclose the lien by the contractor who constructed the, improvement. However brought, the action was really to enforce a private right, the remedy being confined to the property benefited by the improvement. Eurthermore the court did permit the city to buy by confirming the sale.
Even though the owner could have objected to that sale in an apt and timely way, we are of the opinion that the
Reversed and remanded.
Dunbar, Reavis and Anders, JJ., concur.
Gordon, J., not sitting.