73 P. 16 | Or. | 1903
after stating the facts in the foregoing terms, delivered the opinion.
The issue presented for our consideration is whether, under the law in force in 1897 and 1898, a tax deed cut off the lien of a mortgage executed anterior to the assessment and levy of the tax for the nonpayment of which the mortgaged premises were sold and the deed given. The solution of this question depends entirely upon the statute then in effect, and its proper interpretation. For the purposes of assessment, lands and town lots were required to be valued at their true cash value, taking into consideration the improvements, the quality of the soil, etc., such value being taken to mean the amount such property would sell for at voluntary sale made in the ordinary course of business: Hill’s Ann. Laws 1892, § 2752, as amended by Laws 1893, p. 6. The assessment was made by setting down in the assessment roll the names of the taxable persons, the description of each tract or parcel of land, the full cash value of each parcel and of all taxable personal property, and the total value of the whole: Hill’s Ann. Laws 1892, § 2770. A transcript of the assessment roll was placed in the hands of the sheriff, accompanied by a warrant commanding him to collect the taxes charged on the list or roll, and to make the same by sale of the goods and chattels of the respective persons named therein, if necessary: Hill’s Ann. Laws 1892, § 2794, as amended by Laws 1893, p. 118. If any of the taxes mentioned in the list remained unpaid, either on real or personal property, the sheriff made out a statement and return theréof in
This cursory statement of the effect of the statute then in force indicates quite clearly the policy of the law for the assessment and levy of taxes and the enforcement of the payment thereof. The assessment was against the person, and not specifically against the property listed. The property was of course the basis of the assessment, and land was made to bear its true cash value. The owner, however, was charged with the tax, and the property was not made primarily or exclusively liable for the payment of its own burden. In other words, the scheme adopted was^not a proceeding in re to, but rather in personam, and the manner of collecting was to make the tax out of the personal property of the taxpayer, if any such could be found, and, when that source was exhausted, to levy the warrant, if the taxes were delinquent, upon sufficient of the realty of the individual to satisfy the same. The “personal property is in the primary fund to which resort must be had for the compulsory payment of taxes” (Hughes v. Linn County, 37 Or. 111, 117, 60 Pac. 843), and it was only when that was exhausted by the exercise of diligent inquiry that resort could be had to the land. When, finally, the sheriff, in pursuance of a lawful warrant, sold the land, he conveyed to the purchaser, subject to redemption, “all the estate or interest therein of the owner.” The pivotal inquiry here, therefore, is, What estate is thus conveyed ? “ If,” says Mr. Blackwell, in his work on Tax Titles (volume 2, 5 ed. § 954), “the land alone is assessed as the summation of all interests, liens, incumbrances, etc., the general rule is that the deed carries a fee simple absolute, a new and independent title, the land itself being conveyed ; and all prior
Mr. Burroughs states the principle thus: “In those states where the land is assessed to the owner, a report is made of his delinquency in paying the tax, and the sale is made by the tax officers in pursuance of such report, and there are no proceedings against the land in rent,. The purchaser at the tax sale then becomes the owner only of such interest as the person assessed had in the land”: Burroughs, Tax’n, § 122. The text of these authorities is supported by numerous adjudications: City of Nashville v. Cowan, 10 Lea (Tenn.), 209; Gates v. Lawson, 32 Grat. (Va.) 12; Dows v. Drew, 27 N. J. Eq. 442; Blackwell v. West Amwell, 43 N. J. Eq. 165; Smith v. Lewis, 2 W. Va. 39; McDonald v. Hannah (C. C.), 51 Fed. 73, 59 Fed. 977 (8 C. C. A. 426). And, ivhile the states of the Union adopting a like policy or scheme for the collection of revenue are greatly in the minority, yet the rule of law governing in the premises has become well established and clearly defined. In Day v. Micou, 85 U. S. (18 Wall.) 156, it was
But, before disposing of the matter finally, we will notice further the forcible argument of counsel for defendant. He insists that the expression, “all the estate or interest therein of the owner,” is to be read in the light of subsequent sections of the statute, whereby the owner or his successor in interest, or any person having a lien, by judgment, decree, or mortgage, on the property, or any part thereof separately sold, was authorized to redeem from the sale, and any person having a lien by way of mortgage or otherwise might pay the tax and add it to his own lien, and providing that the deed “shall operate to convey a legal and equitable title to the purchaser [property] sold in fee-simple to the grantee named in such deed,” and that, when so read, it signifies the entire or fee-simple estate in the lands sold, devested of all liens and incumbrances of' whatsoever nature. A view in the retrospect will explain the situation. By section 72 of the territoral act of January 27, 1854 (Laws 1854-55, p. 446, c. 1, tit. 6), it was provided that the tax deed “shall vest in the grantee an absolute title in fee simple in such lands ”; and, by section 77, that “all taxes assessed on any tract or parcel of
Some stress is laid upon section 2818, as indicating a purpose to deal with the fee-simple title. Whatever may be the purpose of that section, it contemplates the issuance of a special warrant upon the order of the county court, but the sale in this instance was not had by virtue of such a warrant.
In our consideration of the cause, we have not overlooked the cases of Nickum v. Gaston, 24 Or. 380 (33 Pac. 671, 35 Pac. 31), and McNary v. Wrightman, 32 Or. 573 (52 Pac. 510). But in neither of them was the question here involved determined. In the former, the case seems to have been presented upon the assumption by both parties that the tax sale and deed would cut off the lien of the prior mortgage, and what was said by the court must be read in the light of the legal issue involved. The latter ease holds that a lienor may pay the tax separately assessed upon a specific parcel of realty, and thereby prevent a sale thereof for the general tax assessed upon all the property of the taxpayer. Mr. Chief Justice Moore, in his discussion of the effect of Section 2838, Hill’s Ann. Laws, 1892, says: “ This would seem to imply that, as to a mortgagee or other lienor, the tax wras not a general, but, at most, a