27 N.M. 664 | N.M. | 1921
Lead Opinion
OPINION OF THE COURT
This is a suit to quiet title to a number of lots and a tract of land in Santa Fé county, brought by the New Mexico Realty Company against James W. Norment and the Security Investment & Development Company.
The complaint was in the conventional form. The defendants answered denying the title of plantiff in said property and alleging that the said property was assessed for taxes for the year 1904; that a levy thereon was made; that the taxes became delinquent and a judgment was rendered for the delinquency; that on April 7,1906, the property was duly sold at tax sale to the county of Santa Fé, duplicate certificate being delivered to James W. Norment on December 5, 1910, and duly recorded; that a tax deed for said property was delivered by said county to Norment on February 11, 1911; that subsequently a suit was brought by Norment against the county of Santa Fé, wherein it was decreed that the title acquired by Norment was a new, independent, and superior and paramount title and extinguished all other title and liens; that the said decree was affirmed in the Supreme Court of the state, and that on November 25, 1914, Norment conveyed all his right, title, and interest in said premises to the Security Investment & Development Company, Norment disclaiming any right or title in said premises thereafter.
The trial court found that the said property was assessed to Phillip E. Moisson, for the year 1904; that said Moisson then owned said property, and that the tax proceedings mentioned in the answer occurred as alleged therein. It also found that Mois-son, through his agent, L. Bradford Prince, on June 28, 1907,. tendered to the county treasurer the “exact amount of taxes on said property levied in 1904, that is to say, the sum of $49.59, and said officer refused to accept the same in payment of said taxes.” The court concluded as a matter of law that the tender aforesaid was equivalent to actual payment,- and consequently the acts of the county in selling the land for alleged delinquent taxes for the year 1904 was illegal and void. From a judgment quieting the title of said property in the plaintiff, the Security Investment & Development Company has perfected this appeal.
The property involved in this suit is fractional lots 31, 82, 88, 34, 35, and 89 and full lots 30, 61, 62, 63, 85, 86, 90, 91, 92, 93, 96, and 97, “map of valuable building lots adjoining the railroad depot, Santa Fé, N. M. 1880,” and a tract of land called the “hillside property” in the northern part of the city of Santa Fé. The paper title introduced in evidence by the appellee discloses the following: Warranty deed, William Bradley to Phillip E. Moisson, dated June 1, 1898, for all the lots above described; quitclaim deed of said Moisson to appellee, dated April 10, 1905, for the above-described lots; deed from Manuel Valdez and wife to Phillip E. Moisson, dated 1890, for tract 1 of the Hillside property and deed for tract 2 of said Hillside property from and to same parties, dated 1891. • This entire tract was conveyed to appellee by Moisson by deed dated April 10, 1905. From recitations made in some of. the foregoing deeds it would appear that on September 25, 1848, Ramon Martinez and wife deeded tract 1 of the Hillside property to Antonio Valdez, and that the grantee thereof was dead at the time Manuel Valdez and wife conveyed the Hillside property to Phillip E. Moisson in 1890 and 1891; that the city of Santa Fé quitclaimed its title in said property by its deed to Moisson, dated 1901, and that said city quitclaimed its title to lots 30 to 35, inclusive, to Moisson May 30,1901.
It will be observed that the source of title of Ramon Martinez and wife, to the tract numbered 1 of the Hillside property, is not disclosed, nor is the source of title of Manuel Valdez to both tracts of said Hillside property anywhere disclosed. It also appears that the origin of title of William Bradley, as well as the city of Santa Fé, is nowhere disclosed. In other words, the paper title introduced in evidence by appellee to prove its title to the premises fails to show that appellee’s mediate or immediate grantors were ever vested with the legal title to this property or to any of it, and the question arises as to whether under such circumstances the ap-pellee, plaintiff below, made out a case entitling it to a decree quieting its title to said premises.
There is no evidence in the record that the plaintiff, appellee, or any of its privies, were in possession of the property in dispute. The doctrine laid down in Holthoff v. Freudenthal, 22 N. M. 377, 162 Pac. 173, that possession under a deed from a grantor in possession is sufficient evidence of title to maintain the action, is therefore inapplicable here.
In Bauer v. Glos, 236 Ill. 450, 86 N. E. 116, the court said:
“The only evidence of appellee’s ownership was a master’s deed to Henry Bauer * * * and subsequent deeds from Henry Bauer * * * to Albert Bauer, and from Albert Bauer to appellee. The premises were unoccupied, and there is no evidence of title or possession in appellee or her grantors, or any of the parties to the decree by virtue of which the master’s deed was made. A deed for land without proof of possession or title in the grantor is not proof of title in the grantee.’
In Madler v. Kersten, 170 Wis. 424, 175 N. W. 779, the court said that in actions to remove a cloud on title to land, plaintiff n'ot tracing title to the government, proves no title by showing a deed from one not shown to have been in possession of the property. To the same effect is Rockey v. Vieux, 179 Cal. 681, 178 Pac. 712. Numerous cases support this doctrine, but the few cited here will suffice.
In Eickoff v. Scott, 137 Ark. 170, 208 S. W. 421, the court said:
“Appellees are not in a position to attack appellants’ tax title because they trace their title to the same source, and an attack upon appellant’s title is in effect an attack on the source of their own title. It is true, in an adversary suit, that the plaintiff must recover on the strength of his own title, and not the weakness of the defendant’s title. [Authorities.] This rule is applicable where the parties claim title from independent sources, and has no application where the parties trace their respective titles to a common source. Where the parties trace their title to a common source, the one must prevail who has the superior equity.”
See, also, Charles v. White, 214 Mo. 187, 112 S. W. 545, 127 Am. St. Rep. 674, 21 L. R. A. (N. S.) 481; Stephenson v. Austin, 217 Mo. 355, 116 S. W. 1090; Mo. St. Life Ins. Co. v. Russ (Mo. Sup.) 214 S. W. 860; City of Ft. Bragg v. Brandon (Cal. App.) 182 Pac. 454; and Buchannan v. St. L. & M. R. Co . 253 Fed. 698, 703, 165 C. C. A. 292.
As the parties hereto traced their title to a common source, viz., Moisson, the plaintiff below was not obliged to prove title in any predecessor of Moisson. The court found as a fact that Mois-son was the owner of the property in 1904, and appellant made no objection thereto. Nor at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief did appellant move for a nonsuit upon the ground that the plaintiff was required to prove title beyond the common source.
“That all accrued penalties and interest upon taxes now or heretofore in this year delinquent, shall he remitted upon all such taxes which have been or shall be paid oh or before the first day of July, A. D. 1907. Provided, however, that in all cases where taxes are now the subject of litigation the time for such payment as aforesaid is extended only to the first day of July, 1907, and if not paid on or before such first day of July, no abatement of interest or penalties shall thereafter be made.”
To recapitulate: The taxes were assessed in 1904; became delinquent in 1905; judgment rendered for delinquency January 26, 1906; sold to the county at tax sale on April 7, 1906; tender of “taxes” made in June 1907 and refused, and duplicate certificate of sale assigned to Norment in 1910.
The tax was put in judgment, as heretofore mentioned, and whether the trial court was correct in applying the statute of 1907 with respect to the tender of taxes made by the appellee depends upon whether the judgment merged the “tax” or not. If it did, the statute was without application, because it spoke only to “taxes” as such, and not to judgments which may have been rendered on account of delinquent taxes.
We have found no case in point on this proposition, but the general law of merger applies. In 1 Freeman on Judg. (4th Ed.) it is said:
“The entry of a j'udgment or decree establishes in the most conclusive manner and reduces to the most authentic form that which had hitherto been unsettled, and which had, in all probability, depended for its settlement upon destructible and uncertain evidence. The cause of action thus established and permanently attested is said to merge into the judgment establishing it, upon the same principle that a simple contract merges into a specialty. * * * The cause of action, though it may be examined to aid in interpreting the judgment, can never again become the basis of a suit between the same parties. It has lost its vitality; it has expended its force and effect. * * * It ‘is drowned in the judgment’ and must henceforth be regarded as functus officio.” Section 215;
“The weight of authority in the United States shows that whatever may be a cause of action will, if recovered upon, merge into the judgment or decree. * * * It may even be merged by a statutory judgment.”
“A person often has the1 privilege of pursuing either of several forms of action to obtain legal- redress for a single wrong. Whenever he resorts to any action in which it is competent for the court to award him full compensation for the wrong of which he complains, and prosecutes such action to final judgment, the wrong merges in the judgment and thereafter there can be no further recovery there-for. * * *” Section 216.
See, also, 15 R. C. L. “Judgments,” § 236 et seq.; 23. Cyc. 1108 et seq. In the last-cited work it is said that all the peculiar qualities of the claim' are merged in the judgment.
For most purposes the judgment which merges the claim is to be regarded as a new debt. 1 Freeman on Judgments (4th Ed.) § 217; R. C. L. supra § 247; 20 A. & E. Enc. Law, p. 599 et seq.
After the rendition of the judgment against the land in controversy, there were no longer any “taxes” for 1904 due to the state or county chargeable against the land; the- judgment superseding the tax, and the amount thereof being ordered realized by a judicial sale of the premises. The act of 1907 was not sufficiently broad to cover the situation existing in the case at bar, and the trial court erred in applying the statute.
For the reasons stated the judgment of the trial court will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to set aside the judgment and to proceed thereafter as the parties shall elect, and it is so ordered.
Rehearing
On Motion for Rehearing.
By motion for rehearing, learned counsel for appellee suggests that the court was in error in holding that the taxes for 1904 were merged by judgment and that chapter 65, Laws 1907, therefore did not apply.
In the former opinion we did not consider the sufficiency of the tender because it was rendered immaterial by the decision respecting the applicability of chapter 65, Laws 1907, to taxes which had been placed in judgment.
Counsel for appellant argued that the tender of June 27, 1907, was insufficient because it did not include any sum imposed as costs. The tender was for $49.59, the exact amount of taxes levied on the property for 1904. The rolls for that year showed the imposition of a penalty of $2.48 on account of the failure to pay the taxes when due, and section 10, c. 22, Laws 1899, the law in force at the time, required the taxing authorities to impose that penalty. That sum was, however, remitted by chapter 65, Laws 1907, when its provisions were invoked. The additional sum of $2.75, described as costs of advertising, was charged on the rolls against said property for said year. The appellant contends that because the tender did not include that sum it was bad.
The statute, chapter 65, Laws 1907, provided for the remission of all “accrued penalties and interest,” and the question now is whether it was necessary to pay or tender the amount charged as advertising costs in order to be relieved under the provisions of the act.
Under the law of 1899, if taxes were not paid within 90 days after delinquency, it became the duty of the collector to publish a delinquent tax list of owners of property upon which the taxes amounted to not less than $25; the list to state the “amount of taxes, penalties and costs due.” The collector was required to append to the list and publish a notice that he would in a time stated apply for judgment against the lands and personal property described in the list, “with costs and penalties” and for an order óf sale, and sell said property against which judgment may be rendered for the taxes, penalties, and costs due. Upon the completion of the publication and notice, the district attorney was required to file an omnibus suit against the property described in the publication, and where judgment was rendered it was to include the amount stated in the publication, “together with penalties, interests and costs,” and in entering up such judgments the clerk was required to add to the judgment amount a sum equal to 5 per cent, of the amount due, “which five per centum shall be the costs of such proceeding” to be paid over to the court fund of the county. Sections 15, 17, 18, and 20, c, 22, Laws 1899.
It will be observed that the law required the imposition of costs of publication of the delinquent tax list and also the cost of the omnibus suit brought to enforce payment of the tax. The statute fixes the amount of the costs’of suit, but does not fix the publication costs.
It therefore appears that the cost of publication of the delinquent tax list became a charge against the property in suit here, unless the statute authorized its remission upon payment of the taxes proper the tender was insufficient.
The word “penalty,” as used in the staute, clearly speaks to the arbitrary amount to be added to the tax proper imposed by section 10, c. 22, Laws 1899, as a punishment for failure to pay the tax within the time specified by the statute. This amount is added to. the tax and becomes a constituent part of it. Our conclusion with respect to these matters requires no consideration as, to the usual meaning attributed to the word penalty.
The word “interest” in the statute was evidently used inadvertently. Prior to 1899, 25 per cent, per annum was added as interest to delinquent taxes. Section 4066, C. L. 1897. So far as we have been able to ascertain,, from 1899 to 1918 taxes did not draw interest, although we find the- word “interest” appearing in the act, of 189.9 at several places.
It is elemental that “a tender t.o be sufficient in law must be in amount at least equal to the amount due.” 26 R. C. L. “Tender,” § 20.‘
Under chapter 65, Laws 1907, a tender of the delinquent tax amount, including the legally assessed cost of publishing the delinquent tax list, must be made in order to entitle the party to a remission of the penalty imposed for the nonpayment of taxes, and a tender of an amount less- than that required by law is unavailing.
The judgment of the trial court is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to set aside the judgment and thereafter proceed as the parties shall elect, and,
It is so ordered.