25 Wash. 530 | Wash. | 1901
The opinion of the court was delivered by
S. T. Packwood, respondent bere, brought this action below to foreclose a mortgage upon certain real estate situated in Kittitas county. The mortgage was executed by John A. Shoudy and wife on the 28th day of March, 1894, to secure a note of said John A. Shoudy, payable to said Packwood for the sum of $4,000. Said note was of even date with the mortgage and payable one year after date. Before the commencement of this action, $3,000 had been paid upon the note, and the balance of the principal and interest was unpaid. On the same day the mortgage was executed it was filed for record in the auditor’s office of Kittitas county. At the time of the execution of the mortgage the said Shoudy was indebted to various persons, and, among others, he was indebted to Dexter Horton and A. A. Denny. Being desirous of securing said Horton and Denny, it was agreed that Shoudy should confess judgment in their favor for the amounts
The appellant, Briggs, after setting up in his answer the facts concerning payment of taxes as heretofore stated, prays judgment that a lien against the property upon which taxes were paid be decreed in his favor for the amount paid, together with interest thereon from the date of payment. Appellant bases his right to have the taxes so paid by him declared a lien upon the legislative provision found in chapter 71, § 82, p. 1Y5, Session Laws of 1897:
“Any person who has a lien, by mortgage or otherwise, upon any real property upon which the taxes have not been paid, may pay such taxes and the interest,. penalty and costs thereon; and the receipt of the county treasurer shall constitute an additional lien on such land, to the amount therein stated; and the amount so paid and the interest thereon, at the rate specified in the mortgage or other in*534 strument, shall he collectible with, or as a part of, and in the same manner as the amount secured by, the original lien.”
It is contended by respondent that the above provision is intended to apply only to the holder of a lien upon specified real estate, such as a mortgage lien, and that it does not apply to the holder of a general lien such as a judgment lien. We believe, however, that the language of the statute is broad enough to include the holder of any lien. The words are, “Any person who has a lien by mortgage or otherwise upon any real property . . . .” A judgment of the superior court is a lien upon the real estate of the judgment debtor in the county where the judgment is entered, or in which a properly certified transcript of a judgment rendered in another county has been filed. The statute plainly says that a lien created by mortgage “or otherwise” entitles its holder to pay the unpaid taxes and the interest, penalty, and costs, and that the receipt of the county treasurer shall constitute an additional lien for the amount. If, therefore, appellant was the holder of a valid judgment lien against the mortgaged property at the time he paid the delinquent taxes and redeemed from the tax sale, he is entitled, by virtue of the statute, to have the amount paid declared a lien upon the land prior to respondent’s mortgage lien. Did appellant hold a valid judgment lien at the time? The judgment was entered on the 27th day of March, 1894, and the taxes were paid on the 26th day of June, 1899. Sections 462 and 463, 2 Hill’s Code, provide that the lien of a judgment continues for five years from the date of its rendition, and that proceedings to revive the lien may be instituted within six years from the date of judgment. Appellant’s counsel contends that these two sections must be construed to mean that the lien of the judgment continues
It is urged hy respondent that the attempted execution sale was void for several reasons, but a discussion of them all is not necessary for the decision of this case. The execution was void at the time of the attempted sale, for reasons heretofore stated. There being no lien in existence, there could have heen no authority for the sale in any execution that might have been issued. It is true, this execution was issued a few days before the expiration of the five year period; but the.lien itself, the authority for any execution and sale, was dead long before the attempted sale. It follows that, if appellant is entitled to relief on account of the taxes paid, it must be based upon equitable grounds, considered with reference to the relations of the parties to the subject matter. It must be conceded that appellant paid the taxes in good faith, relying upon what he believed to be his lien as authority for it. It cannot be assumed that
In Fiacre v. Chapman, 32 N. J. Eq. 463, a second mortgagee redeemed from certain tax sales which the complaint alleged were invalid, and this was not denied; but in an action to foreclose the first mortgage, to which the second mortgagee was a party, he sought to recover what he had paid. The court, at pages 464 and 465 of the opinion, says:
“But while the defendant has not established a paramount title under the sales (indeed, he claims none, but only a- lien), he has showu that he has paid, by way of redemption, taxes assessed upon the property, and which, under the charter, were a prior lien to the complainant’s mortgage, and for non-payment whereof the property might have been sold, and under the sale a title superior to the complainant’s mortgage given. . ■ ’. . But it is urged, on behalf of the complainant, that though the taxes were a lien on the land paramount to the first mortgage, yet the lien is discharged by the payment. If it be conceded that the lien was discharged by the payments, that will not deprive Mr. Mitchell of his right of reimbursement for the payments out of the property in advance of the lien of the complainant’s mortgage. They were in no- sense volumtary. It is proved that he made them, relying on the lien for his indemnity. He, indeed, was not compelled to make*537 them by any clnty he owed the complainant, hut, in order to relieve the property from the paramount lien of the taxes and protect it for himself against the consequences thereof, he was constrained to make them. Having thus preserved the property to the complainant as well as himself, he is entitled to equitable subrogation, . . .
In Merrill v. Tobin, 82 Iowa, 529 (48 N. W. 1044), the plaintiff entered certain lands, through an agent, upon county land warrants, and received from the United States a patent therefor. The land was not fenced, and was wild, unbroken, and uncultivated prairie. The plaintiff’s title was defeated in the action by the defendants’ showing possession in themselves; the acts of possession being such as the cutting of hay and stacking it upon the land, and such other acts of dominion over it as it was susceptible of in its wild state. For eighteen years the plaintiff paid the taxes upon the land and during all that time was a nonresident of the state, and did not visit the land and had no knowledge of any adverse claim thereto or of any one being in possession thereof until at the end of that time, when he immediately commenced an action to quiet his title thereto. It was held that the plaintiff was justified in the payment of the taxes on the land, since the evidence showed that such payment was made in good faith. It was also held that, since the present owners of the land acquired title thereto with full knowledge of the facts relating to the payment of the taxes thereon by the plaintiff, the plaintiff was entitled to have the taxes so paid established as a lien upon the land. To the same effect are the following Iowa cases: Goodnow v. Moulton, 51 Iowa, 555 (2 N. W. 395); Goodnow v. Litchfield, 63 Iowa, 275 (19 27. W. 226); Thompson v. Savage, 47 Iowa, 522. See, also, Schaefer v. Causey, 8 Mo. App. 142.
In Parks v. Watson, 20 Fed. 764, it is held that the state has a lien upon all lands until all taxes are paid, and that,
Beavis, C. J., and Fullerton, Anders, Dunbar, Mount and White, JJ., concur.