170 Ga. 734 | Ga. | 1930
On April 14, 1921, Keaton borrowed from tbe Phoenix Mutual Life Insurance Company the sum of $20,000, and to secure the same executed to that company his deed to various land lots and portions of land lots in the 6th district of Early County, containing in the aggregate 2,887-1/2 acres. This indebtedness fell due on October 1, 1925, but was extended by the lender for five years from that date, the lender retaining its original security deed to secure the payment of the debt. In 1923 Keaton returned for taxation, in Early Count}', 4553 acres of land at the valuation of $32,880, city real estate at the valuation of $2,500, and personalty at tire valuation of $13,995. This return covered the lands embraced in the above security deed from Keaton to the insurance company. Keaton defaulted in the payment of his indebtedness to the insurance company. The company brought suit thereon, recovered judgment against Keaton sometime in 1929,
The first question with which we shall deal is whether the principle found in section 6029 of the Civil Code is applicable under the facts of this transaction. It is insisted by counsel for the claimant that the principle announced in this section is not applicable where there was a security deed antedating the tax return and fi. fa., and where the subsequent absolute title was acquired by foreclosure instead of by a voluntary conveyance of bargain and sale, and that certainly under this principle the claimant would not be required to pay taxes on other property in which it had no interest. To state more clearly the question involved in this case: , If the owner of different tracts of land conveyed some of them to a company to secure a debt at a time when there were no liens on his lands, and if thereafter he conveyed other parcels of his lands to a bank to secure indebtedness, with powers of sale in the conveyances, after he had permitted a tax lien to attach on all his property, including all the lands so conveyed as security, and if the bank, after having taken a transfer of the tax fi. fa., exercised the powers of sale contained in its security deeds, and at the sales purchased the lands embraced in its security deeds, thus divesting the owner of his equity of redemption in the lands conveyed as security, and if thereafter the company first mentioned reduced its debt to judgment, and at execution sale purchased the lands embraced in its security deed, thus divesting the owner of his equity of redemption in these lands, is the insurance company liable for any
In Merchants National Bank of Rome v. McWilliams, 107 Ga. 532 (33 S. E. 860), this court decided that “When property is sold and conveyed by a common grantor at different times and to different purchasers, and taxes having a lien on all the property sold are due, the last property sold is primarily bound for the payment of all such taxes.” It was further held that the sale by the sheriff of property under the foreclosure of a mortgage is in law to be treated as a sale by the owner, and that when such sale was of the last parcel of property sold, the owner being insolvent, that parcel of property is chargeable with the payment of all taxes due by the owner to the state and county at the time of the sale. In Reynolds v. Wood, 111 Ga. 854 (36 S. E. 593), this question came before this court again for decision. From the record in this case of file in the clerk’s office of this court the following facts appear: Ellison made a deed to the Building & Loan Association of Rome to lot 50 in the City of Rome, in October, 1890, to- secure a loan of $1200 due by Ellison to said association. Said association by deed conveyed its interest in said property in 1892 to one Moultrie. In
Counsel for the bank rely upon Askew v. Scottish American Mortgage Co., 114 Ga. 300 (40 S. E. 256). In that case there were two security deeds at different dates to different grantees. The maker of these two deeds owned 1400 acres of land. In 1890 he executed to the mortgage company a deed absolute on its face, to two tracts of these lands aggregating 400 acres, but in fact this deed was made to secure a debt. In 1895 the owner, to secure a loan, executed to Askew and Lane a deed to the remainder of his lands. The owner remained in possession of the lands embraced in both of these deeds. In 1896 the taxes due on these lands were assessed against the owner, and a tax execution was issued against him therefor. This execution was levied on one of the tracts which had been conveyed by the owner to the mortgage company, and the same was sold for the purpose of collecting the amount due as taxes on the entire 1400 acres. In August, 1896, the owner relinquished to Askew and Lane all right, title, and interest which he had in and to the 1000 acres conveyed to them as security, together with possession thereof. Subsequently the owner relinquished all his claim to the mortgage company to the land conveyed to it as security, on the ground that the land was not worth as much as the amount of the debt to secure which it had been given. At the time when one of the tracts conveyed to the mortgage company was sold for the payment of these taxes the owner was insolvent, and had been so ever since. On this state of facts the trial judge rendered a judgment prorating these taxes between the mortgage company and Askew and Lane. This court held that under the principle announced in section 6029 of the Civil Code (then section 5424) the land thus acquired by the mortgage company was subject to the payment of all the taxes, and reversed the judgment below. This conclusion was reached upon the theory that the rule laid down in the above section of our Civil Code was not applicable to security deeds which operate only as liens to secure the payment of debts due the grantees therein. Applying this principle, this court held that where the owner relinquished all his right, claim, and title under the junior security deed to the grantees
It was urged by counsel for the bank that there is no legal distinction between a deed executed by a grantor in person and a deed executed by his attorney in fact under a power of sale upon compliance with its terms. There is force in this view. In Merchants National Bank of Rome v. McWilliams, supra, it was stated that the sale by the sheriff under the foreclosure of a mortgage is in law to be treated as a sale by the mortgagor. Under like reasoning the sale under power of sale in a security deed by the grantee is in effect a conveyance by the grantor in such deed. There is not perhaps sufficient difference in this respect to differentiate the Askew case from the present case. In the Askew case, however, this court based its decision upon the ruling in the McWilliams ease; but in so doing, and while admonishing us twice to see the case of Reynolds v. Wood, supra, made no further reference to that case and overlooked the distinction drawn by this court between the Reynolds case and the McWilliams case. We have set out above the pertinent facts of the case of Reynolds v. Wood. On a perusal of these facts it will appear that Reynolds claimed title under a security deed and a subsequent sheriff’s deed, while Wood claimed under a senior sheriff’s deed. It is likewise true that Reynolds reduced his debt secured by the security deed to judgment, reconveying the property for the purpose of levy and sale, and had the same sold under the levy qf the execution on this judgment, but
We can not agree with counsel for the insurance company that his client is not liable for any of this tax, but are of the opinion that the amount due on the tax fi. fa. for 1923 should be prorated between the insurance company and the bank in the proportion which' the value of the lands embraced in the security deeds executed by Keaton to the bank, dated respectively February 5, 1922, June 15, 1923, July 13, 1925, and January 29, 1925, bears to the value of the lands embraced in the security deed from Keaton to the insurance company.
We can not agree with counsel for the insurance company that the lien of this tax fi. fa. upon the lands claimed by that company has been wholly released by reason of the fact that the bank had taken a security deed from the taxpayer to certain property, had sold the same under a power of sale in that deed, at which sale the bank bid in the property, and had conveyed the same by a warranty deed to the widow of the taxpayer,' during which time the bank held the tax fi. fa. as transferee. While the bank could not afterwards enforce the tax fi. fa. against the land so conveyed to the widow, the transaction did not amount tp a total release of all the property subject to the tax fi. fa. It could still be enforced against the insurance company for its ratable part of these taxes.
The other assignments of error are without merit.
Judgment reversed.