171 A. 287 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1933
Argued September 27, 1933.
This is an action of assumpsit brought by a mortgagee of real estate in the City of Philadelphia, who *354
purchased the same at foreclosure sale under the mortgage, and was compelled to pay the taxes for the years 1930 and 1931, against the owner of the real estate when the taxes were due, for reimbursement of the amount so paid. The claim is based on the equity of subrogation to the city's right of action against the property owner personally liable for the taxes (Acts of April 16, 1845, P.L. 495, sec. 4; March 11, 1846, P.L. 114, sec. 2; March 13, 1847, P.L. 340), which accrued to the plaintiff on payment of the taxes to the city: Penna. Co. v. Bergson,
The court below entered judgment against defendant for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense. To warrant the entry of such a judgment the plaintiff's right to it must be clear and free from doubt: Gordon v. Continental Casualty Co.,
The facts as they appear in the plaintiff's statement and the affidavit of defense may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff was the holder of a first mortgage on premises 1702-8 Norris Street, Philadelphia. Defendant was the registered owner of the premises from May 13, 1929 to March 9, 1931. On December 1, 1930, after default on the mortgage, by virtue of the right secured to it under the mortgage, plaintiff demanded possession of the premises, and pursuant thereto collected the rents accruing thereafter until it became the purchaser at sheriff's sale under the mortgage foreclosure on March 2, 1931. The amount of the rent collected by the plaintiff from December 1, 1930 to March 2, 1931 is not set forth, but, whatever it was, no credit was given for it by the plaintiff on account of interest or principal on the foreclosure of the mortgage; the judgment in the scire facias was for the full amount of principal due and interest without deduction for any rents received. The taxes for 1930 *355 amounted to $974.99; taxes for 1931, $879.12; water rents and meter rates for 1930 $77.69; for 1931 $33.60. The defendant admitted liability for the 1930 taxes but defended against those for 1931 on two grounds: (1) That the moneys received by plaintiff on account of rents from December 1, 1930 to December1, 1931 were sufficient to pay the taxes; (2) that the mortgagee being in possession of the rents must be regarded as the real owner and hence was itself personally liable for the 1931 taxes, rather than the defendant. Neither of these defenses is tenable.
(1) The rents, which accrued after the delivery of the sheriff's deed under foreclosure on March 9, 1931, were the individual property of the plaintiff and of no concern to the defendant. The latter cannot ask that rents due and payable during the period that plaintiff was the real and registered owner should be applied to the payment of taxes for which the defendant was personally liable, to the relief of the defendant.
(2) The mortgagee in possession of the premises, and collecting the rents, by virtue of a demand for the same on condition broken, is not the real owner of the real estate with the accompanying personal liability for payment of taxes. The registered or title owner remains the real owner, until he executes and delivers a deed of conveyance, absolute on its face, as distinguished from a mortgage, or the real estate is conveyed by the sheriff under execution process. While in possession and collecting the rents as mortgagee the latter is a quasi or constructive trustee for the owner and must account to the latter for the rents and profits so received: Integrity Trust Co., Trustee v. St. Rita Building Loan Association,
Taxes in Philadelphia are assessed prior to the beginning of the tax year, and the whole tax is due at the beginning of the year: King v. Mt. Vernon Bldg. Assn.,
But the plaintiff's claim in this action is based on the equitable right of subrogation and is subject to countervailing equities: Reitenbaugh v. Ludwick,
The plaintiff, apparently, has in its possession rents belonging to the defendant, which it received and did not appropriate to the payment of interest or principal on the mortgage. Not having been so appropriated, in so far as those rents were not applied to necessary repairs and expenses in connection with the real estate, they remain the property of the defendant and should be credited on the taxes for 1931 claimed in this action. The defendant is not the mortgagor. It is the alienee of the mortgagor, a terre tenant in its restricted sense: Commonwealth Trust Co. v. Harkins,
But another matter needs correction. Judgment *358
was entered by the court below for water rents and meter rates for 1930 and 1931. This was error. Water rents are not taxes: Rieker v. City of Lancaster,
The city having no right of personal action against an owner of real estate for water rents or water rates on property in the possession of a tenant, there was none to which the plaintiff as mortgagee purchasing under the mortgage foreclosure could be subrogated. The law remains the same in this respect as when declared in Theobald v. Sylvester, supra, and O'Donnell v. Neely, supra.
The judgment is modified by reducing it in amount to $974.99, the taxes for 1930, with interest from April 15, 1931, the date when paid; with leave to proceed for the amount paid for taxes for 1931, exclusive of water rents in both years.