12 Pa. Super. 545 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
At the sheriff’s sale of the defendant’s real estate under an execution issued upon a judgment on a bond accompanying a mortgage given by her predecessor in title, the mortgagee became the purchaser at the price of $600, the mortgage debt being $2,000. During the defendant’s ownership taxes had been assessed against her amounting to $128.49, which were unpaid at the time of the sheriff’s sale, and under the statutes were first payable out of the proceeds of sale after payment of the costs of sale. After delivery of the sheriff’s deed the mortgagee brought suit against the defendant to recover the amount of these taxes, alleging in its statement of claim that it was compelled to pay them to the sheriff in order to obtain the deed.
1. That the assessed owner of seated land is personally liable for the taxes, notwithstanding the fact that under the statutes they are alien or charge upon the land cannot be questioned. Nor is that liability extinguished, or reduced pro tanto, by a transfer of the title to another during the tax year. In the absence of agreement taxes on real estate are not apportionable
2. The defendant alleges that the taxes for the year 1897 were registered taxes and were “ fully reached by the proceeds of the sheriff’s sale and were satisfied and discharged by it.” The quoted part of the averment is true of the taxes of both years. We do not understand the plaintiff’s allegation to be, that it paid the taxes in addition to its bid, but only that in complying with the bid as a lien creditor purchaser it was compelled to pay that part of its bid in cash, which it would not have been compelled to do if the defendant had discharged her personal obligation. Thus construed, the plaintiff’s statement is in harmony with the defendant’s version of the transaction, and the question for decision may be stated as follows: Can a mortgagee maintain assumpsit against the grantee of the mortgagor for the amount of taxes assessed upon the land during the grantee’s ownership and paid out of the proceeds of a sheriff’s sale under a judgment on the bond accompanying the mortgage, when the effect of such distribution of the fund is to reduce the sum which otherwise would be distributable to the mortgagor?
In Hogg v. Longstreth, 97 Pa. 255, it appeared that the owner, of premises subject to a mortgage given by his predecessor in title neglected to pay the .taxes for five years. The mortgagee obtained judgment on his mortgage and sold the land at sheriff’s sale, he becoming the purchaser at a price insufficient to pay the taxes in arrear; consequently their lien was not divested. Subsequently, in order to prevent a sale of his land under a judgment that the city had obtained for the taxes of the first three years, and a distraint of his goods for the taxes of the other two years, he paid them and then brought suit to recover the amount from the person who was owner at the time they
The question as to the right to maintain a common-law action for taxes, eo nomine, does not arise in this case. The taxes have been paid, but the circumstances under which they were paid give the plaintiff a right to reimbursement from the defendant as clearly as if the defendant had expressly promised to indemnify the plaintiff. Under the authorities above cited this right may be enforced in an action of assumpsit. We are of opinion, therefore, that the plaintiff’s statement sets forth a good cause of action and that the affidavit of defense was insufficient to prevent judgment.
The assignment of error is sustained and the record is remitted to the court below with directions to enter judgment against the defendant for such sum as to right and justice may belong, unless other legal or equitable cause be shown to the court below why such judgment should not be entered. ¡