This is an appeal from the judgment in defendant's favor in an action commenced by the plaintiff, as the owner of a certain tract of land, to quiet title thereto against the defendant claiming under a tax deed. The defendant in his answer and cross-complaint set up his tax deed as a defense to the action, and also averred that he had paid out and expended the sum of $905 as taxes, penalties, costs, interest, and charges which were assessed and a lien upon said property at the time he obtained said tax deed to the same, and the payment of which was a condition precedent to the issuance of said tax deed; and the defendant prayed that should the court find his tax deed for any reason invalid, and adjudge the plaintiff to be the owner of the property, it should also in its judgment decree that the plaintiff be required to repay to the defendant the sums so expended. Upon the issues as thus made up the trial court found the defendant's tax deed to be invalid, but directed the repayment to the defendant by the plaintiff of the sum of $835.90 so expended by him for taxes and so forth, and decreed that its judgment quieting the plaintiff's title should be ineffectual until such sum *Page 289 was paid. From this judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.
The main contention of the appellant is that the various items of taxes, etc., alleged to have been paid by the defendant as a prerequisite to the issuance to him of the tax deed, were based upon assessments and levies of taxes by the state and by the city of Oakland which were void on account of numerous defects and irregularities as shown in the proofs and pointed out in the briefs of appellant. Conceding that such defects and irregularities exist, and that they were such as would have rendered void the tax deed issued to the defendant, and uncollectible the taxes based thereon in any proceedings initiated by the state to compel the plaintiff as the owner of the property to pay the same, or even in any proceeding initiated by the defendant to quiet his title to the property, we are still unable to distinguish this case from the case ofHolland v. Hotchkiss,
The appellant also contends that the defendant's amended answer and cross-complaint were insufficient in respect to their affirmative averments as to the details of the assessment and levy of the taxes sought to be recovered. We are of the opinion that however uncertain and indefinite the defendant's pleading may be in the respects indicated, it was sufficient to raise the issue in the absence of a special demurrer.
As to the appellant's contention that section 3898, subdivision 5, of the Political Code as amended in 1913 [Stats. 1913, p. 560], is void in its attempted application to assessments and levies of taxes made before the passage of such amendment, it is sufficient to say that the respondent's right to a recovery in the case at bar does not depend upon this or any other section of the code, but rests upon a principle of equity well established in the decisions of the courts long prior to the amendment of the code.
Judgment affirmed.
Lennon, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on May 21, 1917. *Page 291