At a tax sale held in Towson on September 9, 1941, Thomas C. Hunter, Treasurer of Baltimore County, sold a lot improved with a frame house situated on Hillen Road, assessed against Redmond Gray, deceased, to James B. Wheatley for $47. On August 7, 1942, Daisy Gray Stewart, of Philadelphia, having an interest as heir at law in the property, filed a petition in the Circuit Court for Baltimore County alleging that she had tendered *Page 457 $90.64 to the purchaser in payment of the purchase price and interest thereon in order to redeem the lot, and praying that the purchaser be ordered to accept that amount. The purchaser testified that he had spent $449.85 for repairs necessary to make the house rentable. The chancellor held that the petitioner was not entitled to redeem the property unless she tendered the additional sum of $203.85, constituting the value of the improvements less the rent collected. From a decree dismissing the petition, the heir brings this appeal.
The power of a tax collector to sell property for nonpayment of taxes is a special statutory power exercised in an ex parte
proceeding, which divests the owner of his property without his consent, and possibly without his actual knowledge. Steuart v.Meyer,
In some jurisdictions the original procedure is followed whereby a deed is delivered to the purchaser directly after the tax sale and accordingly title passes forthwith, subject to defeasance in case the owner exercises his right of redemption; but if the owner fails to redeem within the time allowed, then the purchaser's title becomes absolute by operation of the statute without any further proceeding to establish it. Under the local law of Baltimore County, however, a purchaser of land at a tax sale acquires only a lien which ripens into a title through the process of foreclosure by judicial proceedings, and he is unable to obtain a deed for the land until after the expiration of the period of redemption and all requirements of the law have been complied with. In a number of States, the Legislature has enacted the Occupying Claimant's Act, under which a purchaser at a valid tax sale may take possession of the property and make improvements thereon during the *Page 459
period of redemption, and if he holds a certificate of sale acknowledged by the County Treasurer, which may be recorded as an instrument of title, he can demand from the redemptioner not only the amount paid for the property with interest, but also the value of the improvements. While it is conceded that such a title is not complete enough to constitute the holder of the certificate an owner, nevertheless his possession is rightful to the extent that he cannot be evicted until he is reimbursed for his improvements. This Act was regarded as salutary by the Supreme Court of Kansas, not only because it prevented injustice to the purchasers at tax sales, but also because of the wise public policy of encouraging improvement of real estate, and thereby increasing the public revenues and promoting the general welfare of the State. Ross v. Kelson,
The basic rule was laid down by Chief Justice Marshall inThatcher v. Powell, 6 Wheat. 119, 127, 5 L.Ed. *Page 460
221, 223, that in summary proceedings, where the court exercises an extraordinary power under a special statute prescribing its course, that course ought to be exactly observed. The power to sell land for non-payment of taxes being strictissimi juris,
statutory requirements for such sales should be strictly complied with in every particular. Charland v. Trustees of Home for AgedWomen,
There is no evidence in the record to show that appellant committed any act of fraud which misled the purchaser to his prejudice. Furthermore, no constructive fraud can be imputed to her. One of the accepted rules of equity, as expressed by Justice Story in illustrating the doctrine of constructive fraud, is that if a man, supposing he has an absolute title to an estate, builds upon *Page 461
the land with the knowledge of the real owner, who stands by and suffers the work to proceed without giving any notice of his own claim, he will not be permitted to avail himself of such improvements without paying full compensation therefor; for, in conscience, he was bound to disclose the defect of title to the builder. 1 Story, Equity Jurisprudence, 12th Ed., Sec. 388. Hence, where one in possession of land under color of title is defeated of his possession by the real owner, the court should award compensation for improvements to the extent of the permanent increase of value, less the reasonable amount of the rents and profits from the premises without the improvements.Gibson v. Fields,
For these reasons we must reverse the decree of the chancellor, and remand the case to enable appellant to redeem the lot in question by paying the purchase price of $47, with interest at 10 per cent., and costs of recording the deed from the Treasurer, as required by law.
Decree reversed, and case remanded for the passage of a decreeauthorizing redemption in conformity with this opinion, withcosts. *Page 463