105 P. 252 | Or. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. Plaintiff offered, in evidence, 'Stringham’s note, indorsed in blank by McCusker, as administrator of the estate of Charles E. Bennett, deceased, accompanied by a written assignment of the mortgage. Objection was made to the admission of the latter, upon the general ground that it was not competent. It is now urged more specifically: (1) That the instrument offered as proof of an assignment showed upon its face an apparent erasure of the name of another and different assignee, and the substitution of plaintiff’s name therefor, and that, before the instrument could be received in evidence,> plaintiff was bound to offer some explanation as to when, by whom and under what circumstances the alteration was made, and, as he failed to do that, it is not admissible; and (2) that proof of its execution should be made by the subscribing witnesses, which was not done. Even if these objections were well and timely taken by defendant, still plaintiff has in evidence the note, duly indorsed by the personal representative of the payee thereof, and under the case of Barringer v. Loder, 47 Or. 223 (81 Pac. 778), that is sufficient to carry with it the ownership of the mortgage given to secure its payment.
2. Defendant offered in evidence, a tax deed from the sheriff of Marion County to her grantor, P. H. Marlay, executed on December 6,1898, and recorded on March 25, 1899. It was objected to by the plaintiff as incompetent, because it showed upon its face: (1) That the assessment upon which it was based was void; and (2) that the
3. The first objection arises from a recital in the deed that “the said real property was duly assessed for the fiscal year 1894 to the said E. R. Tyrrel, and to all owners and claimants, known and unknown.” In the case of Lewis v. Blackburn, 42 Or. 114 (69 Pac. 1024), concerning an assessment of land made to “unknown owner, and to all-owners and claimants, known and unknown,” it was held that an assessment cannot legally be made in the alternative, either to owners known or unknown, but that it must be made definitely to one or the other, and, unless so made is void. The only difference between the facts of that case and the one now presented is that here the name “E. R. Tyrrel” is inserted as owner and joined to and accompanied by an uncertain description as to ownership. It is admitted that the person named was then the owner, and it is claimed by counsel for defendant that the difference is vital and sufficient to save the case from the ruling in Lewis v. Blackburn. It appears, however, that the cases from the state of California, on which the decision in that case was based, are identical in facts with the case now presented. In Grotefend v. Ultz, 53 Cal. 666, the assessment was to “D. B. Matlock and to all owners and claimants known and unknown,” and it was declared void. This was the leading case, and was followed in Grimm v. O’Connell, 54 Cal. 522, where the facts were the same.
4. The second objection made by plaintiff arises from the recital in the deed that the sale was made “to pay the
5. Taxes are not “debts” within the legal meaning of that term. Whitaker v. Haley, 2 Or. 128, 140. “They are not founded upon contracts, either expressed or implied. Hence the incident of interest is not one which will attach to them, although they become payable on a day certain, either by the common law or by statutes allowing interest upon debts. Nothing but an express declaration of law that taxes shall bear interest will authorize the charging of interest upon them. It follows that if interest is included in the amount for which land is sold at tax sale, when no statute specifically authorizes it, the sale will be void.” Black, Tax Titles (2 ed.) § 236. And when a greater rate is exacted than that allowed by law the sale is held void. Gage v. Williams, 119 Ill. 563 (9 N. E. 193) ; Lufkin v. Galveston, 73 Tex. 340 (11 S. W. 340) ; Rellstab v. Belmar, 58 N. J. Law, 489 (34 Atl. 885.) The deed in question was void, and through it defendant Charlotte Eoss could acquire no title to the premises.
6. She also avers in her answer, in effect: That, at the time she took from P. H. Marley a conveyance of his tax title, she also procured to be transferred to her a note (executed on March 30, 1892, by E. E. Tyrrel, who was then the owner of the real premises described in the .complaint) for the principal sum of $178.16, together with a mortgage, given to seure the same, upon 160 acres of land, which included the 80 acres described in plaintiff’s mortgage and in the tax deed; that she became the owner of the mortgage and the lien created by the same; that she did not take a formal assignment of the mortgage, but, believing herself to be the absolute owner of the land
7. The question then presented is whether, under all the circumstances of the case, the defendant is still entitled, in equity, to be substituted in the place of the mortgagee, as the owner of the mortgage. Did she, by the fact of payment, become the equitable assignee of the security, and entitled to enforce it for her own reimbursement and the protection of her supposed interest in the land? She was not personally liable to pay the debt, and a mere volunteer is not entitled to the aid of a court of equity; but the equitable doctrine of subrogation is frequently applied in favor of a vendee, who, although not personally liable, has paid the debt of another, which is a charge upon the land, and which, if not paid, might cause him to lose his interest therein. “Under such circumstances,” says Mr. Justice Vann, in Arnold v.
8. The contest here is between a prior mortgage, recorded April 6, 1892, which was satisfied of record July 2, 1901, and a second mortgage, recorded December 23, 1895, which was assigned to the plaintiff after the satisfaction of the first had been recorded. The fact that the intervening lien was of record does not preclude the defendant from alleging and proving that she was in fact ignorant of its existence when she caused the first mortgage to be released: Pearce v. Buell, 22 Or. 29, 35 (29 Pac. 78); Kern v. Hotaling, 27 Or. 205, 213 (40 Pac. 168: 50 Am. St. Rep. 710) ; Capital Lumbering Co. v. Ryan, 34 Or. 73 (54 Pac. 1093.)
9. The recorded certificate of release does not disclose by whom payment was made, ■ but merely acknowledges payment and discharge, and it is not alleged, or attempted to.be shown, by the defendant, that plaintiff had any other notice or knowledge than that disclosed by the record, as to who, in fact, did make payment thereof. Where the record shows a prior mortgage has been satisfied, without showing by whom payment was made, a purchaser, having no other notice than the record, may assume that payment was made by the party owing the primary duty to pay. Ahern v. Freeman, 46 Minn. 156 (48 N. W. 677: 24 Am. St. Rep. 206.) This would result from the presumption that the ordinary course ,of busi
10. The fact that it appears of record that, had some other person made payment, he would have been entitled to subrogation, does not put the purchaser upon inquiry to ascertain if such person did not make it. 1 Jones, Mortgages (6 ed.) § 877a.
11. The plaintiff having purchased his mortgage on the faith of a record showing the discharge of the first mortgage and no prior incumbrances, and having no notice of the defendant’s payment of the first mortgage, he stands in the position of a bona fide purchaser, whose rights cannot be postponed to aid the defendant, by whose carelessness a record was made, calculated to deceive and injure plaintiff: 1 Jones, Mortgages (6 ed.) § 877a.
Therefore the decree of the lower court will be reversed and one entered here declaring the plaintiff’s mortgage to be a first lien upon the premises described therein for the amount due upon the note secured thereby, viz., the sum of $240, with interest thereon at 10 per cent per annum from December 16, 1895, and foreclosing the same. The note provides for the allowance of a reasonable attorney’s fee, and the sum of $50 is claimed in the complaint. It was stipulated at the trial that no evidence need be offered on that issue, that the matter be submitted to the judgment of the court, and that whatever sum it should find reasonable should be deemed proven. The sum claimed is deemed to be reasonable and is allowed as a part of the judgment. The plaintiff is allowed costs and disbursements in this court and in the court below.
Reversed.