24 A.2d 781 | Md. | 1942
This appeal is from an order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County sustaining a demurrer of the plaintiff *403 to the defendant's answer to the plaintiff's petition for a writ of mandamus which ordered the clerk to issue the writ as prayed.
The plaintiff is the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, a corporation of the United States; the defendant, J. Millard Tawes, Comptroller of the State of Maryland. The plaintiff filed its petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the defendant to refund certain recordation taxes and taxes on conveyances paid by the plaintiff to clerks of courts all over the State, which had in turn been paid by such clerks to the comptroller, amounting to $3,034.80. The plaintiff claimed that it was exempt from these taxes under the Home Owners' Loan Act of Congress of 1933, 12 U.S.C.A., Sec. 1461 et seq.
The petition stated that the amount of taxes which had been paid by the plaintiff on deeds and mortgages amounted to nearly $10,000, all paid under written protest, but necessary to be paid and stamps attached before the deeds and mortgages would be accepted for recordation. That on March 12, 1938, the plaintiff filed a petition in the Baltimore City Court against M. Luther Pittman, Clerk of the Superior Court of Baltimore, to compel him to record a certain mortgage to the plaintiff without payment of the tax of 10 cents for each $100, or fractional part thereof, of the principal debt, and the charge of 50 cents recordation tax for each instrument, as provided for by the Act of 1937 (Sp. S.), Ch. 11, Secs. 220, 221. Code, 1939, Art. 81, Secs. 220, 221. From a decision favorable to the plaintiff, the defendant appealed to this court, and the order of the trial court affirmed. Pittmanv. Home Owners' Loan Corporation,
In the opinion of this court, the demurrer to the corporation's petition should have been sustained.
In its petition the corporation said it had loaned in the State $45,579,033, secured by 15,940 mortgages; and since the closing of its refinancing loans, it had acquired title to more than 3,000 separate parcels of real property, and in the resale it was necessary frequently to take purchase-money mortgages to secure the purchase money, and that when deeds to the purchasers were executed and mortgages taken from them, it was necessary for its protection to have the deed recorded before the mortgage, and the tax on the deeds and the 50-cent recordation fee were demanded before the clerks would accept the deeds for record. It was not disputed, in fact conceded, that when any purchasers paid for such property in full in cash, the deeds were delivered, and the tax on such deeds was no concern of the corporation. So what is the difference whether the purchase money is paid in cash, part cash and part mortgage, or all mortgage? If, in one case, it is the grantee who must pay the tax to get his deed on record, why not the others?
The Pittman Case, supra, did not have the same facts or question presented as here. There the only question *405 was the right of the clerks in this State to require the mortgagee, the Home Owners' Loan Corporation, to pay the two taxes required by the Act of 1937, before the clerks could accept the mortgages for record. Here the question is whether it is a tax imposed on the corporation when, for its own protection, it pays the tax on its deeds to its purchasers, as any other prudent real estate dealer or agent would do, and the Home Owners' Loan Corporation is now a real estate dealer in a large way.
In the Pitman Case, supra, this court followed the decision in Federal Land Bank of New Orleans v. Crosland,
Entertaining this view, it is unnecessary to discuss the question of the application of Section 32, Article 3 of the Constitution of Maryland (Red Star Line v. Baughman,
For the reason that no tax is imposed on the petitioner, appellee, for deeds from it, the order appealed from should be reversed.
Order reversed with costs.