Court Opinion

ID: 7109910
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:25:14.002123+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:42.181471
License: Public Domain

Deemer, J. —
1 In November, 1893, C. G. Culver & Co., a co-partnership of which C. G. Culver was a member, was indebted to the plaintiffs herein in a large amount. To secure this indebtedness, C. G. Culver and wife, Marie, executed a deed absolute in form, but which was intended as security, covering 120 acres of land in Woodbury county, Iowa. At that time Culver owned but an undivided one-eighth of the property, and the deed was intended to cover that interest. The land had been purchased in the year 1890 by a syndicate composed of ten persons, among whom were Culver, Patrick, Patterson, Jackson, and others. The legal title was in J. II. Culver, as trustees for these various parties. The land was sold for the taxes of the year 1890, T. A. Thompson being the purchaser. One C. M. Swan, who had purchased the Patrick interest in the property, made arrangements, in October, 1894, with Thompson, to purchase the tax certificate, but, finding that his interest was mortgaged for more than it was worth, he turned the matter over to one Melvin Smith, who paid him (Swan) the amount he (Swan) had paid Thompson for the certificate, with $10 additional for services in procuring the same. In 1895 a tax deed was issued to Thompson, and on the same day Thompson quitclaimed the land to Smith. Swan saw to the giving of the notices and the procuration of the deed, and received for his services the fee hitherto mentioned. On July 5, 1895, Smith signed a declaration in trust, reciting that he held title for Jackson, Marie Culver, et al.; each and all save Mrs. Culver, who owned the Patrick and Patterson interests, being the original beneficial owners of the land. C. *328G. Culver died in 1895, leaving his widow, and a son, Howard B. Culver, defendant herein, surviving. On January 16, 1896, Smith quitclaimed the land to Howard B. Culver, trustee, who now claims to hold title for the beneficiaries under the Smith declaration of trust. Just prior to the time Smith made his declaration of trust, either Culver or his wife paid him $543, being $50 more than he had paid Swan for an assignment of the tax certificate. To preserve their interests, the other members of the original syndicate, who had not parted with their interests, paid their proportion of the original tax, without interest or penalties. To the foreclosure proceedings Mrs. Culver pleaded the Thompson tax deed as an extinguishment of the mortgage. Plaintiffs replied, claiming that Swan was one of the tenants in common of the property when he purchased the certificate from Thompson, and that his purchase amounted to a redemption from the sale, and that Smith, Swan’s assignee of the certificate, took no title thereunder; that Mrs. Culver, who signed the deed to plaintiffs, which contained the usual covenants of warranty, in which it is claimed she joined, could not take advantage of her husband’s default -in paying the taxes, and acquire a tax deed as against the plaintiffs; and that the tax deed was fraudulently procured, for the purpose of divesting the mortgage lien, and lodging the title of C. G. Culver in his wife, free from the mortgage lien; and that the whole proceeding amounted to nothing more than a redemption from the tax sale. No pleading was filed to this reply, and the cause was tried on the issues thus joined, resulting in a decree foreclosing the mortgage and canceling the tax deed.
As will be observed, the only defense to the mortgage is the title acquired under the tax deed, and the validity of'that instrument is the sole question before us. It appears that C. G. Culver acted for the now beneficial owners of the property in procuring the tax deed from Smith and Thompson, and *329it is claimed that the money was furnished him by the' purchasers in proportion to their respective interests; that this arrangement was made after the issuance of the tax deed;' and that Mrs. Culver paid her proportion of the amount from her own funds. Thompson, who was in no manner connected with the land, had the right to purchase at the tax sale, and take a deed for the premises. Smith also could take an assignment of the certificate and a deed, provided he did so in good faith and for his individual benefit. Swan, however, who had an interest in the property, and was in duty bound to pay the taxes, could not take either an assignment of the certificate or a deed for the property. Lewis v. Ward, 99 Ill. 525; Weare v. Van Meter, 42 Iowa, 128. That Swan was not, strictly speaking, a co-tenant with the other owners, is not material. He was nevertheless under a duty to pay the taxes and by reason of this obligation could not secure a valid tax title. Austin v. Barrett, 44 Iowa, 491; Thomas v. Stickle, 32 Iowa, 71; 2 Desty, Taxation (1st Ed.) page 929, and cases cited. Swan’s purchase of the certificate from Thompson amounted, then, to a redemption, and Smith, his assignee, could acquire no greater rights than Swan possessed. C. G. Culver could not, of course, procure a valid tax title as against the plaintiffs’ mortgage. Goodrich v. Kimberly, 48 Conn. 395; Middletown Sav. Bank v. Bacharach, 46 Conn. 513; Avery v. Judd, 21 Wis. 262; Fuller v. Hodgden, 25 Me. 243. While the deed to plaintiffs contained covenants of warranty in which both Culver and wife joined, still, as it did not expressly state that the wife was to be bound thereby, she would not be liable for any breach thereof. Code, section 2921; Moore v. Graves, 97 Iowa, 4. As she was not bound by the covenants, no doubt she was not prevented, by reason thereof, from acquiring a 'valid tax title. The wife, however, could not acquire a valid tax title as against her husband or his co-tenants. Burns v. Bryne, 45 Iowa, 285. We have seen that Swan in fact made redemption of the property when he paid the money to Thompson, and it is *330doubtful if Mrs. Culver could have obtained a valid tax title. However, as she does not claim to have taken title under the tax deed, but through Smith and Thompson, there is no need of pronouncing on this point, and we do not do so. As Swan’s purchase amounted to a redemption, the tax title to Thompson was invalid, and plaintiffs are entitled to foreclose unless it be for some of the matters to which we will hereafter refer. Moreover, -we are fully convinced, after reading the record, that the whole transaction was a scheme to defraud the plaintiffs, and that what was done simply amounted to a redemption from the sale to Thompson. Tire evidence convinces us that this is nothing more than a redemption of the property from the tax sale by the original beneficial owners and their grantees and assignees. Thompson had received full compensation for the amount invested by him at the tax sale when he took the deed. Immediately on receiving the deed, he (Thompson) quitclaimed to Smith, and Smith soon after filed the declaration of trust hitherto referred to. Smith received the amount paid by him to Swan, with $50 added, which was undoubtedly intended as compensation for his services; and the beneficial owners under the declaration of trust paid simply their proportion of the taxes. Defendant Howard Culver paid nothing for the conveyance to him, and it is manifest, we think, that Smith did not regard himself as a purchaser of the land from Thompson, or a vender of the property either to the cestui que trust or to Howard Culver. This is the only fair conclusion to be drawn from the record.
2 But it is said that plaintiffs failed to show title to the property, and therefore are not permitted to question the tax title under the rule announced in Peterborough Sav. Bank v. Des Moines Sav. Bank, 110 Iowa, 519, and other like cases; and that, having made no offer to reimburse defendants for taxes paid, plaintiffs cannot recover. Neither of these points is raised by the pleadings, nor *331were they relied upon in the trial court. This, in itself, is sufficient to dispose of defendant’s contentions. But as we find that what defendants did simply amounted to a redemption of the property from tax sale, and as the mortgage simply covers Culver’s interest, and as he (Culver) was bound under his mortgage to pay the taxes on that interest, plaintiffs were not obliged to tender anything because of taxes paid. The mortgage is -not on the whole property, but upon the Culver one-eighth interest; and plaintiffs are not required to refund any part of the taxes paid thereon.
As to the first point, it may also be added that the case was tried on the theory that Culver at one time owned an undivided one-eighth interest in the property, and plaintiffs are simply seeking to foreclose their mortgage on that interest. It is not a suit for redemption, but an attack upon a tax deed which is set up as against the mortgage foreclosure, in which it is practically conceded that the mortgagee held title, unless that title was divested by the tax deed. As sustaining our conclusions on this branch of the case, see Adams v. Burdick, 68 Iowa, 666; Lynn v. Morse, 76 Iowa, 665.
The decree is right, and is aeeirmed.