Court Opinion

ID: 3275794
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:44:31.142569+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:59:24.058488
License: Public Domain

The net result of the majority opinion is that for a consideration of $58.66 the wife of the attorney for the improvement district has acquired property which the undisputed testimony shows has — even now — notwithstanding the depression, a market value of not less than $6,000 cash. No witness placed the cash market value at a smaller figure, and some *Page 230 
placed it much higher. The Bankers' Mortgage Company made a cash loan of $5,000, and the appellants, who are the trustees of the Missouri Congregational Conference, thought the property safe security for a loan of that amount, and upon that assumption took an assignment of the mortgage as an investment for $5,000 of the fund held in trust for the support of indigent preachers of that denomination. This result has been reached because, forsooth, the commissioners of the improvement district had the power to sell the property for the price paid.
The sale was for less than one per cent. of the value of the property, and was made to the wife of the attorney for the district.
W. H. Stovall, who is a member of the board of commissioners of the improvement district and the secretary thereof, testified that it was the custom of the board to make deeds to the original owners, in consideration of the taxes, penalty, interest and costs for which property had been sold to the improvement district, and that such deeds were executed to effect redemptions, and that he executed the deed here sought to be canceled upon its presentation to him for that purpose without, knowing who the grantee was and upon the assumption that a redemption was being effected by the owner. This result was accomplished because of the confidential relation existing between the secretary of the board of commissioners and its attorney, and the secretary testified that he would not have executed the deed for the consideration received had he known that the deed was being executed to a stranger to the title.
Because such transactions might occur, either inadvertently or through design, public policy should prevent their occurrence.
It may be conceded — and I make the concession — that payment of the taxes, penalty, interest and costs for which the land sold to the district, or even a smaller sum if a larger amount could not be obtained, is a consideration sufficient in law to support a deed conveying such property. On the other hand, it is certain *Page 231 
that a much larger amount could have been obtained, had any effort in that behalf been made, and, in my opinion, the good faith which should exist between attorney and client required that such effort be made before the attorney for the improvement district should be permitted to acquire title to valuable property for less than one per cent. of its value, even though the title was taken in the name of the attorney's wife, if, indeed, such a conveyance could be made at all.
The case of Arkansas-Louisiana Highway Imp. Dist. v. Pickens,169 Ark. 603, 276 S.W. 355, from which the majority quote as holding that the district had the power and authority to sell the land for the amount of taxes, etc., for which it had been sold to the district, states the duty of commissioners acting for the public in such matters. The facts in that case were that, through the failure of certain landowners in an improvement district to pay their annual assessments of benefits, the district had made default in the payment of its maturing obligations, and it became necessary to levy an increased per cent. of the betterments assessed against all the property, including that of lands owned by persons who were not in default. The owners who had paid their assessments complained that, had other owners paid theirs, no increase would have been required in the assessments; and it was complained also that is was unfair to increase the burdens of persons who had paid their assessments because of the delinquency of others who had made default in that respect. This objection was answered in a statement declaring the duty of the commissioners of the district. This statement, from which the majority have quoted only a single sentence, reads as follows:
"When the lands are bought in by the commissioners at the foreclosure sales, they become the property of the district, to be used for the purpose of raising revenues to pay the bonds. The lands do not belong to the bondholders, and the district is not entitled to take credit, as contended by counsel for appellees, to any extent until revenues are raised by the sale thereof. *Page 232 
The lands thus purchased become the absolute property of the district, and express authority is conferred by the statute to sell the lands at prices fixed by the commissioners. The theory is, and the practice should be, in order to comply with the spirit of the scheme, for the commissioners in selling the land to secure a sufficient price at least to cover the expenses and all of the delinquent assessments up to the time of the resale, so that the lands will bear their full share of the burden of the expense of the improvement. Nor is there any dislocation or destruction of the scheme of uniformity by reason of the purchase by the district of delinquent lands. By the purchase of lands at foreclosure sale, when the sales are confirmed, the district becomes the absolute owner of the lands, which renders, not only the estimated benefits, but the total value of the lands subject to sale to raise revenues. It would be a contradiction in terms to say that the foreclosed lands escape their just proportion of the burden by becoming the property of the district, when, as a matter of fact, by this change in the title the lands become wholly subject to these burdens.
"The requirement of uniformity is fully met in the assessment of benefits and the methods of enforcing the same, and the fact that some of the lands, by delinquency of the owners, may become the property of the district under foreclosure proceedings does not, as we have already seen, disturb the uniformity of the scheme. If it were otherwise, it would be impossible to comply with the requirement of uniformity, for foreclosure of the tax lien and purchase by the district in the absence of other purchasers is the only method whereby the burden of taxation can be successfully enforced."
It appears to me to be apparent that the requirement of uniformity is not only not met but is wholly destroyed if a district having acquired title to delinquent property, as the district here did, may sell a choice piece thereof to the wife of the attorney of the district whose duty it is to protect the public interest. *Page 233 
A similar question arose in the case of Chicago Mill Lbr. Co. v. Drainage Dist. No. 17, 172 Ark. 1064,291 S.W. 810, where the duty of the commissioners of an improvement district as declared in the Pickens case, supra, was reaffirmed. To make that duty plainer and so certain that no doubt about it could exist, it was said, after reaffirming the Pickens case: "It was pointed out in those cases that the lien of the district continued until the taxes were paid or until the lands themselves were acquired by the district through sales for the nonpayment of the taxes, and that, when the delinquent taxes were paid, they became available and should be used in paying the obligations of the district, and further, that, if the lands were sold to the district and not redeemed, then the entire value of the lands to be realized by a sale thereof would be available for this purpose. So that, while a delay would be entailed in obtaining and applying revenues from the delinquent lands, these revenues would finally be obtained and applied, and thus no unequal burden would be imposed."
There is no question about the power of the commissioners to sell delinquent property which has forfeited to it because of the delinquency. But the power to sell is not limited to a sale merely for the taxes, etc., for which the land sold. On the contrary, the power exists, and the duty is by law imposed, if the property must be sold by the district, to realize its revenues and to place the property back on the tax books, to sell it as advantageously as possible.
The benign policy which the secretary of the district testified he thought he was following, when he signed the deed here attached, of executing deeds to original owners as a method of perfecting redemption, is one thing. The policy of permitting a stranger to the title, whose husband occupies the most confidential of all relations, to take advantage of information acquired in the course of that relation to purchase property acquired by the district through the professional services of its attorney is a wholly different proposition. *Page 234 
It must be remembered that this question is not raised by one who has no interest in the subject-matter. The trustees of a fund from which a loan of $5,000 was made upon the security of the land sold, have made themselves parties to this proceeding to protect their security evidenced by the mortgage which they own by the assignment thereof to them. The majority opinion furnishes full authority for this intervention on their part. In arguing that the improvement district itself had the right, as an interested party, to question the forfeiture to the State for the nonpayment of the general taxes, the majority say: "The position of an improvement district is analogous to that of a mortgagee of real property. It is uniformly held that a mortgagee of real property may do any act or perform any duty in reference to the protection of title or redemption from sales that can be done or performed by the owner. For this rule to have full application, it is not necessary that the debt secured by the mortgage be due, or any part thereof, because the status of the parties is established by the execution and delivery of the mortgage."
However, an owner of property within the district has intervened in that capacity to protect the interest of the district. It cannot therefore be said that the question of the validity of the deed here attacked has not been raised by one having the right to question its validity. If it be said that the property owner does not propose to pay the improvement district its due, it may be answered that the assignees of the mortgage debt make that offer, and their entire good faith is shown not only by their tender but by their prosecution of expensive litigation to be accorded that right.
In my opinion, this deed should be set aside as violative of public policy and positive law, and the right of redemption should be accorded as prayed. The case of Cabell v. Board of Improvement, 124 Ark. 278,187 S.W. 666, appears to me to require that action.
I am authorized to say that Justices MEHAFFY and McHANEY concur in the views here expressed. *Page 235