Court Opinion

ID: 6902046
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 21:55:53.552901+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:06:12.349085
License: Public Domain

Opinion by
Mr. Chief Justice Eakin.
1. Daly acquired title to the premises as a homestead, the final receipt being dated April 22,1896, and the patent having been issued June 26, 1896. Plaintiff has not appealed. Therefore the only questions to be determined are whether plaintiff has a lien upon the premises for the value of the improvements, and, if so, how much are they enhanced by such improvements. C. L. Parker, plaintiff’s father, on October 25, 1898, purchased the property for taxes levied for the years 1890 and 1891, for the sum of $34.25, the amount of such taxes, costs, and penalties. Plaintiff took an assignment of the certificate of sale from his father, paying him the same consideration therefor. He entered into possession thereof about the date of the sale. The time for redemption under the sale expired on October 25, 1900. On February 26, 1901, he received a tax deed from the sheriff therefor, and during the time of his possession made extensive improvements thereon.
First, it is necessary to determine under what circumstances the purchaser in possession of real estate is entitled to recover the value of his improvements when ousted from possession by the owner. In Hatcher v. Briggs, 6 Or. 31, in which a similar question was involved, it is held that where a purchaser for a valuable consideration, without notice of any infirmity in his title, has by his improvements added to the permanent value of the estate, he is entitled to a full remuneration for such added value, which the owner is bound to discharge before he can be restored to his original rights in the property. In the opinion in that case Mr. Justice McArthur follows the views expressed by Mr. Justice Story in Bright v. Boyd, 2 Story ( C. C.) 607, Fed. Cas. *567No. 1,876. In the first opinion in the latter case (1 Story 492, Fed. Cas. No. 1,875) he says that the fact that the defendant has stood by and allowed the improvements to be made without giving any notice to the plaintiff of any defects in his title of itself constitutes ground of relief “and the duty of compensation in such cases, at least, to the extent of permanent increase of value, is founded upon the constructive fraud, or gross negligence, or delusive confidence held out by the owner.” The same principle is followed by Mr. Chief Justice Bean in Kieffer v. Victor Land Co., 53 Or. 174, 177 (90 Pac. 582; 98 Pac. 877). Blackwell begins his discussion of this question (2 Blackwell, Tax Titles, § 1009) by giving a summary of the subject, in which he states that, if the purchaser has acted in good faith in regard to his title and the making of the improvements, he should be allowed to put the value of such improvements against any claim for rents or profits; and if, with improvements untainted by bad faith, there coexists- negligence or bad conduct on the part of the owner, in relation to the tax entering into the cause of the sale, the purchaser should in justice recover the value of the improvements. But where the owner has paid the taxes, or where the estate is sold for taxes-that the owner was under no obligation to pay, and that he never is actually notified of the mishap to his land until the tax has ripened and the improvements are made, it is manifestly unjust to compel him to pay for the improvement. He is in no fault; that at common law the improvements could only be recouped against the rents and profits; that whatever may be the rule at common law, equity follows to a great extent the principles of the civil law, and will permit a recovery, even after eviction, for the amount that his improvements have added to the value of the estate; that equity will not allow the owner of the par amount title to stand by and let a bona fide holder make improvements and then refuse to *568reimburse him. At Section 1012 he says that “where one, believing that he has title to a parcel of land, enters and erects a building upon it, and the owner stands by and permits him to go on with his improvements without giving him any notice of the adverse title, equity will decree to the occupant compensation.” To the same effect is 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 388. Thus it would appear that a purchaser’s right in equity to compensation for his improvements depends upon the owner’s knowledge, or his duty to know, of the tax and the proceeding against his property and acquiescence therein. So, also, in 2 Story, Eq. Jur. §§ 1237-1241, and notes, the equitable remedy is based upon the principle of fraud. To the same effect are Sections 799a and 7996, where he cites Putnam v. Ritchie, 6 Paige (N. Y.) 390, to the effect that equity will not give affirmative relief where there has been neither fraud nor acquiescence on the part of the owner; and note to Section 1241, Pomeroy’s Eq. Jur., where it is said that to claim relief in equity “either the aid of a court of equity must be requisite on behalf of the owner against whom the claim for reimbursement is made, so that he can be compelled to do equity or else there must be some element of fraud in the transaction as ground of equitable interference.” In Keenan v. Portland, 27 Or. 545 (38 Pac. 2), Mr. Justice Moore says that, in the absence of fraud, the rule of caveat emptor applies to purchasers at tax sales; that it is the duty of the purchaser at such sale to examine the proceedings authorizing the sale, and if he purchases thereat, he does so on his own judgment. In a note to Pitt v. Moore (1888) 99 N. C. 85 (5 S. E. 389: 6 Am. St. Rep. p. 495), there is a very brief review of the cases upon this question, and in referring to the opinion of Judge Story in Bright v. Boyd, 2 Story (C. C.) 607, Fed. Cas. No. 1,876, the author mentions several cases in which it has been followed, but says:
*569“Nor will a court of equity give to an occupant compensation for improvements, unless there are circumstances attending his possession which affect the conscience of the owner, and impose an obligation upon him to pay for them or allow for their value against a demand for the use of the property.”
To the same effect is the note to Barrett v. Stradl, 9 Am. St. Rep. 805. In many of the states this remedy for improvements in such cases is covered by what is known as the “Betterment Act,” and the rule of the common law that betterments can only be recouped against the use and occupation of the land has been greatly extended. While in Oregon we have no such statute except in recognition of the common-law rule, yet the equitable remedy is available either where the owner has been compelled to resort to equity for relief or where the purchaser has been ousted at law; and where the purchaser, for a valuable consideration, without notice of any infirmity of his title, has made improvements, he may place the amount that such improvements have added to the value of the premises against any claim for rents and profits, and, if there was any negligence or bad faith on the part of the owner in relation to the tax or the making of the improvements, the purchaser may recover the value thereof in excess of the rents and profits.
In the case we are now considering, there is no pretense that the property was liable for the tax. Daly had no taxable interest in the premises at the time of the levy, and therefore he was not negligent in not having it assessed or in failing to pay a tax upon it. He left the county about the time he acquired the title to the land, and it is not shown that he had any notice of the pretended tax or of the proceeding for the sale of the property for a delinquent tax, and was guilty of no negligence or fraud in relation thereto. The foundation of *570plaintiffs pretended right is an alleged tax upon property not liable to taxation and in regard to which defendant owed no duty, and therefore this case does not come within the rule announced in Hatcher v. Briggs, where the title was acquired at a sale in a partition suit and the plaintiff received full value for the property; or in Bright v. Boyd, where the property was sold at an administrator’s sale for full value, for the purpose of paying the debts of the estate; or in Kieffer v. Victor Land Co., where the sale was under a void assessment for a street improvement tax, but for which the property was liable.
Decided May 16, 1911.
[115 Pac. 723.]
The decree of the lower court will be reversed, and the suit dismissed. Reversed : Suit Dismissed.
Mr. Justice McBride took no part in this decision.