Calvary Baptist Church v. Saxton

242 P. 616, 117 Or. 125
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 242 P. 616 (Calvary Baptist Church v. Saxton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Calvary Baptist Church v. Saxton, 242 P. 616, 117 Or. 125 (Or. 1926).

Opinion

*127 BEAN, J.

On February 26, 1900, defendant Edna L. Baxter, by a judgment of the Circuit Court for Baker County in the case of Edna L. Baxter v. Julia ' E. Sherman, was awarded possession of the east one third of the two lots which judgment was entered upon stipulation and was intended to be an assignment of dower. Mrs. Baxter took possession of the property in April, 1900, and at first constructed a small dwelling of two rooms and in later years, after purchasing it at a sale for taxes for the year 1899, erected a substantial residence of the value of about $3,000; made street improvements and constructed a sidewalk and sewer in connection with the property at a value of about $300.

The certificate of tax sale, obtained by defendant, was dated February 26, 1903, for the taxes regularly assessed on the east one third of the lots for the year 1899. The certificate was duly recorded May 28, 1903. The property was assessed to Mrs. Julia E. Sherman who then held the legal title and was in possession of the same.

After the time for redemption from the tax sale had expired and on December 26, 1906, a sheriff’s tax deed was regularly issued to the defendant for the property, and was duly recorded on that date.

On November 27, 1899, Julia E. Sherman and her husband conveyed the two lots to Hardin W. Estes. On April 20,1901, Estes conveyed the west half of the lots to the predecessor of the plaintiff. On October 30, 1905, Estes executed another deed conveying to the church the remainder of the west two thirds of the two lots. On June 9, 1906, Estes executed to the church a deed of the east one third of the lots 4 and 5, subject to the dower of defendant. The first two deeds executed by Estes to the church contained a *128 reservation clause to the effect that if the property, that is, the west two thirds of the two lots, was not used as a “landmark” Missionary Baptist Church, the property should revert to the grantor. On October 10,1907, Estes executed to the church a deed embracing the whole of the two lots and revoking the reversionary clause contained in the two former deeds which conveyed only the west two thirds of those lots. The several deeds mentioned were duly recorded about the time of their execution. The name of the church has been regularly changed and on February 26, 1917, deeds of the property were regularly executed to the plaintiff, the Calvary Baptist Church of Baker, Oregon.

The defendant Edna L. Baxter contends that after her purchase was consummated and the certificate of tax sale placed on the deed records in 1903, the same served notice to all subsequent grantees and to Mr. Hardin W. Estes, grantee, during the three years prior to the time that he executed his deed to the east one third of the lots to the church; and that defendant on various occasions informed the trustees and other members of the church that she had the deed and claimed the property in fee simple as her own since the certificate of sale was recorded. Her claim is that her possession became adverse under a claim and color of title in fee simple from and after the year 1903; that the grantee of the property had notice by the records and by direct information and from her conduct with reference to the property; that she so claimed it, and therefore the suit is barred by the statute of limitations.

The testimony shows that after the certificate of sale was recorded, defendant constructed the main *129 portions of the permanent improvements upon this parcel of land. Defendant asserts in her testimony that she constantly claimed and asserted absolute ownership of the property, which she occupied, improved and inclosed; that she made these claims openly and told the trustees and members of the church that she claimed the property as absolute owner. Among other things she stated: “I have even told the trustees that I had a tax title there to it,” and at page 13 of the testimony, she stated:

.“I told them I had completed my title, I held a tax title, a tax title deed and I explained how it was and there were others, there were several of them, lots of them, and this outfit in there came and consulted lawyers about it.”

This statement appears to have been made when some of the trustees and people of the church approached Mrs. Baxter for the purpose of purchasing her interest in the one third of the lots and told her that she only had a life estate.

The plaintiff contends, and the Circuit Court ruled that when defendant paid the taxes assessed for the year 1899, she was paying an obligation of her own, which she was required to pay; that the delinquency certificate of tax sale and the sheriff deed executed thereafter, gave her no greater right or interest in the property by adopting this plan of paying “her obligation” than by paying the tax in the regular manner prior to their becoming delinquent and placing her ordinary tax receipt of record.

Under the statute of 1854, in force in 1899, when the tax in question was levied the time for levying the tax was fixed at the September term of the county court: Hill’s Ann. Laws of Oregon, Section 2783. Section 2846 of Hill’s Ann. Laws, like Section 4313, Or. L. *130 (Olson), provides that, between grantor and grantee of any land, in the absence of express agreement as to who shall pay the taxes that may be assessed thereon before the conveyance, if such land is conveyed, at the time or prior to the date of warrant, authorizing the collection of such taxes, then the grantee shall pay the same, but if conveyed after that date, the grantor shall pay them. The tax warrant authorizing the collection of the tax mentioned for the year 1899 was dated March 10, 1900.

It is contended by counsel for defendant that when the taxes mentioned were assessed, the statute then made the tax a personal obligation of the person against whom the taxes were charged on the tax-roll, so that when the warrant for collection was assessed the tax-roll and the warrant were in the nature of a judgment against the person charged with the tax on the tax-roll, that it was deemed, in effect, a proceeding’ in personam, ag’ainst the person charged. Citing: McNary v. Wrightman, 32 Or. 578-580 (52 Pac. 510); Middleman v. Moore, 43 Or. 359-361 (73 Pac. 16).

Defendant asserts that the tax mentioned was the personal debt of Julia E. Sherman, who was then the owner of the real estate, or Mr. Estes, to whom she conveyed it in the latter part of the year; that the widow’s dower is a legal right created by law and is in no manner the outgrowth of any contractual relationship as between grantor and grantee and, therefore, taxes levied after the husband’s death, and before assignment of dower are not chargeable to the widow and are, therefore, not a debt or obligation on her part.

Turning now to books, we find that the widow in possession of her dower is liable for the taxes *131 assessed thereon after the final judgment assigning the dower: 19 C. J. 596, § 419. It is further stated in that section that:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 616, 117 Or. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calvary-baptist-church-v-saxton-or-1926.