Corporation of Georgetown v. Smith

10 F. Cas. 236, 4 D.C. 91, 4 Cranch 91
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia
DecidedMay 15, 1830
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 10 F. Cas. 236 (Corporation of Georgetown v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corporation of Georgetown v. Smith, 10 F. Cas. 236, 4 D.C. 91, 4 Cranch 91 (circtddc 1830).

Opinion

Cranch, C. J.

delivered the following opinion:

Mr. John Threlkeld being indebted to the Corporation of Georgetown for taxes due on real estate in that town for the years 1816, 1817, 1818, and 1819, gave his promissory notes for the amount thereof, to the corporation, at six, twelve, and eighteen months from the 15th of September, 1822, in the following form :

“Georgetoion, September 16, 1822.
“I assent to the provisions of the ordinance providing for the' settlement of all arrears of takes due prior to the year 1820, passed the 15th day bf June, 1822; and, six months after date hereof, I promise tp pay to the mayor, recorder, aldermen, and common council of the Corporation of Georgetown, or their order, one hundred and fifty-two dollars and thirty-one cents, with legal interest thereon from this date, being one third of the amount of taxes due by me on real and personal property for the years 1816, 1817, 1818, and 1819. John Threlkeld.”

Two similar notes were given for the like amount, payable in twelve and eighteen months.

By the ordinance of the 15th of June, 1822, the late collector is “ authorized to receive from any persons, in arrears for taxes due the corporation, to the year 1820, the amount of such arrears in promissory notes, payable in six, twelve, and eighteen months, bearing interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, which are hereby understood and declared to be secured by the property which is now bound for the payment of the taxes.”

The collector is also required to pay over to the clerk of the corporation, monthly, all such notes as may be by him reeeivéd for the taxes aforesaid, in lieu of money. And it is further ordained that where persons do not avail themselves of the indulgence, thereby allowed, by passing their notes to the collector within three months from the date of the ordinance, he be directed [92]*92to collect the taxes due, by sale of the property, first giving the usual notice.

Mr. Threlkeld remained owner in fee of the property till the year 1828, when it was sold under an execution against him at the suit of Clement Smith, the defendant in this cause, who became the purchaser thereof, and received a deed from the marshal.

, The notes given by Mr. Threlkeld remain unpaid. In 1824, (May 26th,) the charter of Georgetown was amended by the “Act supplementary to the act to incorporate the inhabitants of the city of Washington,- passed the 15th of May, 1820, and for other purposes ; ” [4 Stat. at Large, 75;] the seventh section of which provides for the notice, to be given, of the sales of real property in Georgetown, chargeable with taxes. The eighth section authorizes the sale of the real property where the owner or tenant has not sufficient personal estate out of which to enforce the collection of the debt due; and where he has personal property, it may be distrained and sold , to pay the taxes. The tenth section provides, that where any person without notice of the outstanding taxes, has made a bond fide purchase from the legal owner .of any real estate, previous to the 15th of May, 1824, the said real estate so acquired, shall not be liable for taxes due and owing previous to said purchase.”

The liability of Mr. Smith to pay the taxes charged, is admitted, but he denies his liability for the interest; and this question ■is submitted.

It is contended on the part of Mr. Smith, that the*property i.s not liable for interest on the taxes, unless it is made so by the agreement of Mr. Threlkeld and the ordinance of June 15,1822; that such an agreement could only have created an equitable lien, which could only have been 'enforced against the property in the hands of Mr. Threlkeld, or in the hands of a purchaser with notice; that it cannot be enforced in- the hands of Mr. Smith, because he is a bond fide purchaser of the legal estate, for a valuable consideration, without notice of such equitable lien.

On the part of the corporation it was contended, that Mr. Smith is a purchaser with notice and therefore bound to pay the interest; that the taxes were a legal incumbrance on the property, and that he was bound to take notice of them at his peril; that in order to ascertain the amount of the taxes, he must necessarily apply, for information, to the clerk of the corporation who keeps the tax-books, and the notes given for taxes, and who would have informed- him of the notes given by Mr. Threlkeld, and of his agreement to the terms of the ordinance of the 15th of June, 1822, which declares that the notes were to be secured by the property then bound for the payment of the taxes; that it was, [93]*93therefore, immaterial whether or not Mr. Smith had actual notice of the notes and agreement; for he was bound to take notice of that which would have led him to a knowledge of them; and, therefore, cannot protect himself under the plea that he was a purchaser without notice. It is also contended, that Mr. Smith, being a purchaser at the marshal’s sale under a judgment and execution, acquired only the right of Mr. Threlkeld, whose right . was subject to the lien for the payment of the notes; that although he took the legal estate, he took it subject to all the liens, equitable as well as legal, charged upon it by Mr. Threlkeld. And in support of this position, the case of Hampson v. Edelin, 2 Harr. & Johns. 66, was cited, where the Court of Appeals of Maryland, upon a bill in equity filed by the vendee, affirmed the decree of the chancellor for a perpetual injunction, prohibiting a creditor of the vendor and the sheriff from selling the estate under a ft. fa. issued upon a judgment obtained against the vendor, after the sale and payment of part of the purchase-money, and after possession given to the vendee, but before the payment of the balance, which, however, was paid by the vendee, and a deed of conveyance from the vendor to the vendee, Avas duly executed and delivered, before the issuing of the fieri facias. In that case, the Court of Appeals of Maryland did not go upon the ground of notice, but upon the ground that the' creditor did not, by the judgment, acquire a legal estate in the land ; and that a judgment obtained by a third person against the vendor, between the contract and the payment of the money, cannot defeat or impair the equitable interest acquired by the vendee, Avho, from the time of the contract, is a cestui que trust. Therefore it is contended that, either on the ground that Mr. Smith is a purchaser with notice of the equitable lien of the corporation, or on the ground that a judgment at law will not overreach a prior equity of a third person, bond fide acquired, for a valuable consideration, the corporation has a prior equitable lien tvhich a court of equity will protect and enforce.

It seems to me that the right of the corporation is strong upon both grounds.

Mr. Smith, Avhether he actually resided within the totvn or not, \vas bound to notice all the ordinances of the corporation affecting his real estate within the totvn. He was bound to know that the property was liable for taxes not paid. Upon the purchase of the real estate in question, he was, at his peril, to ascertain what taxes were due upon it. Upon inquiry at the proper office for that information, he Avould be informed that Mr. Threlkeld had accepted the terms offered by the ordinance of June 15, 1822, (of which also he was bound to take notice,) that he had givers, his notes [94]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 F. Cas. 236, 4 D.C. 91, 4 Cranch 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corporation-of-georgetown-v-smith-circtddc-1830.