Engel v. Catucci

197 F.2d 597, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 54, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2659
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMay 29, 1952
Docket11120_1
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 197 F.2d 597 (Engel v. Catucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Engel v. Catucci, 197 F.2d 597, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 54, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2659 (D.C. Cir. 1952).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Circuit Judge.

The question presented by this appeal is whether, in this jurisdiction, a tax deed to *598 a lot over which lies an easement, created by deed and appurtenant to another lot, extinguishes the easement.

The facts are simple and not disputed. In 1872 one Milburn owned a parcel of land at the corner of Third and H Streets, Northeast. He subdivided the property, establishing a row of lots fronting on H Street. These lots were numbered 807 to 812, inclusive, consecutively from the corner of Third Street. Along the rear of the lots Milburn created a lot five (5) feet wide extending from Third Street to the far line of Lot 812. He numbered this lot 806. His deed to each of Lots 807 to 812 included a right-of-way over Lot 806 for ingress and egress between Third Street and the rears of the several lots. 1

For many years nobody paid the real estate taxes on the long, narrow Lot 806. Each year after 1889 (except 1909 and 1910) the District of Columbia bid in and purchased this lot for unpaid taxes. Finally, in 1949, our present appellant, Engel, offered to buy the lot for the amount of the accumulated taxes, penalties, interest and charges. His offer was accepted by the District Commissioners, and in due course Engel received a tax deed to the lot.

Meantime Engel had become the owner of Lots 811 and 812 in the row, and our present appellee, Catucci, 'had become the owner of Lots 809 and 810. 2 Having acquired the tax deed to Lot 806, Engel put up on that lot a fence along the rear of Catucci’s lots, thus blocking access to Catuc-ci’s property from the rear and denying him the use of Lot 806. Catucci brought a civil action for an injunction to prohibit Engel from interfering with the use of the easement right. The District Court granted his prayer. Engel appealed.

Engel says that the tax deed to Lot 806 extinguished the easement theretofore upon the lot and that, therefore, he can do as he pleases with the property. Catucci says that a tax deed to a servient estate does not extinguish an easement thereon appurtenant to a dominant estate, especially when the easement is created by deed duly recorded. The District of Columbia government, appearing as amicus curiae, supports Engel’s position.

This is a problem of first impression so far as this court is concerned.

The authorities are divided. Supporting the view of Engel and the District government, that the easement is extinguished, are decisions in Maryland, Florida and Washington. 3 Iowa and Mississippi cases, have held that building restrictions and restrictive covenants, sometimes referred to> as negative easements, are likewise extinguished. 4 Decisions in Massachusetts and Kansas 5 are also cited as sustaining this-view. The Massachusetts case involved a. right to come upon the servient estate to remove gravel, and the Kansas case involved easements in connection with a grant of mineral rights. Neither case is direct authority on the question of an easement-appurtenant to a dominant tenement. We note that in the Kansas case, however, the court, while holding that other easements of the mineral owner in the surface were extinguished, expressly held that the right of ingress and egress survived the tax sale. Engel and the District government also claim that observations in opinions of this court support their view, relying principal *599 ly on W. C. & A. N. Miller Development Co. v. Emig P. Corp., 6 in which this court said, upon authority of a series of cases, that a tax deed “expunges all the interests which spring from the record title and vests in the holder a new and complete title to the property in fee simple.” 7

Supporting Catucci’s view that the easement is not extinguished are decisions of the courts of New York, Ohio, New Jersey,. Pennsylvania, New Hampshire and Wisconsin, 8 and of our own District Court; 9 also the opinions of the distinguished authors of the Restatement of the Law of Property 10 and of Cooley on Taxation. 11 The courts of Utah, New Mexico, Missouri, Montana and Oregon have held that negative easements are not extinguished. 12

Briefly, the reasoning of Engel and the District government is that in this jurisdiction the real estate tax is a tax directly in rem, not upon interests in land but upon the land itself; that a tax deed is a new conveyance of the res from the sovereign and, as such, extinguishes all liens, encumbrances, prior titles, and equities of every sort; that this rule includes all easements; and that to levy real estate taxes upon the many and varied interests in realty would vastly increase the complexities and expenses of the taxing process.

The reasoning of the authorities holding that the easement survives the tax deed is, briefly, that when an easement is appurtenant to a dominant estate it attaches to that estate, being carved out of the servient estate; that the value of the dominant estate is increased by the existence' of the easement and in effect thus includes the value of the easement; that, when a tax is paid upon the value of the dominant estate determined in this manner, a tax has in effect been paid upon the easement; that the tax upon the servient estate is upon a value lessened because of the existence of the easement ; 13 that a sale for nonpayment of that tax ought to be a sale of the lessened estate; that “account can be taken of an easement appurtenant without increasing the complication of the tax process”; 14 and that therefore a tax sale of a servient estate should pass title to that estate subject to the easement.

At best the question is a close one. But on balance we agree with the District Court.

It is true, as Engel and the District say, that in the District of Columbia a tax deed extinguishes all liens, encumbrances and equities in and upon the parcel conveyed. 15 But an easement is an interest in land which has peculiar characteristics of its own, 16 being neither an estate nor a lien, *600 an encumbrance nor an equity, in the ordinary sense of those terms. An easement appurtenant to another lot, when created by conveyance, attaches to the possession of that other lot and “follows it into whoseso-ever hands it may come.” 17 The owner of the dominant estate owns the easement.

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Bluebook (online)
197 F.2d 597, 91 U.S. App. D.C. 54, 1952 U.S. App. LEXIS 2659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/engel-v-catucci-cadc-1952.