Green v. De Los Palmer

229 P. 876, 68 Cal. App. 393, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 167
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 28, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4754.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 229 P. 876 (Green v. De Los Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. De Los Palmer, 229 P. 876, 68 Cal. App. 393, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 167 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

NOURSE, J.

The plaintiff commenced an action to quiet title to a certain lot of land which he had acquired by purchase from the tax collector of Alameda County at a sale, for delinquent taxes. The complaint was in the ordinary form to quiet title to the property. Issue was joined by defendant’s second amended answer which merely denied plaintiff’s claim of interest in the property and alleged that the defendant was the owner thereof. The answer also contained a description of the property in suit somewhat different from that which appeared in the complaint. Trial was had upon the issues so joined and at its termination the court announced that judgment would be entered in favor of the defendant and requested him to prepare findings. This was done and in response thereto the plaintiff suggested amendments to the proposed findings in which, among other things, it was suggested that if judgment was to be entered in favor of the defendant it should be done only on the *396 condition that he reimburse the plaintiff for the outlays which he had made as required by subdivision 5 of section 3898 of the Political Code. This relief was denied the plaintiff and judgment was thereupon entered upon findings prepared by the trial court declaring the defendant to be the owner of the property and that the plaintiff had no title or interest therein, and quieting the title of the defendant thereto without requiring him to reimburse the plaintiff for the taxes and expenses paid by him in pursuit of the state’s title. Prom this judgment the plaintiff has appealed under the provisions of section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The appellant urges that the trial court was in error in finding and adjudging that he had no title to the property because of a defective description in the assessment proceedings and that the court was also in error in adjudging that the appellant was not entitled to be reimbursed for his outlays in pursuit of the state title. We shall consider the last point first.

Subdivision 5 of section 3898 of the Political Code provides that, “Whenever in any action at law, it has been or •shall be determined by a court that the sale and conveyance provided for in this and the preceding section or in section three thousand seven hundred seventy-one of this code heretofore or hereafter made are void for any reason, and that the purchaser from the state may not be finally awarded the property so purchased, no decree of the court shall be given declaring a forfeiture of the property until the former owner, or other party in interest, shall have repaid to the purchaser the full amount of taxes, penalties and costs paid out and expended by him, ... in pursuit of the state’s title to the property so sold.” (Emphasis ours.)

The only point urged by respondent in support of this phase of the appeal is that because the assessment of the property was void, and not merely the sale by the tax collector, section 3898 does not apply. It will be noted, however, that the legislature has declared that this right of the purchaser from the state shall apply to all cases where the sale and conveyance “are void for any reason.” There are many eases where the sale and conveyance are declared void because of some defect in the original assessment. If it had been the intention of the legislature to except these cases *397 from the provisions of the code section it would have been a simple matter to have inserted some language indicating that intention.

We are referred to Coleman v. County of Los Angeles, 1801 Cal. 714 [182 Pac. 440], which the respondent states holds that when the assessment of property is void the plaintiff is not entitled to any refund by the defendant. We do not find that to be the rule of that case. The supreme court was discussing the effect of the amendment to section 3898 which we have heretofore quoted and which was adopted in 1913. Reference was made in the opinion to the rule of equity as announced in Holland v. Hotchkiss, 162 Cal. 366 [L. R. A. 1915C, 492, 123 Pac. 268], that where the owner proceeded against a purchaser at a tax sale equity would require him to reimburse the purchaser if the tax sale was held void, and the court said that it was also held that where the assessment itself was void, as well as the sale, no payment would be required of the owner as a condition precedent to the quieting of his title. This statement referred to the portion of the Holland opinion which quoted from volume 2, page 1455 of Cooley on Taxation. “If the tax were wholly illegal in its essentials, of course no such requirement could be made, for it would not be supported by any equity. ” There is no quarrel with the rule of equity as thus announced in the earlier decisions, but, of course, a rule of equity, as well as one of law, may be changed by statutory enactment. It was said in the Coleman case (p. 7201), “It is obvious that the amount thus bid (at the tax sale) would be increased if the purchaser could be assured that if this deed was void he would at least recover the money paid by him. No doubt the amendment in question was adopted to assure the purchaser such reimbursement.” And again, at page 721, “It will be observed, then, that in every instance the purchaser, in whatever form of proceeding the relative rights of the purchaser and the property owners may be litigated, is entitled to be reimbursed by the property owner ‘the full amount of taxes, penalties and costs paid out and expended by him, to be determined by the court, in pursuit of the state’s title to the property so sold. ’ ” In the later case of State of California v. Boyal Consolidated Min. Co., 187 Cal. 343, 346 [202 Pac. 133, 134], *398 the supreme court said: “It is well settled that such relief will be denied to a property owner notwithstanding errors in the sale or in the assessment, if it can be ascertained from the assessment that the property owner is liable in justice and good morals to pay a tax thereon which has not been paid. (Savings & Loan Society v. Burke, 151 Cal. 616 [91 Pac. 504].)” In Savings & Loan Society v. Burke, supra, the attack was based solely on the ground that the assessment of the tax was void in the beginning and the court held on the authority of Couts v. Cornell, 147 Cal. 5601 [82 Pac. 194], that assuming the assessment to be void, equity would not extend relief to the owner of the property unless he offered to do equity by paying the tax which was justly charged against him. In the Gouts case the attack was based upon the ground that the assessment was void because the property was not sufficiently described and there the court held that such defect in the description did not affect the moral obligation of the owner to pay the tax.

In view of these authorities the effect of the amendment is that the owner is not entitled to affirmative relief against the purchaser at a tax sale until he reimburses him for the taxes which were justly chargeable against the property. This does not necessarily deprive the owner of all remedies against the state for a void tax'; it merely denies him the process of the state courts to work an inequity against one who has become a purchaser on the invitation of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 876, 68 Cal. App. 393, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-de-los-palmer-calctapp-1924.