Inter-Ocean Reinsurance Co. v. Dickey

270 N.W. 29, 222 Iowa 995
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 24, 1936
DocketNo. 43766.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 270 N.W. 29 (Inter-Ocean Reinsurance Co. v. Dickey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter-Ocean Reinsurance Co. v. Dickey, 270 N.W. 29, 222 Iowa 995 (iowa 1936).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

Plaintiff is the owner and holder of certain special assessment certificates issued against the property in question for a sewer improvement assessment in Ames, Iowa, levied in January, 1929.

The defendant, C. F. Lytle, is the owner and holder of special assessment paving certificates issued subsequently against the same property for a street improvement assessment subsequently levied. Both assessments were payable in ten equal installments, many of which are still unpaid.

At a scavenger’s tax sale in January, 1935, the property in question was sold by the county treasurer to the defendant, Lytle Investment Company, for a small fractional part of the general taxes then due and delinquent thereon, under the provisions of section 7255 of the Code of 1931, and tax sale certificates were issued to the purchaser thereof.

On March 18, 1935, the tax sale certificates were, on payment of the amount due thereon, assigned to the defendant, C. F. Lytle, holder of the special assessment paving certificates, by paying to the county auditor the total amount due on the tax sale certificates, with a demand -for an assignment of said tax sale certificates.

On August 5, 1935, the plaintiff, who was then the owner and holder of the special sewer assessment certificates, duly tendered to defendant, C. F. Lytle, and the county auditor of Story County, the amount for which the real estate in question had been sold to the defendant, Lytle Investment Company, at a scavenger’s sale, with interest and penalties, and accompanied said payment with a written tender and demand for an assignment of the tax sale certificates. Said tender being refused, the plaintiff paid the total amount due on said tax sale certificates to the county auditor. The defendant, C. F. Lytle, retains the tax sale certificates,, and refuses to assign to the plaintiff, unless and until the plaintiff pays to him or the county auditor the full amount due him on the paving assessment certificates held by him, in addition to the amounts paid to the county auditor as due on the tax sale certificates.

*997 Upon such record the lower court denied the application for a peremptory order of mandamus, but without prejudice to plaintiff’s right to maintain a proper action in equity to enforce its rights, and plaintiff appeals.

Appellant contends that the lien of the special assessment certificates issued for the sewer improvement is prior in right to the lien against the property created by the paving assessments and certificates. Appellant, therefore, contends that it is entitled to an order in mandamus requiring the defendant to assign to plaintiff the tax sale certificates in question under the&> provisions of section 6041 of the Code of 1931. Section 6041 provides that:

“Any holder of any special assessment certificate against a lot or parcel of ground, * * * which lot or parcel of ground has been sold for taxes, either general or special, shall be entitled to an assignment of any certificate of tax sale of said property for any general taxes or special taxes thereon, upon tender to the holder or to the county auditor of the amount to which the holder of the tax sale certificate would be entitled in case of redemption.”

It is conceded by the record that the plaintiff is the owner and holder of the special assessment sewer certificates issued for the sewer improvement along the property in question, and against which special assessments were duly levied in January, 1929.

It is also conceded that the defendant, C. F. Lytle, is the owner and holder of the special assessment paving certificates subsequently issued for the paving improvement along the same property, and for the payment of which special assessments were also subsequently levied against said property.

The special assessments for the sewer improvement were levied prior to the assessments levied for the paving improvement, and proper notices of the levy of both sewer and paving assessments were duly certified and filed with the county auditor as required by statute, the certificates of the sewer assessments being filed first.

Section 6008 of the Code of 1931 provides that after the proper certification of the special assessments to the county auditor, “all special taxes for the cost thereof, or any part of said cost, which are to be assessed and levied against real property, *998 * * * with all interest and penalties on all of said assessments, shall become and remain a lien on such property from the date of the filing of said papers with the county auditor until paid, and such liens shall have precedence over all other liens except ordinary taxes, and shall not be divested by any judicial sale. ’ ’

Under section 6041 the holder of any special assessment certificate is entitled to redeem from the holder of the general tax sale certificate.

I. As plaintiff and the defendant, C. F. Lytle, are both holders of special assessment certificates against the same property, and as the assessments for both improvements are liens against the same property (section 6008), the first question naturally arising is, Which holder has the prior right to an assignment of the general tax sale certificates ? It is conceded that the special assessment certificates held by the plaintiff, being secured by the lien of the special assessments for the sewer improvement, are first in time, because that assessment was duly levied and certified to the county auditor first.

There is a well known maxim of equity' to the effect that as between equal equities, the first in time shall prevail, and that the “first in time shall be first in right”. Des Moines Brick Mfg. Co. v. Smith, 108 Iowa 307, 79 N. W. 77; City of Charles City v. Ramsay, 199 Iowa 722, 202 N. W. 499; Anderson-Deering Co. v. City of Boone, 201 Iowa 1129, 205 N. W. 984; Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Read, 215 Iowa 700, 246 N. W. 779; Fergason v. Aitken, 220 Iowa 1154, 263 N. W. 850.

In Equitable Life Ins. Co. v. Read, 215 Iowa 700, 246 N. W. 779, there was a dispute upon the question as to the priority of rights to certain crops between the holder of the first and second mortgages. In that ease this court said, loc. cit. 703:

“When the crops came into existence, the respective liens would attach at exactly the same time. In other words, one lien would not attach before the other. Their equities, therefore, were equal. The question, therefore, is: Which party is entitled to the crops for the season commencing March 1, 1932?
“ It is a maxim of equity that as between equal equities, the first in order of time shall prevail. The only interest that either * * * had in the crop * * * to be planted for 1932. was a contract for a lien enforcible in equity, and, as neither can be held to attach before the other, their equities must be held to be equal.
*999

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294 N.W. 279 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1940)

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270 N.W. 29, 222 Iowa 995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-ocean-reinsurance-co-v-dickey-iowa-1936.