Kann v. King

204 U.S. 43, 27 S. Ct. 213, 51 L. Ed. 360, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1528
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 7, 1907
Docket16, 17
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 204 U.S. 43 (Kann v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kann v. King, 204 U.S. 43, 27 S. Ct. 213, 51 L. Ed. 360, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1528 (1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

These appeals are from a decree of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia, which adjudged that a tax-sale of certain real estate in the District was void, and which relieved -the lessee of the premises from a threatened forfeiture of the lease, asserted to have resulted from the failure of the tenant to pay the taxes to enforce which the tax-sale was made. The complainant in the original bill was Caroline King, the lessee *48 of the premises, and the defendants were Marianne A. B. Ken-nedjr (the lessor) and.Louis Kann, Sigmund Kann and Myer Cohen, whom it was alleged claimed to be either the equitable or legal owners of the tax-title in question. The defendant Kennedy died the day the bill was filed, and' Henry. Randall Webb, as her executor, and Maria G. Dewey, as her heir at law, were substituted as defendants.

The lessor prosecuted an appeal from an order granting an injunction pendente lite, restraining him, among other things, from prosecuting landlord and tenant proceedings, based upon a right of reentry arising from the alleged forfeiture caused by the non-payment of taxes and tax sale referred to in the bill. The Court of Appeals on the face of the bill sustained the order of injunction. 21 App. D. C. 141. The cause having been put at issue by separate answers asserting the right of the lessor to forfeit and the right of the holders of the tax title was tried on the merits and was decided in favor of the complainant. It was taken to the Court of Appeals on behalf of all the defendants except Mrs. Dewey, and the decree of the lower court, adjudging the tax sale to be void and. relieving from the alleged forfeiture, was affirmed. 25 App. D. C. 182.

The origin of the controversy and the facts as to which there are no dispute are as follows:

The property in controversy, No. 715 Market Space, in the City of Washington, was owned by and assessed for taxation in the name of Maria T. Gillis at the time of her death, intestate, in 1871. • Marianne A. B. Kennedy, as the heir at law of Mrs. Gillis, took possession of the property as owner,, without any administration upon, the estate of Mrs. Gillis. After the death of Mrs. Gillis, continuously up to the making of the taxrsale hereafter referred to, the property remained on the public records and continued to be assessed in the name of Mrs. Gillis, except that a small portion of the rear end of the premises’was, at a time not shown, but prior to the tax-sale before referred to, assessed for taxation in the name of Mrs. Kennedy and her husband.

*49 In 1890, Mrs. Kennedy leased in writing the premises to Henry King, Jr., the husband of complainant, for use as a fancy dry-goods store, and by several extensions the period of expiration of this lease came to be October 1, 1908. By the lease the lessee, his executors and administrators or assigns, were bound, “during the continuance and until the end and determination of the said term, for which the said premises are demised, to, pay or cause to be paid in each and every year thereof the taxes, genera] and special, of every character and description, assessed against and levied upon the said premises by the -authorities of the general or local government.” The right to terminate the lease and to reenter upon the breach of any of .the conditions was stipulated. When the lease was made King, the lessee, was engaged in the dry-goods business in a store on Seventh street, not far from the Market Space store. Under the lease he entered into possession of the Market- Space store and carried on, in addition, business there until his death on August 18, 1897, Sanctioned by an order of the Probate Court-, an assignment of the lease covering the store on Market Space was made to Caroline King, the widow. The business was thereafter conducted for a time solely in her name. She did not, however, actively supervise it. Her elder son, Harry King, who had been, during the latter years of his father’s life, in general charge of the business for his father, remained in that capacity, after,the death of the father, as the representative of his mother, assisted at the Market Space store, in a subordinate capacity, by a brother, Joseph King, who, during the father’s life, had also, in a subordinate capacity, been engaged in business at that place. From the making of the lease in 1890 to the death of King in 1897 it was the habit of Mrs. Kennedy, when the tax on the Market Space store was about to become payable, to request the lessee to send her a check for the amount of the tax, and on the receipt thereof the tax was paid either by Mrs. Kennedy or her agent. This course was not, however, followed, after the death of King. The first installment of taxes which fell due in November, 1897, soon after the *50 death of King, was directly discharged by Mrs. King, who took and retained the receipt. This was done at the request of Mrs. Kennedy, who called at the Market Space store about Christmas, 1897, and asked that the tax be paid. From that time no request was made by the lessor to the tenant, as the taxes fell due, to send her the money to enable her to pay them, nor is it- shown that any express demands were made that the tenant pay the taxes directly.' From the time of the payment by the tenant, near the close of 1897, of the first installment of taxes which fell due after the death of her husband, until the summer of 1900, a period of more than two and a-half years, no taxes whatever were paid upon the leased premises. In the interval the following taxes became overdue:

Second installment of tax for 1898, due in May, 1898;
First installment'of tax for 1899, due in November, 1898;
Second installment of tax for 1899, due in May, 1899;
First installment of tax for 1900, due in November, 1899; and,
Second installment of tax for 1900, due in May, 1900.

On July 24, 1900, the two installments of the tax for 1900, due in November, 1899, and May, 1900, with accrued penalties, were paid by the tenant under 'the following circumstances: As testified by Harry King, he being concerned over past due taxes, owing on a large number of tracts of real estate owned by the estate of his father, it “occurred” to him to have the “bookkeeper go down to the tax office and inquire for the tax bills pf 715 Market Space.” The bookkeeper went and subsequently reported that the two installments for 1900 were due, and Harry King paid them. The. nature of the inquiry made by the bookkeeper at the tax office, and what occurred, is the subject of controversy, and we pretermit its consideration. Nearly a year after, in Mayj 1901, the two installments of taxes for 1899, due in November, 1898, and May, 1899, with interest and penalties, along with the taxes for 1901, were paid by the tenant. The payment of the 1899 taxes was by way of redemption of a sale of the property for such taxes made on April 12, *51 1900. There is no doubt that the payment of the arrears for 1899 was a result of the visit by the bookkeeper to the tax office. It will be observed that the payments which were made in 1900 and 1901, of taxes which were in arrears, did not embrace the second installment of the tax of 1898, due in May, 1898.

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Bluebook (online)
204 U.S. 43, 27 S. Ct. 213, 51 L. Ed. 360, 1907 U.S. LEXIS 1528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kann-v-king-scotus-1907.