Lowe v. City of Atlanta

11 S.E.2d 891, 191 Ga. 76, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 630
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 19, 1940
Docket13426, 13429.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 S.E.2d 891 (Lowe v. City of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. City of Atlanta, 11 S.E.2d 891, 191 Ga. 76, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 630 (Ga. 1940).

Opinions

Grice, Justice.

The assignments of enor fall into two classes, the first of which is the overruling of Mrs. Lowe’s general demurrers to the intervention of Head, revenue commissioner, and to the one by Fulton County, and to the answers of the City of Atlanta, or Elder, municipal revenue collector, and of Suttles, the tax-collector of Fulton County. The second class of exceptions relates to the sustaining of demurrers to her answer and amendment. In these pleadings she asked for affirmative equitable relief. She is plaintiff in error, and therefore has the burden of showing not only error but injury. If the purchaser at the city marshal’s tax sale acquired a good title to the fee, the ultimate result reached by the trial court was correct, and no injury has been done to the plaintiff in error. She attacks the sale on two grounds, the first being that only the title to the estate for years could have passed, since the executions were issued in personam against the holder of the estate for years. She relies on the line of decisions holding that where land is held by a life-tenant, and taxes are assessed against him and executions issued in personam only, a sale under levy of such executions passes only the life-estate. Stone v. Franklin, 89 Ga. 195 (3) (15 S. E. 47); Clower v. Fleming, 81 Ga. 247 (7 S. E. 278); Gross v. Taylor, 81 Ga. 86 (6 S. E. 179); Roddenberry v. Simpson, 171 Ga. 715 (156 S. E. 583, 75 A. L. R. 414); Kirk v. Bray, 181 Ga. 814 (184 S. E. 733); Howell v. Lawson, 188 Ga. 164 (3 S. E. 3d, 79). The insistence is that the principle of these decisions should be applied to a tax sale of property in possession of a lessee having an estate for years in the property, when the execution in personam is likewise against the lessee. In the cases cited there were two estates in the same property — the life-estate and the remainder; the holders of the limited estate were sole occupants of the property taxed; the executions under which the sale took place were in personam and directed against the holder of the lesser estate; and the property was sold as the property of the latter. But the analogy goes no farther. In none of those cases *80 was the person against whom the tax execution issued put in possession by the holder of the other estate, nor did he derive his right to his limited estate therefrom. He entered under no covenant that he should have possession and control of the premises for any certain length of time, no obligation to pay rental, no promise to pay all taxes, no covenant to expend large sums for permanent improvements, and no contract giving him an option to purchase, with a further agreement on his part that when the holder of the other estate shall be in position to convey to him an absolute, unincumbered, and indefeasible title in fee simple, then he is obligated and bound to purchase the premises on the terms and conditions contained in the option. The contract in the instant case contains all of the features above referred to. It is true that as between the parties, under one of the express terms of the instrument, the lessee was chargeable with the payment of the taxes. The Code declares: “Life-tenants, and those who own and enjoy the property, shall be chargeable with the taxes thereon. Hence, while the public may treat property as belonging either to the maker or the holder of a bond for title when the latter is in possession, yet as between the parties the one receiving the rents or enjoying the use shall be liable for the taxes.” § 92-110. This is but a codification of the rulings of this court in National Bank of Athens v. Danforth, 80 Ga. 55 (7 S. E. 546), Burns v. Lewis, 86 Ga. 591, 602 (13 S. E. 123), and Wells v. Savannah, 87 Ga. 397 (13 S. E. 442).

The present issue however, is not between parties who own different interests in the same property, but between the taxing authorities and the owner of the fee. We might concede that under this record the public might have assessed the taxes against either the lessee or the lessor; but that proposition does not reach the issue before us, which is, did the entire fee pass to the purchaser under a sale by virtue of a tax execution issued against one with the word “lessee” after his name, on an assessment made in the same manner, the tax deed reciting that the purchaser is to have and to hold the premises “in as full and ample a manner as the said [named] lessee or its heirs and assigns did hold and enjoy or might have held and enjoyed the same, had it not been seized and sold under the execution aforesaid,” the defendant in fi. fa. not actually owning the fee, although in actual possession under the *81 owner of the fee, by virtue of a contract of the nature of one hereinbefore described? The problem is not solved by merely recognizing, as we do, that a leasehold interest is itself taxable. Henry Grady Hotel Co. v. Atlanta, 162 Ga. 818 (135 S. E. 68). Real Estate Loan Co. v. Union City, 177 Ga. 55 (169 S. E. 301), was a suit to enjoin a proposed sale under municipal tax fi. fas. It was there ruled that though the grantor and grantee in a security deed may agree as between themselves as to which shall be liable for the taxes upon the property conveyed, yet the complete title is nevertheless subject to taxation as a whole, and a sale made in pursuance of a proper assessment and execution would divest the interest and title of each of the parties, with the exception of the right of redemption. The security deed is not a lien, but an instrument conveying title to the vendee. Gilliard v. Johnston, 161 Ga. 17 (129 S. E. 434); Rickey v. First National Bank, 180 Ga. 751 (80 S. E. 740), and cit. At the same time the vendor has an equitable estate in the premises conveyed. Cook v. Georgia Fertilizer & Oil Co., 154 Ga. 41 (113 S. E. 145); Williams v. Foy Mfg. Co., 111 Ga. 856 (36 S. E. 927). In the instant case also there were two estates. In Read Estate Loan Co. v. Union City, supra, which dealt with a security deed, was a holding that under the circumstances there referred to one tax sale would divest the interest and title of both estates. A similar ruling was made, in the case of a bond for title, in National Bank of Athens v. Dan forth, supra. The ruling in Morgan v. Burks, 90 Ga. 287 (15 S. E. 821), was that realty of which one is in' possession under a contract of purchase, upon which a part of the purchase-money has been paid, is subject to sale for his taxes. The court in effect held that Morgan, being in possession, and at the time of the tax sale having made a contract to purchase, and having paid part of the purchase-money, had such an interest in the property as authorized the sheriff to sell it for his taxes, the purchaser obtaining a good title.

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Related

Irwin v. Arrendale
159 S.E.2d 719 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1967)
Lowe v. City of Atlanta
21 S.E.2d 171 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.E.2d 891, 191 Ga. 76, 1940 Ga. LEXIS 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-city-of-atlanta-ga-1940.