McGuigan v. Fitzpatrick

199 A. 448, 60 R.I. 490, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 20, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 199 A. 448 (McGuigan v. Fitzpatrick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGuigan v. Fitzpatrick, 199 A. 448, 60 R.I. 490, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 174 (R.I. 1938).

Opinion

*491 Moss, J.

This is a suit in equity brought against the first respondent, city treasurer of the city of Providence, and Bonded Municipal Corporation, a corporation of the state of New York. The principal relief sought is that a tax sale and tax deed, made by the first respondent, as such city treasurer, to the second respondent and covering certain real property in the city of Providence, be declared null and void.

The material facts are not in dispute and are as follows. On January 7,1926, Peter K. Poladian, then the owner of the property, executed and delivered a mortgage of it, his wife joining therein, to James J. Costigan, father of the complainant, securing his promissory note to the mortgagee for $6000. The mortgagee died on November 26, 1930; and the note and mortgage passed, as a part of his estate, to the complainant, who was duly appointed the executrix of his will. The mortgagor continued to be the owner of the property, subject to the mortgage, until the execution and delivery of the above-mentioned tax deed, which has not been recorded.

A city tax was assessed as of June 15, 1933, against the mortgagor as owner of the property; and another city tax was assessed as of June 15, 1934, against him as such owner, Both of these taxes remained unpaid until the delivery of the above-mentioned tax deed. In 1934, the city treasurer-advertised the property for sale for nonpayment of the 1933 tax, the first date of sale being given as June 7, 1934. On that date the sale was postponed to a certain date, and there were successive postponements until September 26, 1935, when the entire property was sold to the respondent corporation for $193.20, the amount then payable for the 1933 tax, but subject to the 1934- tax.

When the tax deed was delivered to the corporation, the city treasurer insisted on the payment of the amount of the 1934 tax, including interest, and the corporation paid that amount also, $174.55. The deed was then delivered, the consideration recited therein being the sum of these two amounts, $367.75. No notice of the proposed sale was ever *492 given to the complainant, executrix of the will of the mortgagee and then the holder of the mortgage.

The complainant, in December 1935, was advised of the tax sale. Thereafter, as executrix of the will of the mortgagee and as such the holder of the mortgage, which was then in default, she proceeded to foreclose under the mortgage, by the exercise of the power of sale therein. At the foreclosure sale she purchased the property in her individual capacity for $4000, which she paid with her own money. She then, as executrix, executed to herself a mortgagee’s deed of the property. ■

Thereafter she brought the present suit. After a hearing in the superior court on bill, answers and evidence, in which the facts above stated were proved, or admitted by the parties to be true, a decree was entered, in which the relief asked for in the complainant’s bill of complaint was decreed, but only on condition that she pay to the respondent corporation, within thirty days after the decree became final, the above-mentioned sum of $367.75. The decree also provided that in the event that such payment were not made within such time, the bill of complaint should be taken as dismissed. The case is now before us on the complainant’s appeal from this decree, the only reason of appeal now relied on being based on the condition above stated. No appeal was taken by either of the respondents.

We have held in Allen & Reed, Inc. v. Investments, Inc., 57 R. I. 457, 190 A. 447, that if an owner of real property brings a bill in equity for the annulment of a tax sale and deed of that property, which have been made for the collection of a valid tax assessed against him as the owner of the property and levied thereon, he must, as a condition of having the sale and deed set. aside for noncompliance with the requirements therefor, reimburse the purchaser for the purchase price paid by such purchaser. This holding was based on the maxim of equity that “he that seeks equity must do equity”; and we held that any *493 right of the complainant to have the tax sale and deed in that case set aside was subject to such condition.

The first question for us to decide is whether under this maxim the complainant in the instant case should be required, as a condition of having the sale and deed here in- . volved set aside, to pay the respondent corporation the amount paid by it in satisfaction of the 1933 tax, for the collection of which the sale was made by the city treasurer.

It is clear that the sale was not binding on the complainant as the executrix of the will of the mortgagee and as such the owner of the note and mortgage, because no notice of the proposed sale was given to her. Let us suppose that she, before selling the property, under the power of sale, for default in the payment of the mortgage note or of the interest thereon, had brought a suit in equity to set aside the sale and deed, and that the purchaser at the tax sale had paid only the amount of the 1933 tax lien. If she had been allowed, in that suit, to have thé sale and deed set aside without paying anything to the purchaser, she would then have held the property free and clear of the lien of that tax, which before the sale took place was secured by a lien on the property prior to the lien of the mortgage; and the estate of the mortgagee would have been benefited by the discharge of the prior lien at the expense of the purchaser at the tax sale. If, as proved to be the case, the salable value of the property was less than' the mortgage debt, the amount of the benefit would have been the amount which had been secured by the prior tax lien.

In our opinion, that would have been an unjust enrichment. For that reason, we are of the opinion that, in accordance with the above maxim, she as such executrix would have been required in such a suit, as a condition of getting the relief sought, to pay to the purchaser at the tax sale the amount that had been secured by the prior tax lien at the time of the tax sale.

*494 In our judgment, the real reason for applying the above maxim in a suit in equity for the setting aside of a tax sale and a resulting tax deed is that the complainant in such a suit has no equitable right to be put into a better position than he would have been in, if no tax sale had been held, and thus to be enriched at the expense of the purchaser at the tax sale. This reason applies as clearly in the case just supposed, as in the case of Allen & Reed, Inc. v. Investments, Inc., supra.

Assuming that the purchaser did not pay the 1934 tax, we have found that the complainant, as executrix of the will of the mortgagee and as such the holder of the mortgage and mortgage note, could not have maintained a suit for the setting aside of the tax sale and deed, except upon the condition of paying to the purchaser at the tax sale the amount secured by the 1933 tax lien that was prior to the mortgage. The next question then is whether she could get rid of that condition by selling the property at foreclosure sale under the power of sale, with knowledge of the tax sale and deed, and buying it herself individually and taking a deed of it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
199 A. 448, 60 R.I. 490, 1938 R.I. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguigan-v-fitzpatrick-ri-1938.