Porter v. Lafferty

33 Iowa 254
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 23, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 33 Iowa 254 (Porter v. Lafferty) 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
Porter v. Lafferty, 33 Iowa 254 (iowa 1871).

Opinion

Day, J.

I. As to the duty of defendcmts to pay the taxes upon the lands in question. It is alleged in the petition as a ground of relief that the defendants, with intent to defraud plaintiffs, allowed the taxes to remain unpaid on said lands. A consideration as to the sufficiency of this averment involves a determination of the question whether defendants were under any legal obligation to pay said taxes; for we apprehend it will not be claimed that their failure to pay them was a fraud, if they were under no obligation, express or implied, to do so. It is not claimed by appellant that defendants made any express agreement with any one to discharge these taxes. The duty which it is insisted is cast upon them is implied simply from this relation to the title to the lands in question. A brief and clear statement of this relation will greatly aid in determining their rights and duties. On the 4th day of May, 1867, M. J. & A. J. Odem mortgaged the land in controversy, with wanmffy of title, to Henry Oollins. Afterward, in 1861, the precise date not stated, defendants purchased of the said Odems the said property, and took title bond for the same subject to said mortgage, which defendants agreed to pay.

[257]*257The lands were sold for the taxes of 1866, at what time the petition does not state, and, on the 8th day of October, 1870, were by treasurer’s deed conveyed to J. T. Hack-worth. December 5, 1870, the sheriff deeded said land to plaintiff, in pursuance of a sale under a foreclosure of said mortgage.

Haekworth executed a quit-claim to defendants, the date not.stated. From this statement it appears that the taxes for 1866, under which the lands were sold, were delinquent at the time the Odems mortgaged the lands to Collins, and a fortiori at the time of their subsequent sale to the defendants. The mortgage contained covenants of warranty, and hence as between the Odems and their mortgagee Collins, they were under obligations to pay the taxes then due. And, for a failure to do so, they would be liable upon their covenants of warranty. Devin v. Hendershott, 32 Iowa, 192. The subsequent title bond to the defendants was subject to the mortgage to Collins, but it entitled the defendants to a conveyance with covenants of warranty against all other liens.

As between the Odems then, and both their mortgagee and their vendees, they were under obligations to pay these taxes of 1866, and for a failure to do so would be held liable in damages to the party thereby injured. But defendants purchased the lands and agreed to discharge the mortgage; and it is claimed they thereby became liable to pay also the taxes delinquent, and that their failure to do so constitutes a fraud. We are unable to discover any legitimate process of reasoning by which this burden can be cast upon defendants. Clearly they entered into no agreement to do so. Their agreement bound them no further than to discharge the mortgage. Of their failure to discharge the mortgage the Odems might complain, but the plaintiff’ cannot, for it is through that very failure that her title is derived. More - than the discharge of [258]*258the mortgage the Odems could not exact, for they required no agreement to do more.

Wliat peculiar relation do the defendants sustain toward the plaintiff, that places them under an obligation to do more than they undertook to do ? Why does the failure of the Odems to pay these taxes, and which constitutes a breach of their agreement with both plaintiff and defendants, render the defendants liable to the plaintiff* for. that breach ? Or what obligation, as to these taxes, rests upon defendants, which is not equally binding upon the plaintiff? The certificate of purchase at the sheriff’s sale was assigned to plaintiff on the 27th day of November, 1869. The treasurer’s deed was made to Hackworth on the 8th day of October, 1870, which was about the time the period for redemption expired, for the land could not have been sold for the delinquency of 1866, until the first Monday of October, 1867. There was then almost a full year’s time, after plaintiff became possessed of the certificate of purchase, within which she could have redeemed from the tax sale. And we know of no reason why she was not under as great obligations to do so as were the defendants. She held a certificate of purchase under a foreclosure of a mortgage containing covenants of warranty against these taxes. The defendants wete in possession under a contract of purchase from the mortgagors, which contract obliged them to warrant against the same taxes.

But it seems to us that while either party, for his own protection, might have paid these taxes, neither was under obligation to do so. This obligation rested upon the Odems, the mortgagors and vendors, and for a failure to discharge it they alone are liable. It seems to us too clear for discussion that the defendants, by their purchase of these premises and agreement to pay off the mortgage, are under no implied obligation to plaintiff to pay taxes due thereon at the time of their purchase, and that their failure to do so is no fraud upon plaintiff.

[259]*259II. As to the purchase ly defendants of the tax title from Hackworth. Tbe plaintiff alleges that this was fraudulent, the fraud consisting in their false and fraudulent representations that they were the absolute owners in fee of the property. No objection is made to the tax title of Hackworth. So far as appears that was in all respects regular, and conveyed to him a title to the property as against all the world. Hackworth, by his purchase, became vested with absolute dominion over the property. It was his either to sell or retain. No one could control him in the legitimate use of this property. He was under no obligation to sell to any one, nor to sell to plaintiff in preference to any one. This being the nature of ITackworth’s proprietorship, plaintiff claims that he has been defrauded because the defendants obtained a deed from Hackworth by falsely stating to him that they were the owners in fee. Now, we can readily see how Hackworth might complain of this treatment, but it is not quite so apparent how it constitutes a fraud upon plaintiff. True, Hackworth, by his conveyance to defendants, has placed it out of his power to convey to plaintiff, but he was under no obligation, and non constat that he ever would have been willing to do so. But concede that he would have been willing to do so, and what has plaintiff lost? Not any legal right. Not any thing which she is in condition to demand.

Simply a concession which would have been made her through favor. The legal rights are just the same now as before the defendants’ purchase. If Hackworth’s title was good, she could not have disturbed it then; and if bad, it is equally vulnerable in the hands of the defendants, his grantees.

So that the most that can be claimed is that plaintiff has, by defendants’ purchase, lost the possibility of inducing Hackworth to convey, for a consideration, his tax title to her.

"We feel clear that this furnishes her no legal ground of complaint.

[260]*260III. As to the effect of the defendants’ purchase. The Odems by their mortgage with covenants of warranty became bound to defend the title of the mortgagee against any claim arising out of these delinquent taxes.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Moore v. Crisp
1963 OK 97 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1963)
Koch v. Kiron State Bank
297 N.W. 450 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1941)
Teget v. Lambach
286 N.W. 522 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Hawkeye Life Insurance v. Valley-Des Moines Co.
260 N.W. 669 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1935)
Quinby v. Meyer
148 So. 869 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1933)
Kane v. Eustis Et Ux.
143 So. 655 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1932)
Hanby v. Snyder
237 N.W. 339 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
Wood v. Schwartz
236 N.W. 491 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1931)
Pereles v. Koch
136 N.W. 251 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1912)
National Surety Co. v. Walker
38 L.R.A.N.S. 333 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1910)
Busch v. Hall
93 N.W. 356 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1903)
Shrigley v. Black
71 P. 301 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1903)
Manning v. Bonard
54 N.W. 459 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1893)
Wood v. Welpton
29 F. 405 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Iowa, 1886)
Hall v. Westcott
5 A. 629 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1886)
Ritchie v. McDuffie
17 N.W. 167 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1883)
Morrison v. Bank of Commerce
81 Ind. 335 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1882)
Gorton v. Paine
18 Fla. 117 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1881)
Peel v. January
35 Ark. 331 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1880)
Dayton v. Rice
47 Iowa 429 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1877)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Iowa 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-lafferty-iowa-1871.