Riley v. Bank of Commerce of Roswell

23 P.2d 362, 37 N.M. 338
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1933
DocketNo. 3761.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 P.2d 362 (Riley v. Bank of Commerce of Roswell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. Bank of Commerce of Roswell, 23 P.2d 362, 37 N.M. 338 (N.M. 1933).

Opinion

BICKLEY, Justice.

Action of ejectment and to quiet title by appellee against appellant. Appellants cross-complained in the statutory form for quieting their title.

The court decreed that appellee (plaintiff) was the owner of the real estate in question, and awarded the possession thereof to appellee, upon the basis that appellant Bank of Commerce was a junior mortgagee of the property in question and that the appellee was a senior mortgagee thereof and that the junior mortgagee could not acquire any title by the purchase of a tax title as against the senior mortgagee. The correctness of this theory of the decision is the principal question to be determined upon this appeal.

No question is raised as to the legality of any of the proceedings leading up to, and culminating in, a tax deed.

. That, prior to foreclosure at least, appellee was the senior mortgagee is not open to question. On June 6, 1925, appellant bank sued to foreclose its second mortgage, making appellee a party defendant who timely cross-billed on her first mortgage. On September 9,1925, final decree was entered by which the mortgage of appellee was established as prior' to that of appellant, and both mortgages were ordered foreclosed. At the sale, appellee was the highest bidder for a sum insufficient to do more than pay off the first mortgage. On December 9, 1925, a special master’s deed to the appellee was duly executed and delivered and recorded on January 30, 1926. On March 5, 1924, the property was sold for taxes for 1922 and a tax sale certificate was issued on the same day to Chaves county. On November 25, 1925, the 'appellant bank paid to the treasurer of Chaves county the sum of $220.-88, and thereupon said county treasurer indorsed on said tax sale certificate a form of assignment thereof to the appellant bank. On June 2, 1927, the said county treasurer issued and delivered to the appellant bank a form of tax deed covering said property.

In Des Moines Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Eisenmenger (1931) 183 Minn. 46, 235 N. W. 390, it was held: “Successive mortgagees are in same category as tenants in common, as respects payment of taxes on mortgaged premises; one 'of successive mortgagees purchasing at delinquent tax sale cannot acquire tax title to exclusion of another mortgagee; one of successive mortgagees purchasing at delinquent tax sale is entitled only to reimbursement and equitable lien.”

The weight of authority is in favor of this view. See Cooley Taxation (4th Ed.) 1440; annotation, L. R. A. 1917D, 522; “Most states will not permit him (mortgagee) to assert a title against the mortgagor, and almost no jurisdiction will allow him to set up such title against prior mortgagees.” Columbia Law Review Vol. 29, page 93, editorial note commenting on Baird v. Eischer, 57 N. D. 167, 220 N. W. 892.

We -observe that the principles here announced are usually discussed as appertaining where the controversy arises between a mortgagor and a mortgagee, the mortgagee claiming adversely to the mortgagor by virtue of the purchase of a tax title, and where successive mortgagees are involved. See the cases as to both propositions digested indiscriminately in Decennial Digest under Mortgages, &wkey;144. See, also, Cooley on Taxation (4th Ed.) § 1440, which illustrates the same situation. In Baird v. Fischer, 57 N. D. 167, 220 N. W. 892, 894 (1928) certain property subject to two mortgages was sold at -a tax sale to one X, in 1919. In February, 1923, X conveyed his tax certificate to the plaintiff, the holder of a second mortgage on the property, and in May, 1923, the plaintiff received a tax deed from the state. In January, 1923, the defendant, holder of a first mortgage thereon, foreclosed and bought in the property, receiving a sheriff’s deed in February, 1924. In an action to quiet title, it was held for the defendant and that a second mortgagee may not procure and assert a tax title as -against a prior mortgagee. In the course of the discussion, the court quoted in support of its view, the case of Finlayson v. Peterson, 11 N. D. 45, 89 N. W. 855, which involved a contest between, a mortgagor and a mortgagee, -who claimed under a tax deed procured while he was mortgagee, as follows: “But aside from this fact (that the tax deeds were defective), the deeds cannot stand as a conveyance in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff, because when they were obtained by Gurd he was in the relation of a mortgagee, and, as such, was given permission by the terms of the mortgage to pay taxes on the land, and add the amount so paid out to the mortgage debt. It is well established that a mortgagee, under such circumstances, is estopped to acquire title as against the mortgagor. Under such a state of facts, a trust relation arises in which the mortgagee or his grantee becomes a trustee, and as such is not only debarred from acquiring title himself as against the trustor, but is under an obligation to pay the taxes, as a means of protecting the trust property as against a hostile title. * * * (Citing authorities.)”

In Hall v. Westcott, 15 R. I. 373, 5 A. 629, it was held: “A mortgagee, either in possession or out of possession, is not entitled to set up, as against the mortgagor or the other mortgagees, a tax title to the mortgaged estate purchased by him at a tax sale.”

The court, after citing many authorities in support of its holding, remarked: “Other cases adopt a narrower view, and maintain that any person can become a purchaser who is not under any legal duty to pay the taxes”— citing Williams v. Townsend, 31 N. Y. 411, Waterson v. Devoe, 18 Kan. 223, and two Arkansas cases (Bettison v. Budd, 17 Ark. 546, 65 Am. Dec. 442, and Ferguson v. Etter, 21 Ark. 160, 76 Am. Dec. 361) and we add Jones v. Black, 18 Okl. 344, 88 P. 1052, 90 P. 422, 11 Ann. Cas. 753, as being properly classified therewith. See 19 R. C. L. “Mortgages,” § 174, note 4. These three cases are substantially relied upon by appellant in support of a view contra to that set forth in Des Moines Sav. Bank & Trust Co. v. Eisenmenger, quoted supra. All these cases involved controversies between a mortgagor and mortgagee who claimed under a tax deed procured while he was a mortgagee, and are cited in the annotation to Jones v. Black, supra, to the following statement: “It is held by some courts that a mortgagee not in possession of the mortgaged premises is under no obligation to pay the taxes thereon, and may acquire a title as against the mortgagor by the purchase of the mortgaged premises.”

The court in Jones v. Black, the annotated case, cited both Waterson v. Devoe and Williams v. Townsend in support of its holding. It is unfortunate for appellant that, in considering these cases, we find that this court in Kershner v. Trinidad M. & M. Co., 27 N. M. 326, 201 P. 1055, 1057, cited Jones v. Black and its annotation, supra, for a collection of the cases and reached a conclusion contrary to that announced in those three cases, saying: “We are met at the threshold with the question as to the effect of the tax sale. At the time of the purchase by appellant at tax sale, he was the mortgagee of appellee of the property involved. It was taxed as improvements on a mining claim under the provisions of section 5427, Code 1915, which provides for the taxation of all property in the state, with certain exceptions, and section 5433, Code 1915, which specifically provides that improvements on mining claims shall not be exempt.

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23 P.2d 362, 37 N.M. 338, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-bank-of-commerce-of-roswell-nm-1933.