Victoria Copper Mining Co. v. Rich

193 F. 314, 113 C.C.A. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4784
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1911
DocketNo. 2,117
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 193 F. 314 (Victoria Copper Mining Co. v. Rich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Victoria Copper Mining Co. v. Rich, 193 F. 314, 113 C.C.A. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4784 (6th Cir. 1911).

Opinion

WARRINGTON, Circuit Judge.

This is a proceeding supplementary to an ejectment suit. The appellee was plaintiff in the ejectment suit, and the appellant was defendant. The land in controversy is an undivided eight-twentieths of two quarter sections situated in Ontanagon county, Mich., being the northwest and southeast quarters of section 30, in township 50 N., range 39 W. Upon the first trial verdict and judgment were rendered for defendant; but the judgment below was reversed in this court and a new trial awarded, it being held here that the court below erred in not instructing the"jury to find for the plaintiff. 147 Fed. 380, 77 C. C. A. 558. Upon retrial below verdict was rendered for plaintiff Rich, with a finding as-corrected that the value of the entire land was $24,119.20, and that the improvements made on the land had not increased its value beyond the wasté [317]*317committed. Rich elected under the statute to abandon the land to appellant and judgment was entered against it for $9,647.70, being the value of eight-twentieths of the land as fixed by the jury. This judgment was held to be a lien upon this undivided portion, and execution was awarded accordingly. Thereupon the present proceeding, equitable in character, was commenced setting up a claim for taxes alleged to have been paid by the Copper Mining Company and its predecessors in title from 1867 to 1907, amounting to $18,130.26, and also for interest thereon under a statute dated April 6, 1869, from the date of the first payment to the date of the last one at the rate of 25 per cent, per annum. An order was also sought to enjoin Rich from enforcing his judgment upon execution, and it was prayed that ultimately the taxes paid and the interest be set off against the judgment. An injunction was issued restraining Rich as prayed in the bill, but subject to certain conditions, among which was one requiring the Copper Mining Company to execute a bond in the penal sum of $15.000, with sureties, conditioned for the payment to Rich of his judgment and interest, unless reduced by an allowance of taxes, and in that event for payment of the balance if any should remain. The rights of Rich to execution upon his judgment and of the Copper Mining Company to the injunction were disposed of by the learned trial judge in an opinion reported in 163 Fed. 211, 212, 89 C. C. A. 637, which was subsequently adopted and the orders there made were affirmed by this court. Id., 163 Fed. 207, 89 C. C. A. 637. In the opinion of Judge Severens in the first citation and that of Judge Knappen in the second one may be found further details of the facts. The result of the present proceeding in the court below was a denial of the right to recover any of the taxes claimed and the granting of a decree against appellant upon its bond for the amount of Rich’s judgment with interest and costs.

[1] The right of the mining company to maintain the present proceeding was in our judgment correctly stated below by Judge Knappen :

“It is settled by the decisions of the Supreme Oourt of Michigan that a proceeding for enforcing this Hen (for taxes paid) can he had only in equity; and 'on the foot of the adjudication against the tax title.’ Weimer v. Porter, 42 Mich. 569 [4 N. W. 306); Ellsworth v. Freeman, 43 Mich. 488 [5 N. W. 675]; Tillotson v. Circuit Judge, 97 Mich. 585 ]56 N. W. 945].”

The mining company was through mesne conveyances the sole owner of the northeast and southwest quarters of section 30, and of the undivided twelve-twentieths of the northwest and southeast quarters of the section; and Rich was through mesne conveyances the owner of the undivided eight-twentieths of the quarter sections last mentioned. The undivided eight-twentieths interest was formerly owned by Samuel EL. Broughton, who died intestate December 3, 1860. lie had no issue, but left surviving his widow, Sarah N. Broughton, and his father, Shebuel II. Broughton.

[2] Under the statute of Michigan then in force, the widow took a life estate and the father the remainder in fee in this interest. 147 Fed. 382. 77 C. C. A. 558. The widow died in 1881; [318]*318and we agree to .the conclusion reached, and for the reasons stated by the judge presiding at the last trial, that the present appellant’s predecessor in title, viz., the Victoria Mining Company, acquired the interest of Mrs. Broughton in the land by acceptance of the deed executed in 1866, and, further, that during the time commencing with the conveyance of Mrs. Broughton (in 1866) and ending .with her death (in 1881) the company last named was, as holder of her life estate, obligated to pay the taxes assessed and accruing upon the eight-twentieths of the land in dispute. It follows that appellant’s right, if any exist, to recover taxes at all it can apply only to taxes paid after the death of Mrs. Broughton.

The main contention made by appellant in the ejectment suit was that under a statute of limitations of Michigan it acquired title to the eight-twentieths by adverse possession maintained through 15 consecutive years. 147 Fed. 383, 77 C. C. A. 558. One of the contentions now made by appellant is that, since its claim of adverse possession failed in the ejectment suit, the court cannot consistently hold that appellant’s possession obligated it as a tenant in common to pay the taxes in question; in other words, that, since the possession was not adverse within the meaning of the statute of limitations, it w'as not such possession as would imply a duty to pay taxes on the undivided interest found not to belong to appellant — at least without right of recovery over against the actual owner. This would seem impliedly to concede that, if appellant was in adverse possession of the undivided eight-twentieths interest during any portion of the time between the'death of Mrs. Broughton and the commencement of the ejectment • suit (though less than the time prescribed for acquiring-title), it was bound during such time to pay the accruing taxes. This implied concession is emphasized by the fact that appellant and its predecessors in title were all the while claiming exclusive title to the whole of the land.

[3] Apart from any concession of counsel, however, we are disposed to hold that the duty of one tenant in common towards his co-tenant upon the subject of paying taxes is to be distinguished from his duty on the same subject towards the state. Faying aside for the moment the question of contribution: To the state, tenants in common (in the absence of statute specially authorizing each to pay on his own portion) may, like a mortgagor and his mortgagees, be said each to owe the duty to pay the taxes upon the whole of the property. Conn. Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Bulte, 45 Mich. 113, 120 to 122, 7 N. W. 707.

[4] The duty of one tenant in common towards his cotenant, or his inability to compel contribution from his cotenant, must in the end rest upon the receipt of benefits, actual or presumed, by the taxpaying tenant equal to the amount of taxes paid. If,"under claim of exclusive title, he is maintaining a possession adverse as against his cotenant, then the one in possession will be conclusively presumed to have received benefits equal to the maintenance; but, if his possession is not of such adverse character, he will not, in the absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed to have received benefits.

[319]*319In Dubois v. Campau, 24 Mich. 360, 367, Campbell, Ch.

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Bluebook (online)
193 F. 314, 113 C.C.A. 238, 1911 U.S. App. LEXIS 4784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-copper-mining-co-v-rich-ca6-1911.