Warner, Trustee v. Day

1946 OK 208, 170 P.2d 246, 197 Okla. 319, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 538
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 25, 1946
DocketNo. 32157.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1946 OK 208 (Warner, Trustee v. Day) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner, Trustee v. Day, 1946 OK 208, 170 P.2d 246, 197 Okla. 319, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 538 (Okla. 1946).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

The controversy involved herein arose from a tax resale of lots 3 and 4 in block 8 of the Higgins addition to the city of Muskogee, Okla. The facts, as we understand them, are substantially as hereinafter related.

In 1929, under an oral arrangement between himself, R. C. Borum, and W. S. Warner, whereby he purchased real estate at tax sales with joint funds of the three, E. S. Warner purchased the above described lots for himself and his said associates at a tax resale held that year (presumably for delinquent ad valorem taxes only), taking title in his name as trustee for himself and the others.

In 1931 R. C. Borum purchased tax certificate No. 65 on lot 3 and tax certificate No. 66 op lot 4. The ad valorem taxes for each subsequent year on each lot (except for the year 1933 on one of the lots) were allowed to become delinquent and the lots sold to the county for said delinquent taxes. After each successive sale, Borum or one or more of the joint owners would redeem the lots and have the amount paid for the respective lot endorsed on one or the other of the above-mentioned tax certificates. According to the endorsements, redemption for some of the years was made in the name of R. C. Borum, some in the name of Warner, Borum, Warner, and one in the name of E. S. Warner.

In 1944 both lots were sold at resale for all the delinquent installments of city improvement taxes assessed against the lots as parts of paving districts 188 and 191 and sewer district No. 12. The total amount of such taxes, including the statutory penalty on lot 3, was $2,281.87, of which amount $1,883.96 was for paving and $403.91 was for sewer. This was an improved lot and was purchased at the resale by one Ernest Day for $1,365. The total amount of delinquent assessments on lot 4 was $2,332.52, of which $1,928.61 was for paving and $403.91 was for sewer. This was an unimproved lot and sold to one Norman E. Reynolds, Jr., for $145.

Thereafter Reynolds conveyed lot 4 to Day by quitclaim deed and Day commenced an action to quiet his title to both lots. Subsequently said cause was consolidated with an action brought by Carl S. Dalbey, holder of three of the paving bonds for payment of which the assessments in street improvement districts numbered 188 and 191 had been levied. Among the defendants in the consolidated action were Addie E. Butler, the holder of certain sewer warrants issued against the lots in sewer district No. 12, and R. C. Borum. In Borum’s answer he stated that he had served the statutory notice required for the delivery to him of a tax deed based on tax certificates numbered 65 and 66 and would apply for same 60 days from the date of said service. He also alleged that if he did not receive said deed, he was entitled to a lien for the total amount of the tax payments shown on the certificates, plus interest.

In his petition, Dalbey asserted a prior lien on the proceeds of the tax resale of said lots, alleging that as neither of them sold for an amount sufficient to pay the paving taxes thereon, the entire amount thereof should be apportioned to improvement districts 188 and 191, and prayed that the county treasurer be enjoined from apportioning or distributing any part thereof to payment of the sewer warrants, or to the delinquent ad valorem taxes for which Borum claimed a lien by reason of his tax certificates.

After a trial to the court at which it was stipulated that the defendants E. S. Warner, trustee, E. S. Warner, R. C. Borum, and W. S. Warner were in possession of and receiving rentals from the lots, judgment was rendered quieting Day’s title to the lots against all claims of the defendants and sustaining Dalbey’s claim to the entire proceeds of the tax resale. The court spe *321 cifically found that the sale canceled and extinguished all the unpaid assessments levied against the lots in street improvement districts numbered 188 and 191 and sewer district No. 12; that the unpaid paving assessments were a first and prior lien against the proceeds of said sales and that since said proceeds were less than the delinquent paving assessments, the entire sum should be applied thereon, and ordered the sale money disbursed accordingly. Both Borum and Addie Butler have appealed from said judgment.

Borum contends that the court erred in denying him a lien for the delinquent ad valorem taxes he had paid on the lots (as shown by tax certificates numbered 65 and 66, and certain of the endorsements thereon). On the authority of Board of County Commissioners of Seminole County v. City of Wewoka ex rel. North et al., 191 Okla. 142, 127 P. 826, he claims that said lien is coequal to Dalbey’s lien for paving taxes and that same was not discharged by the resale of the lots for special improvement taxes only. Day admits that according to said decision a resale for ad valorem taxes only does not extinguish a lien for delinquent special assessments and that conversely such sale for special assessment taxes only would not extinguish a lien in favor of the county for delinquent ad valorem taxes, but says that such a rule is not applicable here, where the county’s lien has been satisfied as evidenced by Borum’s tax certificates in the present case. He says Borum has no lien as holder of said certificates, either on the lots or the proceeds of their resale, for his purchase of same and the payments endorsed thereon were in legal contemplation merely a mode of paying taxes which he and his joint owners, W. S. Warner and E. S. Warner, were already obligated to pay, citing the well established rule adopted by this court in Brooks v. Garner, 20 Okla. 236, 94 P. 694 (and applied in other cases to the present date) as follows:

“One who is under a moral or legal obligation to pay the taxes is not in a position to become a purchaser at a sale for such taxes; and if such person permits the property to be sold, and buys it in either in person, or indirectly through the agency of another, he does not thereby acquire any right or title to the property, but his purchase is deemed a mode of paying taxes.”

Borum says this rule does not apply to this case for two reasons, the first of which is that he was under no obligation to pay the taxes on the lots, that this was the duty of his trustee, Warner, and that he as a cestui que trust or beneficiary of the trust estate was not personally responsible for obligations growing out of trust transactions. Though the legal title to the lots was in the name of E. S. Warner, as trustee, still Borum had an equitable interest therein, together with the other cestui ques, and by all of the authorities it was in all material aspects a taxable property interest so far as ad valorem taxation is concerned. See 54 Am. Jur. 93, sec. 102, pg. 95, sec. 105; Bogert, Trusts and Trustees, vol. 1, sec. 187, p. 524, sec. 191, p. 533; vol. 2, sec. 263, p. 845. 60 O.S. 1941 § 174 provides that liability for acts and omissions of the trustee extends to the whole of the trust estate, and 60 O.S. 1941 § 133 provides:

“Every person who, by virtue of any transfer or devise, is entitled to the actual possession of real property, and the receipts of the rents and profits thereof, is deemed to have a legal estate therein of the same quality and duration and subject to the same conditions as his beneficial interest.”

The Oklahoma Trust Act recognizes the duty of the trustee of an express trust to pay taxes levied or assessed against the trust .estate (60 O.S. 1941 § 175.24, par. K), but section 51 thereof (60 O.S.

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Bluebook (online)
1946 OK 208, 170 P.2d 246, 197 Okla. 319, 1946 Okla. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-trustee-v-day-okla-1946.