Summary
In Wilkins v. Lenon, 182 Ark. 953, 33 S.W.2d 1093, there was a foreclosure sale for delinquent municipal improvement district assessments.
Summary of this case from Word, Receiver v. GrigsbyOpinion
Opinion delivered December 22, 1930.
1. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT — REDEMPTION. — A mistake of the collector of an improvement district regarding the amount of taxes and cost to be paid for redemption did not defeat the right to redeem under Crawford Moses' Dig., 5644. 2. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — REDEMPTION FROM IMPROVEMENT TAX SALE. — The owner offering to redeem from a street improvement tax sale could rely on the collector to give correct information as to the amount necessary to redeem. 3. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — REDEMPTION FROM STREET TAX. — The owner offering to redeem from a street improvement tax sale was not required to ask specifically whether there had been a decree of foreclosure. 4. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — RIGHT TO REDEEM. — A mortgagee acquiring title by foreclosure could redeem a lot from a sale for street improvement tax. 5. MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS — RIGHT TO REDEEM. — A purchaser at tax sale or his assignee cannot be an innocent purchaser as against the statutory right of the owner to redeem.
Appeal from Arkansas Chancery Court, Southern District; Harvey R. Lucas, Chancellor; affirmed.
Danaher Danaher, for appellant.
Donham Fulk, for appellee.
STATEMENT OF FACTS.
J. F. Lenon and People's Trust Company brought this suit in equity against Street Improvement District No. 2 and J. A. Wilkins to redeem a certain lot in the city of DeWitt for the non-payment of street improvement taxes for the year 1922. The lot was struck off to the street improvement district which transferred its certificate of purchase to J. A. Wilkins.
J. M. Lowe was the original owner of the lot, and executed a mortgage on it and certain other property to the People's Savings Bank of Little Rock, Arkansas, for the sum of $30,000. The mortgage was duly filed for record, and provided that the mortgagor should pay all taxes and improvement district assessments on the property while the mortgage or deed of trust was in force. The lot had a two-story brick building on it and was worth about $12,000. Lowe made default in the payment of the mortgage indebtedness, and a foreclosure suit was brought in the chancery court. Judgment was render in favor of the bank against Lowe in the sum of $34,607.11, and this was declared, to be a first lien upon the lot in question and certain other property. Pursuant to the terms of the decree, default having been made in the payment of the judgment in the time prescribed in the decree, the property was sold on April 18, 1923, and the bank became the purchaser for the sum of $25,000. A commissioner's deed conveying the property to the bank was executed on April 20, 1923, and filed for record on May 5, 1923.
The lot in question was situated in Street Improvement District No. 2 of DeWitt, which was organized under the general laws of the State in 1915. The assessed benefits against the lot in question amounted to $50 in installments of $1.50 per annum. The assessment for the year 1922 was not paid; and on the 4th day of September, 1922, the improvement district brought suit in equity to foreclose its lien for the non-payment of the assessment. At the sale under the decree of foreclosure in favor of the district, the lot was struck off to the district on January 18, 1924, for the sum of $5.90, being the amount of taxes, penalty and costs; and a certificate of purchase was issued to it.
According to the evidence in favor of the plaintiffs in this suit, sometime in 1928 an agent of the mortgagee, People's Trust Company, went to the collector of the improvement district and asked what were the delinquent assessments on the property for Street Improvement District No. 2. The agent of the mortgagee told the collector that he wanted to pay all the delinquent street improvement taxes on the lot. The collector gave the agent of the bank the amount of the taxes for the years 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927 and 1928, and said that they were all the taxes that were due. The agent of the bank paid these taxes. The bank did not know there were any delinquent improvement district taxes against the lots until 1928. The collector of the improvement district had been the agent of the bank for the collection of the rents on the property, but had failed to notify it that there were any delinquent improvement district taxes due. According to the testimony of the collector, he did not notify the bank that there were any delinquent taxes due because it was not his duty to do so under his contract of agency with the bank. He admitted that he had been collector of the improvement district from the time it was organized up to and including the year 1928. He returned the property as delinquent for the non-payment of the assessment for 1922. He denied that he told the agent of the bank that there were no other taxes due than for the years mentioned by the agent in his testimony. He said that he did not know at the time about what amount was due under the foreclosure decree. After the bank had offered to redeem the land for the non-payment of the delinquent assessments, the collector of the district transferred its certificate of purchase to J. A. Wilkins. Wilkins had told him that he wished to buy something along that line, and he allowed him to buy the lot in question.
The sum of $5.90 was paid into the treasury of the court to be paid to the defendant, J. A. Wilkins. Other facts will be stated or referred to in the opinion.
It was decreed that the title to the lot be quieted in J. F. Lenon and the People's Trust Company, as their respective interests may appear, against all claims of J. A. Wilkins and Mrs. J. A. Wilkins. To reverse that decree, J. A. Wilkins has duly prosecuted an appeal to this court.
(after stating the facts). The first and most important question in this case is whether an offer to the collector of the street improvement district of payment of all the past-due taxes or assessments upon the lot in question and a payment by the owner of all sums made known to him by the collector are equivalent to an actual payment of the whole and will operate as a redemption from the tax sale.
In Forehand v. Higbee, 133 Ark. 191, 202 S.W. 29, it was held that where a deputy county clerk in the discharge of his official duties issues a certificate of redemption, the landowner has a right to rely upon it as containing the correct amount of taxes, penalty and costs due by him, and that the payment of the sum contained in it is effectual as a statutory redemption. It was further held that a taxpayer cannot be deprived of his right of redemption by the neglect of duty on the part of the officers of the State. Many cases from courts of last resort, including the case of Martin v. Barbour, 140 U.S. 634, 11 S.Ct. 944, were cited in favor of the rule.
The principles announced in that case apply with equal force in the case of the redemption from delinquent street improvement district taxes. The parties acting in the redemption are the owner and the officer. It is the duty of the owner to apply for the redemption, but the officer must furnish him with the means of making his tender. The officer who is the legal custodian of the books and entries of the taxes and costs must necessarily know the sum to be tendered. It is the duty of the collector to give the owner or his agent this information when asked for it; and if he mistakes the amount of taxes and costs to be paid for the redemption, his mistake shall not defeat the redemption. The owner, having called for the amount and having paid all demanded for the redemption, cannot be involved in the loss of his land by the mistake of the officer.
In the present case, the bank acted in good faith. Through its agent, it went to the collecting officer of the improvement district at his office and asked for the delinquent improvement district taxes due and offered to pay the whole amount necessary for the redemption of the lot. Reliance was placed in good faith on the statement of the collector, and the amount claimed by him to be due was paid to him. The agent of the bank was justified in so doing and was not required to personally examine the books and ascertain if the amount demanded was correct. The owner had a right to rely upon the assurance of the officer with whom he was required to deal in the matter to correctly inform him of the proper amount necessary to redeem the lot. The agent testified positively that he asked the collector for all delinquent street improvement assessments and told him that he wished to pay the amount due in order to redeem the land. He did pay the amount given him by the collector.
It is true that he did not specifically ask if there was any decree of foreclosure, but this was not necessary. His offer to redeem included this amount. While the collector of the district testified that the agent for the bank did not ask about all the delinquent improvement district taxes, he is contradicted by the surrounding circumstances. He had been the agent of the bank in renting the property and knew that it was valuable property. The amount of street improvement district taxes due annually was only $1.50. The amount, including taxes and costs in the foreclosure decree, was only $5.90. The collector must have known that the owner of the property was offering to pay all the delinquent street improvement assessments. To allow the sale to appellant to stand would be to assist the improvement district as an agent of the State to take advantage of its own wrong. The right to redeem is a substantial right given by statute, and was prevented from being exercised within the statutory period of five years by the neglect on the part of the collector of the improvement district to do his duty. Section 5644 of the Digest gives the owner the right of redemption at any time within five years from the date of the sale. The record shows that the offer to redeem was made within the five years allowed by statute, and that a tender of the amount necessary to redeem was deposited in the registry of the court after the refusal of the defendant Wilkins to accept the same.
It is true that Lowe was the original owner of the land, and that the foreclosure for the non-payment of the delinquent street improvement assessment was against him. Lowe had mortgaged the land to the bank, and the bank had foreclosed its mortgage and had become the holder of the legal title to the lot at the time the offer to redeem was made. Therefore, the bank had the right to redeem, and its right could not be defeated by the sale of the property by the district to Wilkins because the latter acquired no better title than the district itself had. The statute gave the right to redeem, and there could be no such thing as an innocent purchaser at a tax sale or from one who purchased at a tax sale as against the statutory right of redemption. Bradbury v. Johnson, 104 Ark. 108, 147 S.W. 865, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 419.
The conclusion we have reached renders it unnecessary to consider other questions argued by counsel in their brief or to abstract the facts upon which such arguments are based. It follows that the decree of the chancery court was correct, and it will be affirmed.