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Wilbur v. Van Vechten

The Supreme Court of Washington
Feb 26, 1932
8 P.2d 426 (Wash. 1932)

Opinion

No. 23374. Department Two.

February 26, 1932.

COURTS (36) — TAXATION (151) — RULE OF DECISION — STATE DECISIS — FORECLOSURE OF LIEN — NOTICE TO CITY. The rule that a general county foreclosure does not cut off local city assessments unless the city treasurer has been regularly served as required by Rem. Comp. Stat., § 9393, has become stare decisis.

EQUITY (46) — TAXATION (149) — LACHES — STALE DEMANDS — ACTION TO FORECLOSE TAX — LIMITATIONS. A town or private bondholder having the legal right, under Rem. Comp. Stat., § 9404, to commence an action for the foreclosure of local assessments at any time within ten years after the last installment falls due is not guilty of laches in delaying eight years before commencing an action to foreclose upon property supposed to have been foreclosed by the county, during which time the purchaser paid county taxes in the belief that he had clear title.

TAXATION (177, 178) — TAX TITLES — TITLE AND RIGHTS ACQUIRED — LIEN — LOCAL ASSESSMENTS — SUBROGATION. A purchaser at a county tax foreclosure takes subject to local assessments by towns not brought in, and is not, by the payment of subsequent taxes to the county, subrogated to the right of the county to its lien for such taxes, as against a town foreclosure of local liens not cut off by the county foreclosure.

Appeal from a judgment of the superior court for King county, Macfarlane, J., entered May 14, 1931, upon findings in favor of the plaintiff, in an action to foreclose delinquent local improvement assessments, tried to the court. Affirmed.

Peters, Evans McLaren, for appellant.

Meyers Couden, for respondent.


Respondent instituted this action, as the owner and holder of a number of bonds issued years ago by the town of Tolt, the name of which town was changed to Carnation and now renamed Tolt, in King county, against a local improvement district theretofore established by the town, to foreclose certain alleged delinquent local assessments which had been levied by the town in connection with this special improvement. Appellant was made a defendant because of his record ownership of certain lots in the improvement district on which assessments were still unpaid and delinquent. The facts are not in conflict, and may be briefly stated as follows:

In the early part of 1924, King county conducted a general tax foreclosure proceeding which resulted in these lots being acquired by King county at the tax foreclosure sale. The town of Tolt was not named as a defendant, and no summons or complaint was served upon its treasurer at any time before judgment.

In April, 1924, after such tax foreclosure sale, King county conveyed the twenty-four lots in controversy, and fifteen others, to appellant who bid them in, by county treasurer's deed. Appellant paid King county $990 for the property of which $606.13 went to King county on account of its general taxes, and the balance of $319.87 went to the local improvement fund of the town. Since that time, appellant has paid taxes on the property from year to year, in reliance upon his supposed unencumbered title, in the total sum of $254.84. The tax deed recites that the sum of $319.87 had been paid over to the town of Tolt in full liquidation of all local assessment liens theretofore existing against any of the lots. Appellant continued to pay taxes on all these lots, under the belief that his title was unencumbered, until the commencement of this action in May, 1929.

Previously, the same plaintiff (respondent) had instituted another foreclosure action against the same local improvement district in November, 1924, which he allowed to pend until a judgment of foreclosure was entered in November, 1925. In that former action, the same counsel appeared for plaintiff as appeared here. The property now in controversy was omitted from the first foreclosure, for the reason, as stated by counsel for respondent as a witness in this case, that he had some doubt that the local assessment lien as to these lots had been destroyed by the general tax foreclosure sale theretofore conducted by King county.

This doubt of counsel for respondent was removed by the decision of this court in Everett v. Morgan, 133 Wn. 225, 233 P. 317, 237 P. 508, decided in March, 1925. It was there decided that, unless a copy of the complaint in a county tax foreclosure action was served upon the town treasurer, the foreclosure proceedings would not operate to destroy any local assessment lien which the town might have levied against the property in question.

Appellant alleged a number of affirmative defenses, but of these he is now urging only the following:

(1) The three year statute of limitations, as controlling in suits attacking a tax title, under Rem. Comp. Stat., § 162.

(2) Laches on the part of respondent in standing by during a period since 1924 and allowing appellant to continue to pay taxes upon the property in the belief that his title was cleared of any local assessment liens, as recited in the deed by which King county had conveyed him the property.

(3) As an alternative defense, the appellant contends that, if neither of the foregoing defenses be sustained, then he should be subrogated to the position held by King county, namely, the holder of a general tax lien prior to the assessment lien herein sought to be foreclosed, for the full amount that he has paid to King county by way of taxes, aggregating $254.84, with interest on each amount at the legal rate of six per cent per annum from the date of the respective payments, which amounts to $300.33.

The trial court refused to sustain any of the contentions of appellant, entered a judgment foreclosing the local assessment liens against the lots owned by appellant, and this appeal results.

[1] Appellant first invokes the provisions of § 162, supra, which, in brief, requires actions to set aside or cancel the deed of any county treasurer issued after and upon the sale of lands for general state, county or municipal taxes, or for the recovery of lands sold for delinquent taxes, to be brought within three years from and after the date of the issuance of such treasurer's deed.

Appellant admits that this contention was rejected in Everett v. Morgan, supra, but argues that, since no vested rights have accrued to anyone in reliance upon that decision, it should be overruled as erroneous.

On the contrary, the rule of that decision has become stare decisis. It has been affirmed and reaffirmed repeatedly. First National Bank of East Palentine v. Pasco, 138 Wn. 309, 244 P. 975, 246 P. 304; State ex rel. Spokane v. Degraff, 143 Wn. 326, 255 P. 371; Perkins v. Kennewick, 143 Wn. 691, 254 P. 458; Tacoma v. Fletcher Realty Co., 150 Wn. 33, 272 P. 43.

Under these decisions, it has now become well settled that the purchaser at a tax foreclosure sale, where the city or town has not been regularly served as provided in Rem. Comp. Stat., § 9393, takes title subject to unpaid local improvement assessments.

Consequently, the first contention of appellant is untenable.

[2] Although the instant case is undoubtedly one of considerable hardship upon appellant, we cannot agree with the contention that respondent is guilty of laches in remaining idle as to the property of appellant in controversy from November, 1924, until the present action was begun. Rem. Comp. Stat., § 9394, which is the same as it was when the former cases were decided, gives the right to enforce such assessment liens, both to the municipal corporation creating them, or any other person having a right to begin such action, within ten years after the last installment of such assessments shall become delinquent. Rem. Comp. Stat., § 9404, authorizes any number of owners of property on which the bonds are a lien to be joined as defendants in such suits.

The result is that, under these statutory provisions and our decisions, respondent had a legal right to commence his foreclosure at any time within ten years, and a statutory right to make any number of owners of the property on which the bonds are a lien defendants in such suits. One is not required to bring all of them in in one action, and violates no legal duty in not doing so.

[3] Since appellant simply paid taxes after receiving the tax title on the lots to which he holds title, which taxes were presumably imposed for the support of the government and therefore for his benefit and protection, we can see no ground for the application of any principle of laches nor for any subrogation to the rights of King county for these subsequently paid taxes.

In Tacoma v. Fletcher Realty Co., supra, it was held that, even when the payment is made by the purchaser of the land at tax foreclosure sale conducted by the county itself, in exact compliance with the second paragraph of § 9393, supra, the purchaser takes it subject to the assessment lien. We can see no theory whatever on which appellant should be allowed to be subrogated to the right of King county for subsequent taxes paid by him solely as owner. There never was any relation of lien holders of different ranks created by the sale by King county as between it and the owner, who, at all times since, has been appellant. Hence, we find it useless to discuss the many cases cited by appellant as to the application of the right of subrogation under a variety of circumstances in the cases cited.

We can see no way by which appellant can obtain any relief under our law.

The judgment is affirmed.

TOLMAN, C.J., MILLARD, MAIN, and BEALS, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Wilbur v. Van Vechten

The Supreme Court of Washington
Feb 26, 1932
8 P.2d 426 (Wash. 1932)
Case details for

Wilbur v. Van Vechten

Case Details

Full title:I.R. WILBUR, Respondent, v. D.A. VAN VECHTEN, Appellant

Court:The Supreme Court of Washington

Date published: Feb 26, 1932

Citations

8 P.2d 426 (Wash. 1932)
8 P.2d 426
167 Wash. 22

Citing Cases

Sidlo, Simons Co. v. Phillips

) 233 P. 287; Tacoma Realty Company, (Wash.) 272 P. 43; Wilbur v. Van Vechten, (Wash.) 8 P.2d 426. The…