Marple v. Marple
Marple v. Marple
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Two of the defendants in this action, being the owners of a tract of land, mortgaged it to plaintiff’s testator to secure a debt due from them to him. Afterward they suffered the land to go to tax sale and deed. This deed, though good on its face, was voidable because of irregularities in the proceedings upon which it was based. It was placed on record, but the owners of the land always remained in possession. Before it had been on record five years the owners of the land obtained from the tax-deed holder a quitclaim deed, paying him $800 in cash and giving him a note for $500 secured by a mortgage on the land. This action was brought more than five years after the recording of the tax deed, to foreclose the first mortgage. The holder of this $500
We think the court below erred in holding that the lien of the last mortgage was the superior one. At the time the owners of the land purchased the interest of the tax-deed holder and received a quitclaim from him, the tax deed had not ripened into a title; it had not become efficient to cut off the prior title; no new title had arisen. A tax deed had issued, but it was voidable; it might never rise to the dignity •and potency of a title. To accomplish this, possession must have been obtained under it, and it must have been on record for five years. At this juncture the owner of the original title bestirred himself, and sought to avert the threatened danger. To do this he needed $800. He had $300 and must have $500 more, or get the owner of the threatening title to give him credit for that sum.
It is claimed in the brief of plaintiff in error tliat the $300 cash paid was more than sufficient to pay all the tax liens then existing, but there is nothing in the record supporting such claim. However, we do not think it material. The transaction between the holder of the tax deed and the owner of the land amounted in law simply to the extinguishment of the tax lien arising upon the cancelation of the voidable tax deed. And whether that lien amounted to but $300, the cash paid, or the entire $800, makes no difference.-
The holder of the tax title was' content to surrender his prior lien, to which he was entitled under the the statute for the taxes paid, and accept in lieu thereof another and different kind of lien, to wit, a mortgage. In doing so, he waived his first lien and took a subordinate one. It was as though the owner
It is suggested that, as this action was not brought until the expiration of more than five years after the recording of this tax deed, the latter, as an instrument of title, had become efficient, and that, therefore, the second mortgage had become superior. Not so. The tax deed became innoxious, and its adversary character was, extinguished and merged when its holder' conveyed by quitclaim deed his interest therein to the owner of the original and threatened title, and that was, as we have seen, before the new title had matured. And besides this, no possession had even been taken under the tax deed; for surely it will not be claimed that the possession of the owner of the original title was changed to a possession under this incipient title upon the receipt of the quitclaim deed ? Such a claim would merge the greater into the less and not the less into the greater.
The judgment of the court below will be reversed, with the direction to proceed in accordance with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- R. S. Marple, as etc. v. W. F. Marple
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. Title and Ownership — Tax Title — Priority of Mortgages. Where one holding a voidable tax deed executes a quitclaim to the owner of the premises and takes a note secured by a mortgage thereon in payment of the sum agreed on for such quitclaim deed, the holder of the tax deed thereby waives his tax lien, and his mortgage is inferior to another mortgage previously given.