Fischel v. Thompson
Fischel v. Thompson
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiff brought an equitable action to establish and enforce a lien upon certain real estate owned by the defendant for the amount of certain taxes thereon paid by the plaintiff, and appeals from a judgment dismissing the complaint. The facts proven were simple and not disputed. 'The defendant had a first mortgage upon the premises, and the plaintiff a second mortgage. The defendant brought an action to foreclose her mortgage and made the plaintiff a defendant, alleging generally that the present plaintiff had or claimed to have some interest in or lien upon the mortgaged premises, which interest or lien, if any, accrued subsequently to the lien of her mortgage. The present plaintiff had redeemed the premises from certain tax sales prior to the commencement of that action, and made other redemptions during the pendency of the action, and recorded the statutory notice of such redemptions under Stats. 1898, sec. 1159. He
It is plain that the action cannot be sustained. By redeeming the land from the tax sales the plaintiff discharged the tax liens and acquired a lien therefor of the same nature as his mortgage lien, and constituting simply an addition to his mortgage lien. Burchard v. Roberts, 70 AVis. 111, 35 N. W. 286; Hill v. Buffington, 106 Wis. 525, 82 N. W. 712; Stats. 1898, secs. 1158-1160. lie was made a defendant in the foreclosure action under the usual allegation that his lien, if any, Avas subject to the lien of the first mortgage, and the-judgment rendered in that action, under very familiar principles, cut off his mortgage lien and the additions made to' it by his tax redemptions. This principle was fully recognized in the case of Hill v. Buffington, suprabut in that case the-first mortgagee had expressly recognized in his complaint the-existence of the unredeemed tax certificates held by the second mortgagee, and had not attacked them. Under such circumstances Ave held that the usual judgment of foreclosure could not be construed as referring to such certificates or liens, and hence, when the first mortgagee sued in equity to set them aside as a cloud upon the title, it was held that he-would be required to do equity by first paying the amount of the tax liens. There is no such case here. The present defendant, in her foreclosure action, in no way misled the
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
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