Court Opinion

ID: 8064574
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:43:30.851616+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:10.008541
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Swayze, J.
Tf it were necessary we could not avoid holding upon the ease as presented that there was no proof that the deed to Schuster had ever been legally delivered. It is not necessary to go as far as that. Assuming in favor of the respondents that it was delivered, the failure to record- it until after Mitsch. had recorded his deed is fatal to the alleged Schuster title. There is no question that Mitsch was a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration not having notice thereof. As to him, the statute makes the Schuster deed void and of no effect. Comp. Stat., p. 1553, pl. 54. The law was not different in 1894. Gen. Stat., p. 882, pl. 145. There can he no question that Mitsclds deed conveys the lots; the boundaries as stated therein plainly cover them; the fact is confirmed by the testimony of the grantor and of the surveyor, *606and was, in effect, acknowledged by Scheie when he served a notice calling upon Mitsch to redeem. The fact that MitsclTs deed included the lots was not disputed; the controversy was only whether they were included in the assessment of the “lumber yard'"' by Ihese words álone. This was an immaterial issue, since the proceedings are otherwise fatally defective.
“The power to sell lands for taxes is a naked power, and the validity of the title derived from such a sale depends upon a strict compliance with the directions of the statute. The onus probandi is upon the purchaser at such a sale, and he must show affirmatively that everything had been done which the statute malees essential to the due execution of the power.” Woodbndge v. State, Allen, prosecutor, 43 N. J. L. 262. The first and most important essential is a valid assessment. Without that, alf ihe proceedings are a mere nullity. Under our statute one of the requisites of a valid assessment is notice of some kind to the owner. The collector is required, by section 42 of the Tax art, within sixty days after the receipt of the tax duplicate, to demand payment of the tax from each taxpayer in person or by-notice left at his residence or mailed postage prepaid to the taxpayer if his post-office address is known to the collector. Although this section of the statute provides that no proceedings for collection shall he invalid for lack of the notice or demand, it is obvious that this saving clause was meant only to prevent the -failure of a tax lien in cases where the collector could not readify make the demand. In a case like the present, where it is shown .that the owner was well known to him, lived in the same town, and was supposed at least to have been already assessed and_ to have paid taxes on the property regularly for three years immediately preceding, there can he no excuse for ihe failure to give notice and demand payment of the tax as the statute requires, except the fact that, as is now said, the property was not included by the assessor in the assessment of the “lumber yard.” This, however*, does noi excuse the collector. He himself undertook to assess the lots as omitted property under ihe authority given to him by section 28 of the Tax act. Comp. *607Stat., p. 5107, pl. 28. That section requires him to give the owner immediate notice of the entry of the assessment on the duplicate and of the time and place of the next meeting of the commissioners of appeal. There is no saving clause in this section as in section 42, and the- decisions do not suggest a qualification of the necessity of notice except in the case of non-residents where actual service is. impossible. The decisions, it is true, were not in cases of omitted properly added by the collector under section 1 of tlie act of 18-18 (Gen. Stat., p. 3290, pl, 56), but in cases of property added or assessed at a higher valuation by the commissioners of appeal under section 2 of the act (Id., pl. 57) ; but the revisers, in 1903, by combining the tvo sections in the present section 28, must have meant that the same rule was applicable to each case, and by omitting to introduce in section 28 the saving clause of section 42, sufficiently indicated that the requirement of notice under the former section was more stringent than under the latter. There is a valid reason for making it more stringent. The taxpayer may be assumed to know that iiis property is liable to tax and be held to the duty of ascertaining whether it lias been assessed by the assessor; but he may on Ills part assume that the general short description, which the assessor is authorized to adopt, includes aU his property liable to assessment, especially since lie may properly assume that the assessor has performed his public duty to assess all property liable to taxation. On the oilier hand when, as in this case, it is claimed that a part of the property lias been omitted by the assessor, the taxpayer is entitled to know wliat the claim of the collector is, so that he may take proper proceedings to present the facts before the appellate tribunal provided by statute, in this case there was a failure to give notice to Mitsch, the owner, and his interest m the lots could not be affected by the subsequent proceedings. When, therefore, the collector attempted by a sale and the certificate thereof to affect Mitsch’s title, the latter had a right to question the proceedings by certiorari. Mitsch’s title is that of owner in fee and the certificate of sale is nugatory for want of a legal assessment on which to rest. If it be said *608that the collector cannot be supposed to decide between conflicting titles, it is sufficient answer to say that he cannot sell the property except upon proceedings against the owner, and if he desires to avoid the risk of losing the tax, he must notify all parties who seem to have a title. If this Avere.not required, an owner of land would be placed in the unfortunate posilion in which Mitsch finds himself. Without notice of a tax, without any reason to expect any tax other than that levied by the assessor, after paying all that he ought to have anticipated it aves bis duty to pay, and without being afforded an opportunity to contest or even to pay the additional tax demanded, he finds himself deprived of property which he has been at an expense to improve for business purposes. The legislature never contemplated so gross an injustice, and in order to prevent it, has required the notice that was not given in this case.
These considerations are enough to dispose of the case. It is probably well, hoAvever, to call attention to other errors equally fatal. Woodbridge v. Allen, above cited, holds that on the hearing of a certiorari brought to review the proceedings on which a tax title is founded, the common law rule applies that one who claims under a tax sale must show, affirmatively, that the tax was duly assessed, and was a lien on the lands, and that the successive steps which led to the sale were regularly taken. Such facts, if they do not appear by the proceedings returned with the writ, must be shoAvn by the recitals in the certificate of sale or by proof aliuncle. It Avas also held in that case that where the writ of certiorari calls for all documents and proceedings, tire return must be taken to contain a full statement of all the proceedings that were had. The court was there dealing with the effect of section 15 of the Sale of Land act. Comp. Stat., p. 1679. The provisions of the present act are no stronger than that. The certificate of sale is only presumptive eA'idenee of the title of the purchaser and of the regularity and validity of the pro-: eeedings. Comp. Stat., p. 5135, pl. 56, at the end. When we examine the return and the certificate in this case Ave find a very complete failure to set forth what the statute requires. *609The certificate, indeed, contains some of the recitals required to be contained therein, but on a direct attack by certiorari this does not suffice under the rule of Woodbridge v. Allen, and there is no proof aliunde. The defects are serious. There is nothing in the certifícale or return to show that the tax was unpaid unless we guess it from a recital of the assessment and tiie sale; nothing to show proceedings to perfect a lien by filing with the county clerk as required by section 50; indeed, the return says, and the township clerk testifies, that there was no list of delinquent taxpayers for 1908. There is nothing to show that the tax was in arrear on July 1st, 1909, as .required by section 51; or that public notice was given of the time and place of sale, stating the names of delinquents and the land to he sold, and the amount of the delinquent taxes; or that advertisement was made in newspapers or by posting in five public places. The collector was a witness- but did not testify on this subject. Tí we could assume that these facts were not litigated, we could not in the same way overcome the failure to give notice of the sale to the owner, for there is uncontradicted evidence; ihat no such notice was given. As if the failure to comply with section 51 was not fatal enough, there was a failure, at least as far as appears, to comply with section 51, by filing a report with the clerk of the taxing district of the collector’s proceedings with proof of publication, posting and mailing. The clerk was called as a witness, but was not questioned on this topic. It would be difficult to find a proceeding more erroneous. The defects are not merely of formal or technical procedure ; they go to the substantial merits. Even when it came to the redemption of the property from the sale, Mitsch was given no chance to redeem. Although Scheie, the purchaser, served a notice calling upon him to redeem, the collector refused him the right solely on the ground that he vas a stranger to the title, thus assuming to pass on a legal question and deciding it wrong. It is not important that the tax was not tendered in cash or that there may have been an error of a few cents in calculating the interest — the refusal to accept the payment *610was not put on either of these grounds, and it would have been idle to make a further and more formal tender.
After the argument in this court a point was made by supplemental brief, that was not presented in the court below. It is said that the writ of certiorari was allowed too late, and section 14 of the Certiorari act is appealed to. Since the point was not made in the Supreme Court, we need not consider it now. We ought not to do so since the limitation is not applicable in cases where the assesment is made in violation of constitutional rights. (Cases have been recently collected by Mr. Justice Trenehard in Walsh v. Newark, 18 N. J. L. 168.) We do not. know what facts might have been brought to the attention of the Supreme Court, if this point had been made there.
The judgment must be reversed, and the récord remitted to the Supreme Court in order that a judgment may be there’ entered setting aside the proceedings. Since the taz was illegally assessed, and our decision disposes of the whole case, the appellant is entitled to costs in both courts.
For affirmance — None.
For reversal — The Chancellor, Chief Jcjstice, Swayee, Bergen, Kalisch, Black, Bogei.t, Vbedenburgh HepPENHEIMEK, WILLIAMS, JJ. 10.