Court Opinion

ID: 8060467
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 04:37:45.39356+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:02.367971
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Reed, J.
The question propounded is, whether a mortgage upon land which is exempt from taxation is liable to taxation. Immunity is claimed by the mortgagee under the language of the first section of the act of 1876. Rev., p. 1163, ■§ 109. This section provides that hereafter no mortgage or •debt secured thereby shall be assessed for taxation unless a deduction therefor shall have been claimed by the owner of the land and allowed by the assessor. No deduction on ■account of the present mortgage was or could have been ■claimed by the owner of the land.
It is apparent at a glance that if we regard only the letter •of the section quoted, the present mortgage is included in the *580class of lion-ratable mortgages. But to stop with this literal construction of the statutory meaning would, in my judgnient, illustrate the force of the maxim, Qui haeret in litera' haeret in eortiee. I am convinced, from a consideration of the reason which must have induced this legislation, and from am inspection of the whole act, that it was not the legislative-intent to include within the class of mortgages mentioned' those upon lands exempt from taxation. It is a statute dealing; with the matter of deductions.
It relieves the mortgagee from a liability to be taxed im case no deduction is claimed and allowed. If no deduction is-claimed, the landowner, of course, practically pays the tax.. So the act is designed for the single purpose of fixing the-right of the mortgagor and the obligation of the mortgagee-in respect of - a single matter, namely, whether a deduction is- or is not claimed.
The only condition that would afford any ground for the- ■ propriety of such an act would be the existence of mortgages-upon land, from the ratable value of which such mortgages-could be deducted. If all the mortgages in the state were-secured upon lands exempt from taxation, the act-, in its whole-scope, would have been nonsensical. As there would them have been nothing from which a deduction could have been-made, such a thing as a claim for a deduction would have-been impossible. Therefore, the provisions in the act pointing out the place where the deducted mortgage shall be-assessed, namely, in the taxing district where the land lies-from the value of which the deduction is to be made, would have been meaningless. It is only when we consider the fact that the mass of mortgages is upon taxable lands, and the-landowner has the right and ability to claim a deduction, that-the terms of the statute become apt and consistent.
So it appears that the only condition of affairs calling for this legislative regulation was the existence of deductible real estate mortgages. The directions contained in the act seems to show that these were the only mortgages upon which the-. *581statute was intended to operate. The mortgage now in question is not within the class affected by the act of 1876.
In addition, it may be observed that statutes dealing with' ■deductions have been restricted to those debts which were assessable to some one. While it is the object of such statutes to prevent double taxation, judicial sentiment has been in favor of the view that they were not intended as a means of ■evading all taxation of the credit.
The terms of section 78 of the Tax act (Rev., p. 1157) . expressly makes it lawful to deduct debts due to a creditor within the state. Yet in State, Montgomery, pros., v. Trenton, 11 Vroom 89, it was declared that there existed no-purpose in this legislation to relieve the debtor unless the tax could be collected from the creditor. So, in State, Davison, pros., v. Silvers, 12 Vroom 505, it was held that the act now invoked by the mortgagee did not permit a deduction unless the mortgage was taxable against the mortgagee.
While these decisions do not of necessity lead up to the 'conclusion that the converse of the proposition is true, and :that"a niortgage which is hot assessed to the debtor must be -assessed to the creditor, yet they have weight from the circumstance that, they negative a legislative intention in these acts to grant entire immunity from taxation to both mortgagor •and mortgagee.
This would be the result if the present mortgage is not assessable against the mortgagee.
My conclusion is, that the mortgage is subject to taxation.
While I have arrived at this conclusion, I am, nevertheless, aiuable to see how the present assessment is to be supported. 'This assessment is made by the assessor of Oxford township, where the mortgaged land lies. The mortgagee lives in Bel-videre.
Aside from the provisions of the act of 1876, already discussed, mortgages, like all other credits, were assessed at the •domicil of the owner. This mortgage was not so assessed, but was assessed in supposed conformity with the directions •of the second section of the act of 1876. But the mortgages *582which are to be so assessed are those named in the first section, namely, those for which a deduction has been claimed. Indeed, the ground upon which this mortgage has been held to be assessable is that it was not included within the class of mortgages affected by that act. If unaffected by'the terms of the statute, then it is assessable at the domicil of the mortgagee in the town of JBelvidere.
But inasmuch as a tax upon this mortgage is due, and the error consists in the selection of a wrong taxing district, I think that under the terms of the act of 1881 (Rev. Sup., p. 602, § 487) we should direct that the said mortgage be added to the ratable property in the duplicate of the town of Belvidere, and be there collected as other taxes, which were there properly assessed and remain unpaid, are collectible.
Let such an order be entered.