Ashley Realty Co., Inc. v. Metropolitan District

46 A.2d 13, 132 Conn. 551, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 29, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 A.2d 13 (Ashley Realty Co., Inc. v. Metropolitan District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ashley Realty Co., Inc. v. Metropolitan District, 46 A.2d 13, 132 Conn. 551, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 99 (Colo. 1946).

Opinion

Jennings, J.

This action to quiet title was brought under the provisions of General Statutes, § 5035, to test the validity of a lien for benefits assessed by the defendant. The latter in its answer claimed damages in the amount of the lien and interest. The trial court found the lien to be void and gave judgment for the plaintiff as regards the claim for damages in the answer.

The defendant is a municipal corporation created by 20 Special Laws 1204 and has a limited jurisdiction in Hartford and certain neighboring towns. Section 60 (p. 1224) of-the act provides that assessments for benefits for public improvements shall be a lien on the land benefited from the'time of the passage by the district board of a vote laying out or ordering the construction of the improvement, provided that a *553 caveat shall, within thirty days, be entered in a record kept by the district clerk, but that the lien shall not remain in force for a longer period than three months from the date of the last publication of the notice of final layout or completion of the improvement unless the bureau of public works of the district “shall within that time, lodge with the town clerk of the town wherein the land lies, for record, a certificate signed by the clerk of said bureau.”

The finding, with such corrections as are required, may be summarized as follows: The first schedule of assessment was published September 30, 1939. On November 18, 1939, the defendant duly filed a caveat with the district clerk, claiming a lien as of November 13, 1939, and it was entered on his records. The plaintiff bought the property on March 15, 1940, after having the title searched. It had no actual notice of the caveat. The construction of the sewer, the improvement in question, was completed on or about October 24, 1940, and the date of the last publication of notice of that completion was October 28, 1940.

On.January 27, 1941, within the three-month period designated by the act, the clerk of the defendant took a number of certificates of lien, including the one in question, to the office of the town clerk of Hartford, in which town the land lay. He did not visit that part of the town clerk’s office used by the public but went into the office of the assistant town clerk. He deposited the certificates on the desk of the latter, in his presence, indicating that he was depositing certificates of lien for the defendant. He left the office without paying or offering to pay the recording fees nor was such payment sought by the assistant town clerk. Thereafter the town clerk sent the bureau of public works of the defendant a bill for the recording of all of the certificates of lien which had been depos *554 ited on the desk of the assistant town clerk. The bill was dated January 27, 1941, the date of the deposit of the certificates, and was paid by check dated February 14, 1941. The trial court concluded, in effect, that the0 certificate in controversy was neither lodged for record nor recorded until February 18, 1941, when it was stamped “Received Feb. 18, 1941, 11:11 a.m., and recorded in the records of the town of Hartford.”

General Statutes, § 321, provides, in part, that “the town clerk shall, on receipt of any instrument for record, write thereon the day, month, year and time of day when he received it, and the record shall bear the same date and time of day; but he shall not be required to receive any instrument for record unless the fee for recording it shall be paid to him in advance.” The plaintiff claims that payment of the recording fee was a condition precedent to the sufficient filing of the certificates. The defendant claims that by leaving the certificates with the assistant town clerk um.er the circumstances described it performed its entire duty and that in the absence of any request for payment it was not required to pay in advance.

The act provides that the lien shall not continue more than three months unless the. bureau of public works shall, within that time, lodge the certificate for record. It follows that the lien is continued if the certificate is lodged for record within the time limited. To lodge is “To place or deposit for safeguard or preservation; as, to lodge money or records in a place of deposit.” Webster’s New International Dictionary (1936). The certificate was lodged for record, therefore the lien was continued. No other reasonable construction of the meaning of the act is possible. It does not contain the limitation in the recording act (General Statutes, § 5010) that “No conveyance shall be effectual to hold any land against any other person *555 but the grantor and his heirs, unless recorded on the records of the town in which the land lies.” The defendant did everything it was required to do by the act. Oats v. Walls, 28 Ark. 244, 248; Ridley v. McGehee, 13 N. C. 40, 45. Under the circumstances of this case, the payment of the recording fee was not a condition precedent to the lodging of the certificate for record. See Butchers’ Ice & Supply Co. v. Bascom, 109 Conn. 433, 441, 146 Atl. 843; Livingston Finance Corporation v. Baudin, 10 La. App. 17, 18, 120 So. 401; Lucas, Sergeant &c. v. Clafflin & Co., 76 Va. 269, 281; American Exchange National Bank v. Colonial Trust Co. (Tex. Civ. App.), 186 S. W. 361. The trial court erred in finding the lien invalid.

The defendant filed an answer in which it claimed judgment for the amount of the lien with interest and lien fees. This was treated by the parties and the court as though it had been entitled a counterclaim. If we assume without deciding that a counterclaim for money damages is proper in a suit to quiet title and that the defendant can sue in personam and is not restricted to its remedy against the real property, it still cannot recover against the plaintiff. It is not questioned that the caveat correctly stated the time when the lien attached as November 13, 1939. See Dann v. Woodruff, 51 Conn. 203; Tomes v. Thompson, 112 Conn. 190, 194, 151 Atl. 531. The plaintiff took title on March 15, 1940. The work was completed on or about October 24, 1940. The questions on this phase of the case are: Was there a personal obligation to pay the assessment and, if so, when did it come into existence? Section 55 of the charter, 20 Special Laws 1222, provides in part: “ . . . said board may assess the . . . expense . . . upon persons whose property is . . . specially benefited thereby, arid estimate the proportion of such expense which such persons shall *556 respectively defray, or enforce the collection of the same, or may, if it shall deem it advisable, assess the expense of any such public work directly upon land benefited. . .” It thus distinguishes between such an assessment and the imposition of a lien on the land.

"The party against whom a tax is assessed is directly liable for the tax and his duty [to pay it] is clear.” Middletown Savings Bank v. Bacharach, 46 Conn. 513, 524.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A.2d 13, 132 Conn. 551, 1946 Conn. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ashley-realty-co-inc-v-metropolitan-district-conn-1946.