Ballard v. Park Place Land Co.

12 A.2d 247, 127 N.J. Eq. 192, 26 Backes 192, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 93
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 9, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 A.2d 247 (Ballard v. Park Place Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ballard v. Park Place Land Co., 12 A.2d 247, 127 N.J. Eq. 192, 26 Backes 192, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 93 (N.J. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

Buchanan, V. C.

Certain premises in the City of Trenton owned by Park Place Land Company were sold to the city of Trenton on March 2d, 1937, for unpaid taxes. On July 19th, 1938, under and pursuant to the provisions of R. S. 1987, App. A:4-1 (originally Pamph. L. 1933, Special Session, chapter 6, page 1304.) Ballard, the tax collector of the City of Trenton, filed petition in this court and obtained order appointing him receiver of the rents and income of the said property.

On Eebruary 14th, 1940, as the result of petition filed herein by the owner, the receiver filed an amended accounting *193 by him as said receiver of the rents and income from said premises. To this amended account exceptions were filed by the aforesaid owner of the premises; and the matter has been duly brought on for hearing on the exceptions.

The receiver, by his amended account, charges himself with a total of rents received aggregating $3,190, and prays allowance for a few disbursements aggregating $115.76, and for the balance, ($3,074.24), paid by him to the City of Trenton on account of the latter’s tax lien.

The exceptions filed by the owner substantially amount to this, — that the receiver should have collected rents amounting to $6,560 instead of only $3,190, and should be therefore surcharged with the sum of $3,370.

There is no substantial dispute, if indeed any, as to the facts. It appears that at the time of the appointment of the receiver to collect the rents, the premises were occupied by a tenant, Grace Fields, under a lease from the owner, at the weekly rent of $80. On or about February 6th, 1940, the aforesaid tenant of the premises paid to the City of Trenton the sum of $17,591 in redemption or purchase of the tax title certificate, which sum was accepted by the city as the full amount due to the city over and above the $3,074.24 turned over to the city by the rent receiver aforesaid; and the receiver was discharged from further duty except the duty to account.

The owner makes no contention that the receiver was under any duty to collect rents accruing after the date of such redemption or purchase. The contention is simply that the receiver should have collected rent of $80 a week during the period of 82 weeks between the date of his appointment, July 19th, 1938, and the date of such receipt by the city of the full amount due to it.

It further appears that, in the middle of 1939, the tenant having fallen into arrears for a period of about five months, the rent receiver commenced eviction proceedings in the city district court and obtained a warrant of removal. The order however allowed the tenant one month in which to remove before being evicted. Admittedly the rent receiver made no objection to the city district court against this provision for *194 a month’s delay. Before the month expired, moneys were deposited and negotiations commenced for the redemption of the tax title certificate as aforesaid; and no rents were collected by the rent receiver from and after July 25th, 1939.

It is quite apparent from the testimony of the receiver (and from the argument of his counsel), that he did not conceive of himself, as such receiver, as owing any duty or obligation to the owner of the premises, but felt that the only thing he need concern himself about was obtaining for the city the full amount due the city on the tax title certificate. This is also the position taken and the argument made by his counsel in contending against any surcharge'and in seeking the allowance of the account as filed and the discharge of the receiver from all further liability.

In that view this court cannot concur. Mr. Ballard as receiver of the rents, under the appointment by this court as aforesaid, was an entirely separate and different person in the eyes of the law from the Mr. Ballard as tax collector of the City of Trenton. As such rent receiver he was a fiduciary for both parties in interest, and accountable not only to the City of Trenton, but also to the owner of the premises, for his acts and conduct as such fiduciary. His duty was to protect the interests of both, — not merely the interest of the city alone.

Obviously the owner had at least as great an interest as the city, that the rents should be collected from the tenant as they accrued. Hnder the order appointing the receiver, the owner was restrained from any collection of any rents or any acts which would interfere with the collection of rents by the receiver. If the receiver did not collect the rents, the owner could not collect them. The receiver was under the duty of acting, with regard to the collection of the accruing rents, as an ordinarily reasonable and prudent man would have acted if the premises had been his own. If the rents fell in arrears, it was his duty, both to the owner and to the city, to take all reasonable measures to accomplish the collection thereof. This duty he failed to perform.

It is further to be noted that not all of this omission by the receiver to perform his duty was merely negligence. It *195 appears by his own testimony that for a part of the period involved, it was an actual refusal on the part of the receiver to comply with the requests of the owner that he should proceed to collect these arrearages of rent.

This omission and refusal to use reasonable efforts to collect the rents was a breach of his fiduciary duty to the owner, —a breach of trust. It was a legal injury to the owner, and the receiver is liable to the owner for such damage as has been sustained by the owner as the result thereof.

In the effort to contravene this conclusion, the receiver’s counsel relies (1) on the case of Brunner v. Morrison, *123 N. J. Eq. 224, 196 Atl. Rep. 716; and (2) on certain language of the statute. The cited case is not in point. That ease holds two things, — first, that it was error for the court below to determine on a summary hearing, issues of fact on the question of the liability of the rent receiver to the owner. In the instant case there has been a full and complete hearing on testimony and evidence taken in open court. The other holding was that the owner could not set off or charge against the municipality the amount of any loss sustained by the owner by reason of the receiver’s negligent failure to collect rent. In the present case the owner is making no claim whatever against, or affecting, the City of Trenton; the claim is only against the receiver for the latter’s breach of duty.

As to (2), it is contended on behalf of the receiver that under the express language of the statute, {supra) the receiver is rmder no duty whatever to the owner of the premises. Reliance is placed upon the statutory provisions that the tax collector of the municipality may petition this court to be appointed receiver of the rents and income of real property subject to delinquent taxes “for the purpose of collecting and satisfying out of such rents and income the delinquent taxes,” &c.; and “Such receiver * * * shall be appointed only for the purpose of collecting and satisfying the delinquent taxes, penalties, interest, and costs and expenses as aforesaid.”

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Related

Ballard v. Park Place Land Co.
129 N.J. Eq. 597 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 A.2d 247, 127 N.J. Eq. 192, 26 Backes 192, 1940 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ballard-v-park-place-land-co-njch-1940.