Burnet v. Dean

46 A. 532, 60 N.J. Eq. 9, 15 Dickinson 9, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 45
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 9, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 46 A. 532 (Burnet v. Dean) 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
Burnet v. Dean, 46 A. 532, 60 N.J. Eq. 9, 15 Dickinson 9, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 45 (N.J. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

This is a bill to foreclose a mortgage given by the defendant Dean to the complainant, dated April 10th, 1891, covering certain lands within the corporate limits of the village of South Orange.

The municipality of South Orange is made a party defendant because it claims a paramount lien upon the premises for certain taxes assessed by it for municipal purposes for the several years intervening between 1877 and the date of the mortgage, and also for certain taxes assessed upon the premises for the several years since the execution of the mortgage up to and including 1897. The prayer is that these, taxes may be declared not to be a lien.

The only question litigated was whether the lien of such taxes was paramount to the mortgage.

[11]*11In considering this question it must be borne in mind that the existence of a lien on land for taxes imposed upon the same,, and the length of time such lien continues, is a matter depending entirely upon legislative enactment. It has no other foundation. For more than half of the present century there was no such lien, and when first imposed by statute it was held to be simply a lien upon the interest of the party against whom the tax was assessed, and was not paramount to encumbrances by mortgage or otherwise. The taxes levied by some few of the cities of the state were, by the terms of their charters, held to-be paramount to encumbrances. But it was not until 1879, by the statute approved March 14th of that year (P. L. of 1879 p.8J/.0), that taxes throughout the state were made paramount to encumbrances, and a rational method adopted for enforcing the lien.

The question presented, then, is entirely one of statutory construction.

The territorial limits of the village of South Orange, as at present constituted, formed originally a part of the township of South Orange, and the inhabitants of that portion were incorporated into a body politic and corporate by the act of March 25th, 1869. P. L. of 1869 p. 6.^5. The incorporation was partial only, and in that respect resembled the original incorporation of Morristown and other towns and villages in this state. The roads within the limits of the village were, by that act, put under the control of the village trustees, who were given little, if anything, more than the powers of overseers of the highway. The township committee of the township were directed to give a certain proportion of the road money collected in the whole township to the trustees of the village. •

This charter was amended by the act of April 4th, 1872. P. L. of 1872 p. 1208. That act, by the fifteenth section, gave the board of trustees power, by ordinance, to order to be raised in each year, upon the persons and property in said village, such sum or sums of money as the said board may deem expedient or necessary for the following purposes: lighting streets, grading, graveling or otherwise improving streets and highways, and cleaning and keeping the same in repair; support of a police [12]*12department; payment of any indebtedness of the village, and contingent expenses, of the village. •

This act did not supersede the right of the township to assess "and collect taxes within the limits of the village for general township, county and state purposes. That machinery was left in full force and vigor.

By section 28- it was provided that the village clerk should transmit to the assessor of the township a copy of the ordinances that might be passed for the purpose of raising money by tax, and ■ •

“it shall be the duty of the assessor of the township to assess the said sum or sums upon the persons and property within the limits ;of the village, and the duty of the collector of, the township to collect the same, in the same manner and at the same time that the taxes in the townships of said county are assessed and collected; provided, that no township tax for the working, repairing, paving or permanent improvement of roads shall be assessed and collected within the limits of the village,”

and no such, tax in the .other part of the township shall be expended within the village. And, by the twenty-ninth section, the collector of the township, after collecting such taxes, shall turn them over to the treasurer of the-village.

A supplement to this charter was passed in 1875. P. L. of 1875 p. 895. That act provided for the appointment of a collector of taxes for the village, and for the payment of taxes directly to such collector; and section 10 provided that the duties now prescribed by the previous sections of the act to be done by the collector of the township shall be performed by the village collector.

The act of March 14th, 1879 (P. L. of 1879 p. SJfO), first piade taxes generally throughout the state a paramount lien over and above mortgages. It declares (section 1) that

“all taxes which shall be laid, assessed or imposed for or on account of 'any lands, shall be, become and remain, from and after the date of such levy and-assessment, a full and complete first and paramount lien on all the lands, tenements, hereditaments or real estate, on account of which such levy and assessment shall be made, for the space of two years from the time when such taxes so assessed were payable

and subsequent language makes it paramount to mortgages.

[13]*13In the second and subsequent sections provision is made for the collection of such taxes by advertisement and sale; and by the thirteenth section it is declared

“that it shall be the duty of the township collector, before the 1st day of February in each year, to make return in writing to the clerk of the county in which his township is situate, of all unpaid taxes assessed the previous year,”

and the clerk shall make a list of thenn

By the fifteenth section: .

“That in case such tax return shall not have been made at the time herein provided, or in case a name or names shall have been omitted from such return, then, and in that case, such tax shall cease to be a lien upon such real estate as against a purchaser or mortgagee in good faith.”

The eighteenth section provides as follows:

“This act shall not be construed so as to alter, modify, affect, annul or repeal the provision of any charter of any city, milage or borough whereby the collection of tames is regulated, and the taxes assessed and to be assessed in any such city, village or borough, shall be levied, assessed and collected as heretofore, and the lien of taxes on lands in any such city shall be and remain as now regulated, and nothing in this act shall be held to impair, alter or affect the said lien in any way whatsoever, this act being intended to apply to townships in this state and not other municipalities.”

. -This eighteenth section was amended by an act of May 6th, 1889 (P. L. of 1889 p. 857), but such amendment did not affect its construction for present purposes..

Much discussion was had as to the true construction of this act.

I think it was intended to make all lands subject to a tax for two years, and no longer; but the period of two years might be cut down by a failure to comply with the terms of the thirteenth and fifteenth sections in cases of townships and township collectors.

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Related

State v. Board of Commissioners
36 A. 482 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1896)
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40 A. 649 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 A. 532, 60 N.J. Eq. 9, 15 Dickinson 9, 1900 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnet-v-dean-njch-1900.