City of Jersey City v. Kelly

47 A.2d 354, 134 N.J.L. 239, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 3, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 47 A.2d 354 (City of Jersey City v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Jersey City v. Kelly, 47 A.2d 354, 134 N.J.L. 239, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 159 (N.J. 1946).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Oliphant, J.

These are appeals from three rules for judgment entered in the Supreme Court in railroad tax cases. We are in entire accord with the opinion of Mr. Justice Perskie speaking for that court, 133 N. J. L. 202, except as *243 it declares chapter 291, Pamph. L. 1941, as amended by chapter 169, Pamph. L. 1942, unconstitutional as applied to the taxes due from the railroad companies to the state for the tax year 1941. It is a fundamental rule, applied with unvarying uniformity, that legislative enactments will be declared void only in cases where they are in conflict with the constitution. If the constitutionality of the statute is in anywise doubtful such shall not be declared void. Attorney-General v. McGuiness, 78 N. J. L. 346, 347; Moore v. State, 43 Id. 203, 244; Wilenlz v. Hendrickson, 135 N. J. Eq. 244, 251 ; Buttfield v. Stranahan, 192 U. 8. 470, 492.

The reasons upon which the Supreme Court opinion is based are that (a) “The State admittedly had a vested right to the taxes as first computed” under R. 8. 54:27 — 4; (b) the tax as so “first computed” amounted to $18,322,164.33; (c) under the final computation made under the 3941 act, as amended in 1942, the total tax amounted to $15,042,913.07; (d) thus, there was a net face difference between the original computation for 1941 under the old law and the final computation of the tax under the 1941 law, amounting to $3,279,233.26; (e) therefore as to the tax year 1941, the 1941 Railroad Tax Act violated article 1, paragraph 20 of the state constitution, which provides “no donation of land or appropriation of money shall be made by the State or any municipal corporation to or for the use of any society, association or corporation whatever.”

The old railroad tax law provided “The amount of tax payable * * * shall be due and payable * * * on any day between said June 1st and December 1st following * * •* (R. S. 54:27-2) ;” and, further, “* * * these taxes shall be a lien paramount to all other liens upon all the lands and tangible property and franchises of the company in this State. The liens shall take effect on June 1st of the year in which the tax is payable and shall be a debt due from the company to the State on that date, for which an action at law or suit in equity may be maintained, and shall be a preferred debt in case of insolvency.” (R. S. 54:27-4.) By R. S. 54:26-7 appeal from such tax to the State Board of Tax Appeals is *244 provided for if made on or before the third Monday of June following the levying or imposition of the tax, namely, June 1st. R. S. 54:26-9 provides “If it shall be made to appear upon such hearing that any such assessment or tax is illegal, excessive, insufficient, or that there has been illegal discrimination in the assessment, the Board shall correct, adjust and equalize the assessment and tax of such property.” The final determination of the State Board of Tax Appeals is subject to certiorari (R. S. 54:26-11), and the judgment of the Supreme Court on certiorari may bo further appealed to the Court of Errors and Appeals.

Under these statutory provisions, the assessments and the amount of tax as certified by the Commissioner on or before the 1st day of June following his completion of valuations are subject to revision. They become definite, final and irrevocable on the third Monday of June following provided no appeal is taken therefrom to the State Board of Tax Appeals. If such appeal is taken to that Board, and there was in the instant ease, the assessments and the amount of tax remain subject to revision until all right for future review is exhausted or lost by time limitation.

The'decision of the Supreme Court, as heretofore stated, is predicated upon the assumption that the state had a vested right in the taxes as first computed. The vice of this premise, which led the court to an erroneous conclusion, is not in what it says but in what it fails to state, for while the state had a vested right in the taxes such right was subject to divestment in either of two ways: (1) By further action of the 1941 legislature, provided such action was within constitutional limitations, or (2) in the event of a successful appeal by the railroad companies under the procedure prescribed by R. S. 54:19-1, et seq., the old Railroad Tax Act. In the latter instance if the taxes were reduced from.the original assessment the right of the state would be divested to the extent of the reduction. The word “vested” when used as descriptive of recognized legal rights, does not exclude divestible rights or interests. It is used to denote the quality of a present right or interest, even though divestible, as distinguished from that *245 the very existence of which is contingent. Class v. Strack, 85 N. J. Eq. 319, 322.

The question confronting us deals with the first manner of divestment above enumerated and is: does chapter 291, laws of 1941, violate article 1, paragraph 20 of the state constitution ?

Appeals from the assessments of the Tax Commissioner had been taken by all interested parties and those appeals are still to be heard by the State Board of Tax Appeals tinder the Supreme Court’s holding in this very case. At the time of the questioned enactment there was no finality of the amount claimed to be dire by the state. If there had been no appeals the amount as assessed would have become fully determined and the right of the state not subject to divestment after the third Monday in June.

We are not dealing here with rights created and exisling between private persons. We are concerned with the sovereign power to tax and to provide for a method of securing the payment of such tax. There can be no doubt that the 1941 taxes became a lien paramount to all other liens on June 1st, 1941, for the amount of tax as finally determined but Ibis does not mean that the state acquired an irrevocable right in the full amount of the original assessment on such date, otherwise the reduction thereof by the State Board of Tax .Appeals or by the courts, if such should be the case, would be unlawful.

The Supreme Court is fundamentally wrong in assuming that the lien granted as of June 1st by R. S. 54:21-4 is for a definite amount of taxes, because the lien given by such section is a lien for whatever tax is finally determined upon, whether it be the same or whether it he higher or lower than the amount originally certified as of June 1st. If the Supreme Court’s theory of lien for the amount of taxes certified on June 1st is correct then if such amount was eighteen million dollars and under appeal it was raised to twenty-five million dollars the holding would have to be that the lien of the state existed only for eighteen million dollars and that it had no lien for the seven million dollars increase in taxes pursuant to the final determination of the appellate authorities.

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Bluebook (online)
47 A.2d 354, 134 N.J.L. 239, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-jersey-city-v-kelly-nj-1946.