Commonwealth v. Central Realty Co.

13 A.2d 312, 338 Pa. 172, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1939
DocketAppeal, 38
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 13 A.2d 312 (Commonwealth v. Central Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Central Realty Co., 13 A.2d 312, 338 Pa. 172, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 482 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The Commonwealth has appealed from an order discharging its rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense to its scire facias sur lien upon a settlement for state capital stock tax and corporate loan tax. The facts of the case are set forth in the affidavit of defense.

*174 In October, 1915, the auditor general settled the capital stock tax of Central Realty Company, for a period ending November 1, 1914, in the .amount of $250, and the corporate loan tax of the same corporation, for the year 1914, in the amount of $576.92. However, no certified copy of the lien was transmitted for indexing to the prothonotary of Lackawanna County, where the corporation had its place of business and owned a large tract of real estate, for nearly twenty-two years. During this interval the state authorities took no steps to collect the taxes. On September 27, 1937, the certified liens were filed in Lackawanna County, and the scire facias sur lien was issued against the corporate taxpayer, 'with notice to the present terre-tenant, Williams Bakery Company, ■' the appellee in this court. The amount of the taxes claimed, $826.92, with statutory interest and attorney’s commission, brings the total to approximately $3,300.

During the twenty-two years interval • the- property changed hands several times. In March, 1916, the taxable, Central- Realty Company, conveyed a portion of the tract subject originally to the lien to Sail Mountain Company, which in turn conveyed it .to Williams Ice Cream Company'in 1920. Appellee acquired a small portion from the latter in December, 1922, and it is against this parcel that the Commonwealth proposes to levy the entire tax originally assessed in 1915 against the Central Realty Company, although it comprises but a very small fraction of the original tract. Meanwhile Central Realty Company has passed out of existence and its assets have been dissipated, so that there is no hope of appeílée?s collecting from that company the taxes assessed against it.

Appellee contends that it would be inequitable to permit the Commonwealth, after this long lapse of time, to collect the entire amount of the taxes from the limited land which appellee owns. This contention has appealing force, yet the statutes and the respect wé must ac *175 cord previous judicial decisions will not permit tis to yield to its persuasiveness. ■

The Act of March 30, 1811, 5 Sm. Laws 228, sec. 12, relating to the settlement by the auditor general of public accounts or taxes due the Commonwealth provided that the amount so settled by the auditor general should “be deemed and adjudged to be a lien from the date -of the settlement of such account on all the real estate” of the taxpayer throughout the state. The Act of April 16, 1827, P. L. 471, 9 Sm. Laws 433, sec. 4, provided that the Auditor General should be “authorized- and required to transmit to the prothonotaries of the respective counties, to be by them entered of record, certified copies of the liens” thereafter arising under the Act of 1811, above quoted. The Act of 1827 was thus mandatory in its' provisions as to the transmission of liens for recording in the counties and- it was so construed by this court. It was held that if the provision was' not complied with and the lien was not filed in the county where the real estate of the. taxable was located, subsequent lien .creditors took precedence over the' claim of the Commonwealth. This Court, In re Wilson, 4 Pa. 164, said at page 165: “The account settled by the auditor-general at common law, gave the Commonwealth no lien. The Commonwealth’s lien on the land of her debtor is. created and- exists in pursuance of the acts of the legislature! Both acts are -to be -taken together. Our legislature have uniformly discountenanced all liens and encumbrances from transactions that do not appear of record. 7 Serg. & Rawle, 73. The Act of 1811 gave the Commonwealth a lien on all lands of the debtor within the state. The Act of 1827 did not abridge'that lien, but made it the duty of the auditor-general to file the lien in the county where the debtor resided, for the purpose of notice. Every citizen interested could go there and examine; and if the auditor-general had done-his duty, he could have saved the lien of the Commonwealth. The settlement not being placed of record in Washing *176 ton County, the lien created by the first act was not notice to judgment creditors. It is the duty of the officers of the state to obey the acts of the legislature. If they disregard them and neglect their duty, they subject the Commonwealth to loss by their negligence.” Again, in Arnold’s Est., 46 Pa. 277, 280, we held: “Without the notice given by filing a copy of the balance of the account, and having it entered on record, the debt ascertained to be due the Commonwealth may be a lien as against the debtor, but it is inoperative against other lien creditors.”

The Act of June 7, 1879, P. L. 112, sec. 14, although it was held not to have repealed the Act of 1811, supra, was so similar to it as to be almost identical. It gave the Commonwealth a lien on the franchises and property, real and personal, of corporations subject to the state taxes imposed by the act, among them a capital stock tax, “from the time the said taxes are due and payable.” In Wm. Wilson & Son Silversmith Co.’s Assigned Est., 150 Pa. 285, 24 A. 636, we again sustained the mandatory provision of the Act of 1827, supra, with respect to the filing of liens for Commonwealth taxes in the respective counties, as affected by the Act of 1879, supra, and again held that unless this was done the tax failed of priority as against judgment creditors. We pointed out that the Act of 1811, as well as that of 1879, applied to all public funds or moneys, as well as taxes, of whatever character, due the Commonwealth and settled by the auditor-general, and we declared the following (pp. 289-290) : “The Act of 1827, sec. 4, Purd. 1386, pi. 30, prescribes the duty of the auditor-general in all cases arising under the Act of 1811, and although that act does not declare that the lien shall not prevail if the duty to file a certified copy is not performed, yet we have held that such is the consequence of a noncompliance with the act. . . . Other lien creditors have the same right to notice under the Act of 1879 as under the Acts of 1811 and 1827, and we can see no reason why *177 the rule of duty applicable in the one class of cases is not equally applicable in the other. . . . Hence the Act of 1827, which prescribes the duty of filing a copy in the county of the debtor is just as applicable to the settlement of taxes under the Act of 1811, whether they are created by that act or by acts of later date. We find nothing in the Act of 1879 which conflicts, or is inconsistent, with this view of the subject. The reasons of public policy, which is averse to secret liens, are quite as applicable against taxes created by the Act of 1879 or any other acts as they were against such liens under the Acts of 1811 and 1827.”

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Bluebook (online)
13 A.2d 312, 338 Pa. 172, 1940 Pa. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-central-realty-co-pa-1939.