Compton v. Feldmark

88 A. 174, 82 N.J. Eq. 112, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 3, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 88 A. 174 (Compton v. Feldmark) 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
Compton v. Feldmark, 88 A. 174, 82 N.J. Eq. 112, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Teaming, Y. C.

The single question here presented is whether the lien of complainant’s mortgage is superior to the possessory rights which defendant Sadie Cohen claims in the mortgaged premises under a certain tax title.

The bill is filed to foreclose a mortgage held by complainant on certain-real estate in Maurice Eiver township, Cumberland county. The bill makes Sadie Cohen a defendant under an averment to the effect that the mortgaged premises were sold by Maurice Eiver township for taxes levied subsequent to the execution and record of complainant’s mortgages, and purchased by that township for a-term of years which has not yet expired, and thereafter a conveyance of the term was made by the township to Sadie Cohen, and by reason of such conveyance Sadie Cohen claims an interest in the mortgaged premises; the [114]*114bill avers that any interest the said Cohen may have in the mortgaged premises is subordinate to the lien of complainant’s mortgage, and sets forth, among other things, that no notice was given to complainant to enable complainant to make redemption in behalf of his mortgage lien.

The answer “of Sadie Cohen asserts that the tax title held by her is superior to the lien of complainant’s mortgage.

The bill also sets forth certain irregularities in the levy and assessment of the tax and in the sale fir the township, and also charges that the sale -was void and'of no effect as against complainant. These alleged irregularities are denied by the answer.

The answer in no way challenges the jurisdiction of this court to examine into and pass upon the regularity of the proceedings of the township and its officers antecedent to the tax sale and to declare the tax title thus acquired by the township void as against complainant; but in Ihe briefs filed since final hearing it is objected that this court is without jurisdiction for that purpose. It is, however, clearly unnecessary to here consider how far this court can properly inquire into the validity of a tax title which is brought in question in a suit to foreclose a mortgage, for the primary question for consideration in this ease is not the validity of defendant’s tax title, but is whether assuming that title to be valid the lien of complainant’s mortgage is superior or subordinate to any rights of defendant under her tax title. ’Under the present statute (P. L. 1906 p. £69) the notice of sale under a foreclosure decree must specify all liens subject to which the sale is made, and in the present suit I think it entirely clear, without any inquiry into the validity of the tax title, that the lien of -complainant’s mortgage is superior to the rights of defendant under her tax title, and that this court is required, under the issues as framed, to so determine.

The tax sale to the township, under which sale defendant Sadie Cohen holds, was made December 2d, 1899, for a term of thirty years from that date and wras for the taxes of the years 1897 and 1898. This sale wras made under the act of March 14th, 1879, as amended. Gen. Stat. p. 3353 et seq. That act [115]*115made a tax against real.estate a first lien as against a prior mortgage for two years from the 20th day of December of the year the tax should be assessed. Section 12 of that act provided that no sale of land for taxes under the act should destroy or affect the lien -of a prior mortgage, duly recorded, unless the purchaser should give to. the mortgagee, within a period there named, a certain written notice of the sale. The question here presented is, therefore, whether such notice was in fact given. A failure to give the notice in no way affects the validity of the tax title; if the notice was not in fact given the lien of the mortgage is paramount.

The question therefore is merely one of evidence. If there is evidence, either direct or presumptive, that the statutory notice was in fact given the lien of the mortgage is subordinated; otherwise it is, by the very terms of the statute, unaffected.

The only evidence touching' this controlling fact is to be found in certain exhibits which have been offered by defendant to establish the fact.

The provisions of the statute touching the service of this notice are that it shall be served personally or by leaving it with a member of the family over the age of fourteen years; and if the mortgagee cannot be found then by mailing' the notice enclosed in an envelope plainly directed to him at his last-known post-office address, rvith full postage prepaid thereon. The statute then provides that the purchaser shall, within twenty days after the service of the notice, transmit a true copy of such notice with due proof of service to the clerk of the county in which the lands are situate, and which notice shall then be by the county clerk recorded and indexed in the same book in which the mortgage is recorded, and a marginal note made thereof in the book where the original mortgage is recorded.

The record book of mortgages was produced by defendant, and there is recorded therein a notice by the township to the mortgagee, which notice may be here assumed to conform to the requirements of the statute. Forming a part of this record is an affidavit of the township clerk, as follows:

[116]*116“State of New Jersey, t Cumberland County, j
“Samuel Foster, of full age, being duly sworn according to law on his oath saith, that on the twenty-seventh day of February, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred, he served a notice of which the within is a true copy upon Daniel B. Compton, of Mauricetown, N. J., mortgagee, that said service was made upon the said mortgagee by mailing said letter containing said notice to his last-known post-office address, and if not delivered in five days to be-returned back to this post-office address, and-that said notice was served or given within three months from the date of such sale of lands for taxes the within notice mentioned.
“Sworn and subscribed to before me, this first day of March, 1900.
“Japhet M. Fox,
“Notary P-ablic.”

Is this record sufficient evidence of the fact that notice to redeem was given to the mortgagee in. accordance with the requirements of the statute?

The acf. contains no provision to the effect that this record shall be received in evidence in any court for any purpose; but if the requirement for a public record of the notice may be deemed sufficient to make that record competent evidence in a court, it clearly cannot make it evidential of more than it contains in the absence of a statutory provision making it presumptive evidence beyond the scope of its terms. No such statute is to be found. Certain records of tax sales and tax deeds are by statute made presumptive evidence that the sale and all antecedent proceedings were regularly made and had in accordance with the act; but these provisions do not include the record here in question. Defendant’s tax deed may be regarded as valid by reason of these statutory presumptions, but tire record here in question appears to be unaided by any statutory presumptions which have been brought to my attention.

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164 A. 687 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 174, 82 N.J. Eq. 112, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compton-v-feldmark-njch-1913.