Inhabitants of Woodbridge v. Allen

43 N.J.L. 262
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 15, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 43 N.J.L. 262 (Inhabitants of Woodbridge v. Allen) 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
Inhabitants of Woodbridge v. Allen, 43 N.J.L. 262 (N.J. 1881).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Depue, J.

The proceedings for the collection of these taxes were had under a special act to facilitate the collection of taxes in the township of Woodbridge. Pamph. L. 1873, p. 758.

[264]*264The writ was directed to “ The Inhabitants of the township of Woodbridge, in (he county of Middlesex,” which is the corporate name of the township, and. also to Benjamin M. Clark, the owner of the lands purchased at a sale for taxes assessed upon them. The writ of certiorari was sued out and is prosecuted in aid of an action of ejectment, pursuant to section 15 of the act relative to the sales of land (Rev., p. 1045); and its purpose is to obtain the vacation of the proceedings by which the lands in controversy in the ejectment suit were sold for taxes.

The taxes were assessed against one Edgar. Allen, the prosecutor of the writ, subsequently succeeded to Edgar’s title in the lands sold for the taxes. Clark, who is named as a co-defendant in the writ, is the owner of the tax title. He has been made a party to the suit because his title is involved, that he may be heard in the suit affecting his interests and be concluded by the record. State, Alden, pros., v. Newark, 11 Vroom 92. It will be perceived that both the prosecutor and the real defendant are interested in the proceedings for assessing and collecting these taxes, only so far as they affect the title to the lands in controversy in the ejectment suit.

By the act under which these proceedings were had, the entire proceeding for the sale of lands of delinquent tax-payers is entrusted to the township committee. The township collector is required to make return of the taxes assessed on lands and unpaid, to the township committee, who are required to cause his return to be recorded in the clerk’s office of the township. The township committee is empowered to enforce the collection of the taxes by directing the sale of lands; the sale is to be made by the chairman of the township committee; the township committee is to execute the certificate of sale, and to execute and deliver the deed to the purchaser if the property be not redeemed within the term pi-escribed.

The members of the township committee are the executive officers of the township, to whom the management of its affairs is entrusted; and the record of their proceedings for [265]*265the sale of lands for taxes is a township record. The writ was directed to the township in its corporate name, and the return to it was signed by the town elei’k. ¥e think the writ was properly directed, and no objection can be made to the mode in which it was returned, counsel having agreed on a state of the case after the return was made.

The writ of certiorari, when prosecuted in aid of an action of ejectment, partakes of the nature of the action to which it is auxiliary, and brings up for review only such defects as, prior to the statute, were available in an action of ejectment. State, Baxter, pros., v. Jersey City, 7 Vroom 188.

In an action involving a tax title, resort to a writ of certiorari in aid of the action of ejectment is made necessary by section fifteen of the act relative to the sale of lands under a public statute, or by virtue of any judicial proceeding. Rev.,p. 1045. By the fourteenth section of that act, the recitals in the deed or conveyance of land by a sheriff or other officer, or by auditors, in pursuance of any decree, judgment, execution or order of the court, if duly acknowledged or approved, are made prima facie evidence of the truth of the facts therein recited. This section simply substitutes the recitals in the deed in the place of the extrinsic evidence necessary to validate a deed made by an officer in virtue of some judicial authority. If the facts necessary to support the title do not' appear in the recitals, they must be proved aliunde in the same manner as before the act was passed. Independent of this statute, the recitals in a deed or conveyance made by an officer with respect to the mode in which the sale was conducted, such as advertising the sale, its adjournments and the like, are sufficient proof of compliance with the directions of the statute. Den v. Philhower, 4 Zab. 796. The provisions of the fourteenth section are, by section 15, made applicable to deeds, declarations of sale and conveyances of land by public or municipal authorities. The recitals in the deeds, declaration of sale or conveyance are made prima facie evidence of the facts recited. But the fifteenth section goes a great deal further. It also enacts that the proceedings upon which such deeds, declarations of sale and conveyances are [266]*266founded shall not be subject to be questioned collaterally, but may be at any time reviewed by certiorari or other proper proceeding in the Supreme or Circuit Courts.

By force of the fifteenth section, the recitals in deeds, declarations of sale and conveyances made by, or'by authority of, any public or municipal authority authorized or empowered by any law of the state to make and execute, or to direct or procure the making and execution of any deed, declaration of sale or conveyance, are prima facie evidence of the facts recited, wheresoever such proof becomes material or necessary, provided such deed, declaration of sale or conveyance has been duly acknowledged or proved. But in an action of ejectment, or any other action in which the title is in issue, the proceedings on which the deed, declaration of sale or conveyance is founded are not subject to be questioned, and the deed, declaration of sale or conveyance is made the evidence of the title. If the deed, declaration of sale or conveyance is proper in form, and purports to have been made pursuant to a public or municipal authority competent to order or make a sale of lands for that purpose generally, and the deed, declaration of sale or conveyance has been executed with proper formalities, it is conclusive evidence, in such an action, of the title it purports to convey. This, I think, is clearly the legal construction of this section, and it is a construction promotive of the policy which induced this legislation. It was found, in practice, difficult to sustain tax titles, by reason of the technical rules by which such titles were tried; and if the title was set aside in ejectment, the result involved a loss to the public of the tax for which the property was sold. The legislature, therefore, provided a remedy for illegalities and in-formalities in the proceedings on which the sale was founded, by certiorari, a proceeding on which the sale, if irregular or illegal, may be set aside, and proper steps be taken for the collection of the tax, if' it was legally laid. On the hearing of the certiorari, the common law rule applies that one who claims title under a tax sale takes upon himself to show, affirmatively, that the tax w'as duly assessed and was a lien on [267]*267the lands, and. that the successive steps which led to the sale were regularly taken.

Under the act of 1873, providing for the collection of taxes in the township of Woodbridge, above referred to, the proceedings necessary for a valid sale of lands for taxes are, in general terms, an assessment of the tax, with such a description of the land with respect to which it was laid as will be sufficient to ascertain the extent and location thereof, {Rev., p.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Nordell v. Mantua Twp.
132 A.2d 39 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 N.J.L. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inhabitants-of-woodbridge-v-allen-nj-1881.