Simon v. Cronecker

915 A.2d 489, 189 N.J. 304, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 29, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 915 A.2d 489 (Simon v. Cronecker) 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
Simon v. Cronecker, 915 A.2d 489, 189 N.J. 304, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 22 (N.J. 2007).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In the two consolidated appeals before us, plaintiffs are holders of tax sale certificates covering the unpaid municipal taxes and charges on defendants’ properties. Plaintiffs have instituted actions to foreclose on the tax certificates, and defendants stand to lose their properties unless they can redeem those certificates within the time prescribed by law. A third-party investor contracted to purchase defendants’ properties and arranged for the redemption of the tax certificates, without intervening first in the foreclosure action.

Plaintiffs claim that the eleventh-hour intermeddling by the third-party investor, frustrating their efforts to foreclose on defendants’ properties, violates the Tax Sale Law and this Court’s decisions in Bron v. Weintraub, 42 N.J. 87, 199 A.2d 625 (1964) and Wattles v. Plotts, 120 N.J. 444, 577 A.2d 131 (1990). They reason that thwarting the foreclosure action will diminish the market for tax certificates and thus increase the number of untaxed properties on the rolls of municipalities. Defendants and the third-party investor respond that property owners have both a statutory and constitutional right to sell their property, as defendants did here for substantial consideration. They contend that their contractual arrangements for redeeming the tax certificates will avert an unwarranted forfeiture of all of defendants’ equity in their properties.

The trial court permitted the redemption of the tax certificates, finding that the third-party investor paid significant consideration for defendants’ properties. We granted direct certification because of the importance of the issues raised in both cases. 188 N.J. 259, 905 A.2d 869 (2006).

These cases illustrate that competition in the marketplace can yield considerable social good. Here, in pursuing their self- *311 interests to maximize profits, the tax sale certificate holders and third-party investor also produce important societal benefits — the certificate holder puts property back on the tax rolls and the third-party investor helps a property owner salvage a piece of his equity. We do not read the Tax Sale Law, N.J.S.A. 54:5-1 to - 137, to discourage commercial competition that is likely to benefit a financially-strapped property owner, and we will not interfere with salutary market forces for the purpose of impoverishing him.

In balancing the conflicting interests in these cases, we now hold that the Tax Sale Law does not prohibit a third-party investor from redeeming a tax sale certificate after the filing of a foreclosure action, provided that the investor timely intervenes in the action and pays the property owner more than nominal consideration for the property. However, because the third-party investor here did not intervene in the foreclosure actions before arranging for redemption of the tax certificates, the investor will not be permitted to profit from the transactions. To' protect defendants’ interests, we impose constructive trusts, allowing plaintiffs to succeed in the third-party investor’s place. For those reasons, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.

I.

A.

Simon v. Cronecker

At a tax sale auction in October 1999, Sea Isle City put up for bid a tax sale certificate covering the unpaid sewer charges and real estate taxes on four lots owned by Mary E. Ross in that municipality. 1 The successful bidder, plaintiff Richard Simon (Simon), purchased the tax certificate valued at $4841.40, agreeing to satisfy the tax and sewer arrearages on the Ross property. At the auction, the interest rate on the certificate was fixed at twelve percent per annum.

*312 Over the next four years, Simon continued to pay the property taxes and sewer costs. In October 2003, Simon filed an action to foreclose on the tax certificate and thereafter amended the complaint multiple times to identify those with a potential interest in the Ross property. 2 Among those named were the heirs of Mary and Emmett W. Ross. Their grandchild, defendant Emmett W. Ross, Jr. (Ross), acquired his interest through his grandmother’s will. By court order, August 22, 2005 was set as the last possible day for a person with a valid property interest to redeem the tax sale certificate, then valued at approximately $56,000. Simon stood poised to foreclose on the property.

Cherrystone Bay, LLC (Cherrystone), the intervenor in this case, is in the business of investing in properties subject to foreclosure. Through a search of public records, Cherrystone learned of Simon’s foreclosure complaint and obtained the information necessary to contact Ross. Cherrystone then contracted with Ross to purchase Ross’s property interest for $250,000. Ross claimed that he had been unable to find a buyer for the property until Cherrystone made its overture. On August 22, 2005, the last day to redeem the tax sale certificate, Cherrystone and Ross closed on the property. That same day, Ross and a title company representative delivered a cashier’s check to the tax collector’s office in the amount necessary for the redemption of the tax sale certificate. Up to that point, Cherrystone had not sought to intervene in the foreclosure action and apparently had not revealed its legal rights to the Ross property. Although the tax collector accepted the redemption check, Simon refused to surrender the tax sale certificate, claiming that the redemption was illegal.

In September 2005, Simon filed a motion to bar the redemption of the tax sale certificate, and in response Cherrystone for the first time moved to intervene in the foreclosure action. Plaintiff *313 Simon and intervenor Cherrystone then became locked in a battle for the rights to the property.

An appraisal valued the Ross property at approximately $1,200,000. After deducting from the property’s purchase price of $250,000, the $56,000 value of the tax sale certificate and the amounts placed in escrow to cover a judgment and overdue taxes, Ross was left with a cash disbursement of $63,422.77. Cherry-stone asserted that Ross would receive more eash-in-hand from the escrowed funds if the amount of the outstanding judgment were reduced. In any event, Cherrystone maintained that Ross was gaining a “true benefit” with the use of the escrowed funds for the satisfaction of the judgment.

B.

Grivas v. Smyth

The City of Wildwood conducted a tax sale auction in 1996, putting up for bid a tax certificate covering back real estate taxes on property owned by defendant Smyth family. 3 First Union National Bank purchased the tax certificate, valued at $2,893.59. The auction set the interest yield rate at fifteen percent per annum. Six years later, First Union assigned the certificate for one dollar to plaintiff Nicholas Grivas (Grivas), who thereafter paid taxes on the property.

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915 A.2d 489, 189 N.J. 304, 2007 N.J. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-cronecker-nj-2007.