Watson v. Ciaffoni

122 A.2d 56, 385 Pa. 16, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 429
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1956
DocketAppeal, 38
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 122 A.2d 56 (Watson v. Ciaffoni) 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
Watson v. Ciaffoni, 122 A.2d 56, 385 Pa. 16, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 429 (Pa. 1956).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Jones,

The question in this case is whether the tax sale at which the defendants purchased the plaintiffs’ property was illegal and void because of the failure of the local tax claim bureau to give the owners proper notice by registered mail of the filing of the return of unpaid taxes against the property and the formal entry of a claim therefor as well as notice of the subsequent sale. The court below held the sale to be invalid for the reason above mentioned and, accordingly, entered a final decree adjudging the defendants’ title to the property illegal, void and of no effect and directing the defendants to deliver up the deed, which they received from the tax claim bureau, for cancellation, upon being reimbursed by the plaintiffs for the sum paid for the property at the tax sale.

The material facts are undisputed and are fully established by the learned chancellor’s findings which the court en banc confirmed. Actually, the defendants excepted to but one of the findings and that dealt with a relatively immaterial and unimportant fact.

Plaintiffs acquired the property in controversy, consisting of an improved tract of some seventeen acres in Washington County, by deed from E. D. Watson, widower, in September, 1950. The deed, as duly recorded, showed on its face that the grantees’ residence was *18 “Beech Bottom, Brooke County, West Virginia”. The certificate of residence endorsed on the deed recited the grantees’ post-office address as “P. O. Box 112, Beech Bottom, West Virginia”. And, the recorder’s certification of the transfer to the assessment office of the county, made pursuant to the Act of May 21, 1943, P. L. 571, Sec. 605, 72 PS §5453.605, certified the owners’ post-office address as “Box 112, Beech Bottom, Brooke County, West Virginia”. The plaintiffs were in fact residents of Beech Bottom, West Virginia, continuously from 1922 throughout all of the times presently material and their post-office address during all of that period remained Box 112, Beech Bottom, West Virginia.

Immediately upon acquiring title to the property, the plaintiffs entered into possession thereof, demised the premises to various tenants and thenceforth continued in possession uninterruptedly.

For the years 1951, 1952 and 1953 the property was assessed in the names of the plaintiffs as owners. But, their address was mistakenly shown on the assessment roll as B. D. #1, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania, with the further notation that they were “N.R.” meaning “nonresident”. The way the incorrect address for the new owners happened to be shown was that, when the change in assessment was made in the assessment office, pursuant to the recorder’s certificate of the transfer, the initials of the name of the grantor and last preceding assessee (R. D. Watson) were stricken out and there was substituted therefor by the clerk in ink “W. R. and Frances”. So that, the new assessment read “Watson, W. R. and Frances, Canonsburg R. D. #1, Pennsylvania” — and this, despite the fact that the recorder’s certificate of the transfer showed the grantees’ correct post-office address to be “P. O. Box 1Í2, Beech Bottom, West Virginia.”

*19 The plaintiffs paid the county taxes for the year 1951 but received no notice of the road or school taxes for that year. It was the latter taxes, when unpaid, that became the basis of the tax lien upon which the property was later sold to the defendants. The plaintiffs also paid the county, road and school taxes for the year 1952 and the county and road taxes for 1953.

The unpaid 1951 road and school taxes were returned in 1952 by the tax collector to the tax claim bureau which sent a notice of the filing of the return and entry of a claim therefor by registered mail addressed to the plaintiffs at R. D. ¶:1, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. This registered letter was returned to the tax claim bureau, marked “unknown”. The plaintiffs never received notice from anyone of the filing of the return or the entry of the claim. A month later the tax claim bureau posted a notice of the claim on the premises, but, of that, the plaintiffs were likewise not informed at any time. In the succeeding year the bureau mailed a notice of the proposed sale of the property, again addressed to the plaintiffs by registered mail at R. D. #1, Canonsburg, Pennsylvania. This notice was returned to the bureau marked “unclaimed • — -unknown”. Several weeks later the bureau posted the premises with a notice of the proposed sale of which the plaintiffs likewise had no knowledge.

Thereafter the property was sold to the defendants by the tax claim bureau at public sale for a bid of |70.43 which covered the unpaid road and school taxes for 1951 and all of the 1953 taxes notwithstanding the plaintiffs had paid, when due, the road and school taxes for that year as hereinabove stated. The sale was duly advertised and notice of the confirmation nisi was published showing the return of sale. The tax claim bureau subsequently 'conveyed- the property *20 to the defendants by a deed carrying a stated consideration of $70.43, the bid price.

At the time of the tax sale, the property, which was improved with two frame dwellings, had a fair market value of $6,500 to $7,000 as found by the court below and not excepted to by the defendants.

Little need be said in support of the action of the learned court below. The controlling law is statutory and so plainly stated as not to admit of any doubt. The applicable statute is the Real Estate Tax Sale Law of July 7,1947, P. L. 1368, as amended, 72 PS §5860.101 et seq.

Section 308 (a) of the Act provides that “Not later than the thirty-first day of July of each year, the [tax claim] bureau shall give notice of the return of said [unpaid] taxes and the entry of such claim to each delinquent taxable, by United States registered mail, return receipt requested, postage prepaid, addressed to the owner at his last known post office address. If no post office address of the owner is known, or if a notice mailed to an owner at such last known post office address is not delivered to him by the postal authorities, then notice, as herein provided, shall immediately be posted on the property affected.” The vital importance of the registered mail notice to the delinquent owner, as provided for in Section 308 (a), supra, is emphasized by the fact that Section 314 of the Act, which deals with proceedings to attack the validity of a tax claim, provides in Sub-section (e) that “No taxpayer shall have the right... to open a claim absolute under the provisions of this act, except on the ground of payment of the tax involved or failure to receive notice” (Emphasis supplied).

Likewise, Section 602, which is concerned with notice of a tax sale, provides, inter alia, that “notice of *21 the sale shall also be given by the [tax claim] burean, by United. States registered mail, return receipt requested, postage prepaid, to each owner . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 A.2d 56, 385 Pa. 16, 1956 Pa. LEXIS 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watson-v-ciaffoni-pa-1956.