West Ridgelawn Cemetery v. City of Clifton

160 A. 534, 109 N.J.L. 146, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 290
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 160 A. 534 (West Ridgelawn Cemetery v. City of Clifton) 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
West Ridgelawn Cemetery v. City of Clifton, 160 A. 534, 109 N.J.L. 146, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 290 (N.J. 1932).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Campbell, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court dismissing a writ of certiorari issued for the purpose of reviewing the legality of the assessment and sale for taxes of lands of the appellant, West Ridgelawn Cemetery. The assessments were for the years 1922 and 1923.

The appellant was duly incorporated on October 3d, 1905, as a cemetery association, under the act entitled “An act to authorize the incorporation of rural cemetery associations and regulate cemeteries” (1 Comp. Stat., p. 372), and on December 12th, of the same year, obtained the consent and approval of the township committee of the township of Acquackanonk, acting as a board of health, to the location of such cemetery as required by the act before referred to.

Three tracts of land seem to have been considered necessary for the purpose and in order to assemble them, separate conveyances therefor were taken by the Passaic Trust and Safe Deposit Company.

These there tracts consisted of the acreages of sixty-six, lying generally west of Dwasline road, two and ninety-three-one-hundredths and fourteen and fifty-one one-hundredths, lying contiguous and both being generally east of Dwasline road. The trust company which took title to these three tracts for the purpose of assembling them conveyed them to the appellant cemetery association in July, 1908, and such deed of conveyance provided “that the said land is to be used by the grantee, its successors and assigns, for cemetery purposes only.”

While formerly in the township of Acquackanonk the lands finally, and at the time of the assessment for taxes here under consideration, came within the corporate limits of the city of Clifton. In assessing them for taxation purpose they were described in the tax rolls as two plots. The first tract of *148 sixty-six acres was designated as “block 270, plot 25, Dwasline road, sixty-six acres” and the second and third tracts were combined and described as “block 281, plot 30-42, Passaic avenue, seventeen and one-half acres.”

Both tracts were sold for the unpaid taxes of 1922 and 1923; the sixty-six acre tract to the city of Clifton and the seventeen and one-half acre tract to the Harrington company.

On June 25th, 1928, the cemetery association filed a bill in Chancery, against the Harrington company and the city of Clifton, for the purpose of quieting title to its lands because of the disturbance thereto by the certificates of sale for taxes thereof before referred to.

The Harrington company filed an answer setting up its tax certificates for the seventeen and one-half acres and also filed a counter-claim for the purpose of foreclosing its liens under such certificates, to which the cemetery association filed an answer.

The city of Clifton did not answer the bill of complaint or in anywise appear in the Chancery proceedings.

To the answer of the cemetery association to the counterclaim of the Harington company the latter filed a replication with notice that if the association failed to obtain a writ of certiorari under chapter 202, Pamph. L. 1925, to review and determine the legality of the tax assessments and certificates of sale it would move to strike out the answer.

On December 3d, 1928, a writ of certiorari was allowed bringing to the Supreme Court for review the assessments and sales for taxes in questions “against West Ridgelawn Cemetery for the years 1922 and 1923.”

The return to the writ includes not only the assessment, levy and sale as to the seventeen and one-half acres sold to the Harrington company but of the sixty-six acres sold to the city of Clifton.

The matter was heard and decided in the court below with reference and respect to both tracts.

The Supreme Court found that taxes were assessed against the lands and paid for the jrears 1906 to 1921 inclusive; that the taxes for 1922 and 1923 were not paid and the property *149 was sold for such nou-payment; that no appeal from such assessments was taken to the county board of taxation or to the state board of taxes and assessment, although an appeal was taken to the state board from the assessment for 1925 and 1926; that at the time that the assessments for 1922 and 1923 were made there were no interments in the smaller tract (seventeen and one-half acres) and those in the larger tract (sixty-six acres) were twelve and ceased after 1913; that the prosecutor-appellant became possessed of the lands in 1907; in 1909 a map was prepared of a portion of the lands subdividing it into cemetery plots; in 1912 a sign was erected with the name of the cemetery thereon; in 1913 a factional quarrel took place between two sets of trustees, and they did not function; in 1916 a deed for all the property of the prosecutor-appellant was executed to Adam Prank, in whose name the title remained until December 16th, 1924; during the entire time that the prosecutor-appellant or Adam Prank, its successor in title, held the property, taxes were paid thereon to the city of Clifton, thereby giving indication that the owners did not claim exemption; that the situation as it existed when the assessments in question were made, and for some years prior thereto, presented no plain indication that the property was then being actually used as a cemetery, or that such purpose was within reasonable contemplation and the only possible inference was that at such time the prosecutor-appellant had no purpose to claim an exemption for taxation upon the theory that the land was owned and used for cemetery purposes, made the test by Fairview Heights Cemetery Co. v. Fay, 90 N. J. L. 427; affirmed, 91 Id. 687, and that as all exemptions from general taxation are to be considered strictly and in case of doubt to be resolved in favor of the right to tax, under Rosedale v. Linden, 73 Id. 421, the exemption claimed had not been made out and the writ of certiorari was dismissed.

Prom such judgment of dismissal the cemetery association appeals and urges three grounds for reversal. 1. The lands in question were cemetery lands in 1922, 1923 and 1924, dedicated and used, exclusively, for cemetery purposes and were exempt from taxation.

*150 This is purely a factual question and although the facts before the Supreme Court were not in serious conflict, that court passed upon them as it had a right to do.

In proceedings of this character, in review of a judgment of the Supreme Court the finding of that court upon questions of fact is a finality. This has been the settled law since Moran v. Jersey City, 58 N. J. L. 653, running through a long and perfectly harmonious line of adjudications from then to the present time.

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Bluebook (online)
160 A. 534, 109 N.J.L. 146, 1932 N.J. LEXIS 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-ridgelawn-cemetery-v-city-of-clifton-nj-1932.