White v. Town of Wolfeboro

551 A.2d 514, 131 N.H. 1, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 99
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedSeptember 23, 1988
DocketNo. 87-250
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 551 A.2d 514 (White v. Town of Wolfeboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Town of Wolfeboro, 551 A.2d 514, 131 N.H. 1, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 99 (N.H. 1988).

Opinion

Batchelder, J.

This is a case about land and some of the consequences of a failure to pay real estate taxes on a timely basis. The land is in Wolfeboro, and on April 1, 1982, the date of the tax assessment upon it, title stood in the name of Charles I. White, the plaintiff. He had owned the land since 1953 and had paid taxes through the 1981 assessment period. The land, unique as to all other land, consisted of approximately ninety-five undeveloped acres adjacent to Northline Road, and was assessed at $21,360, resulting in a tax of $358.85. The record indicates that the assessed value in question was approximately 20% of its market value in a time of generally escalating land values in the area.

The taxes for the tax year in question (April 1, 1982, through March 31, 1983) were not paid, and on June 28, 1983, a notice of tax sale was sent to the plaintiff pursuant to RSA 80:21. The plaintiff had resided at Bay View Road in Dover until, during the 1982 tax year and after his marriage was dissolved by a decree of divorce, he moved to Route 108 in Durham. He resided there throughout the relevant period, including 1985. The June 28, 1983 notice of tax sale was mailed by certified mail to the plaintiff at his Dover address and was returned to the town offices in Wolfeboro marked by the post office as follows: “Returned to Sender, Moved, not forwardable.” The Trial Court (Manias, J.) found that “[t]he sale was conducted at the Selectmen’s Office in Wolfeboro on July 26, 1983. The property was purchased at the sale by the Town for the amount of taxes, interest and costs then due.” Such an event is significant for the owner since, assuming the validity of the tax sale, its effect is the changing of a continuing inchoate lien for municipal taxes to an asserted lien of record for a specified amount upon which a higher level of statutory interest begins to run. In addition, the statutory clock starts to run against the time when the owner may lose the title to the land itself to the municipality or to another entity or person who “buys the taxes” at the collector’s sale.

On July 1, 1985, pursuant to RSA 80:38-a (Supp. 1987), the town sent a certified mail notice to the plaintiff, once again at the Bay View Road, Dover, address, notifying him that the property in question would be deeded to the payer of the taxes at the 1982 tax sale unless he redeemed the property within 30 days of the notice. The envelope containing the notice was returned to the town offices in Wolfeboro having been marked by the post office as follows: “Returned to sender, forwarding order expired.” The plaintiff failed to redeem the property, and the tax collector executed a deed [3]*3dated October 8, 1985, to the Town of Wolfeboro, purporting to convey a full interest in the entire 95-acre tract.

During the period in question the offices of town manager and tax collector in Wolfeboro were held by one Krapp, whose affidavit accompanying the defendant’s motion for summary judgment indicates that he conducted the tax sale in question at the selectmen’s office and that the only other persons in attendance were the deputy tax collector and town clerk (the same person) and the selectmen. He further asserted in his affidavit that the town, acting through its selectmen, was the only bidder and that it “did not offer to take less than the entire property, or less than a one-hundred percent (100%) interest” for the amount then due— $387.39.

In September 1986, the plaintiff filed a petition to set aside the deed, to quiet title, and for damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Motions for summary judgment were filed by both parties, and a hearing before the trial court resulted in rulings that the town had followed the applicable statutory procedures of RSA chapter 80, that the procedure employed by the town did not violate notions of due process as provided for in the New Hampshire or Federal Constitutions, and that there were no § 1983 violations. Because we hold that the town did not conduct the tax sale in accordance with RSA 80:24, we reverse and remand. In keeping with our longstanding policy to decide cases on constitutional grounds only when necessary, see New Hampshire Ins. Co. v. Duvall, 115 N.H. 215, 218, 337 A.2d 533, 535 (1975), we do not reach the claims asserting a deprivation of constitutional due process rights under the State and Federal Constitutions. Similarly, we need not address the 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim, or the plaintiff’s assertions dealing with lack of statutory notice of the sale or the pendency of the collector’s deed.

RSA 80:24 provides, with respect to the collector’s sale, that:

“Every such sale shall be at auction, in some public place in the town or place where the land is situated, and between the hours of ten in the forenoon and six in the afternoon, and shall be of so much of the estate holden as will pay the taxes and incidental charges; but, if necessary, the sale may be adjourned from day to day, not exceeding three days, by proclamation made at the place of sale within the hours aforesaid.”

(Emphasis added.) Apropos to our consideration of this case is RSA 80:24-a, which is instructive in providing that “[w]hen such sale is of less than the whole estate the collector shall sell only a common and undivided, interest in the property and no portion thereof shall [4]*4be sold in severalty by metes and bounds.” (Emphasis added.) This subsection became law in 1961 and was, accordingly, in effect during the time of the events giving rise to the case before us.

We find that RSA 80:24 and :24-a control the outcome of this case. It is apparent from the pleadings and supporting affidavits in the case, as well as the findings of fact by the trial court, that the town did not comply with the statutory mandate in conducting the tax sale of the plaintiffs property. Judicial scrutiny has, for all practical purposes, been only twice visited upon the language of the statute. Coleman v. Hooksett, 111 N.H. 337, 283 A.2d 681 (1971); Spurgias v. Morrissette, 109 N.H. 275, 249 A.2d 685 (1969). In Spurgias, the claimant sought to recover the so-called surplusage or overage received when the town sold its tax title for $2,865.54 more than was due the town for the unpaid tax liability. 109 N.H. at 276, 249 A.2d at 686. The claimant suggested, in the language of the decision, that it was “open to him to attack the tax sale under RSA 80:24 . . . upon the assumption that it was unnecessary to sell the entire property in order to satisfy the charge[s] [against it].” Id. at 278, 249 A.2d at 687. The court, it would seem by way of dictum, found no statutory violation because the record failed to show that any bidder offered to take less than the whole for the amount due. Id. at 278, 249 A.2d at 687-88. The use of the word “shall” in the statute indicates that the burden is on the municipality to see that the sale “shall be of so much of the estate holden as will pay the taxes. . . .” RSA 80:24. The Spurgias

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Bluebook (online)
551 A.2d 514, 131 N.H. 1, 1988 N.H. LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-town-of-wolfeboro-nh-1988.