20 N.J. Misc. 149 | N.J. Tax Ct. | 1942
The caption represents thirteen appeals from judgments of affirmance by the Passaic County Board of Taxation of assessments made by the respondent taxing district, for personal property of petitioner, for the year 3940. The common question presented for determination is as to whether growing nursery stock, constituting the stock in trade of the petitioner, commercial nurserymen, was properly assessable for taxation as personal property. Petitioner contends that its stock was part of the realty in which it was growing, and that the real estate assessment, not here in issue, must be deemed inclusive thereof. It further argues that the personalty assessments herein in question, concededly based almost exclusively upon such stock, must be reduced or canceled to the extent that they are so based, upon the asserted ground that the property is not personalty, but realty, as stated. Respondent urges that the property was taxable personal property, or in the alternative, that this board should
The business of the petitioner is operated on a number of tracts of land, aggregating approximately 200 acres. Most of the land is owned, some of it leased, by petitioner.. As of the assessing date, it was growing its stock, consisting of evergreen and deciduous trees, deciduous shrubs and vines, upon these lands. The plants are all perennials, ranging in age from seedlings to twelve and fourteen year old trees. All of them are priced, and subject to severance and sale at such prices, upon selection by petitioner’s customers. They were concededly planted with the sole view of maintenance and growth pending sale. The, trees and shrubs upon the leased land were undoubtedly the property of petitioner in as full a sense as- thdse growing upon its own lands.
The problem presented for adjudication appears to be one of first impression in this state, and is attended with some' difficulty of solution, as the tax acts do not specify what shall be included under the respective terms, real property and personal property, and because the' case and common law authority on the general question of the nature of trees, shrubs, crops, &c., as real or personal property, has been developed in the' fields of real property law, along lines designed to effectuate the intentions of private parties, among each other. The predominating view in situations between vendor and vendee, executor and heir, landlord and tenant, and mortgagor and mortgagee, or their creditors, is to the effect that property of the type here in question is realty. 1 Thompson on Real Property (1939), p. 118; Haddonfield Safe Deposit and Trust Co. v. Liggit (Court of Chancery, 1929), 11 N. J. Mis. R. 269; 165 Atl. Rep. 89; Bigler v. Simon (Supreme Court, 1933); 11 N. J. Mis. R. 113; 164 Atl. Rep. 861; Ahern v. Littl (Court of Chancery, 1918), 90 N. J. Eq. 72; 105 Atl. Rep. 597; Howell v. Schenck, 24 N. J. L. 89; 1 Jones on Mortgages, § 539. The rule is
It will thus be apparent that resort to traditional authorities, as relied upon by petitioner, is not dispositive of the question before us, that being whether it was the legislative intention, in enacting the general tax laws now found in the Eevised Statutes, title 54, chapter 4, to subsume this genus of property under the head of realty or of personalty. The question is not merely academic, aside from the effect of its solution upon the parties before us, as important consequences flow from a classification of property as real or personal. Por example, the tax on realty is not a personal charge against the owner thereof, as is the case with personalty taxes. R. 8. 54:4-l; N. J. S. A. 54:4-l. The latter, furthermore, are enforceable by distraint, arrest and imprisonment, as well as by action at law. R. 8. 54:4-78, 54:4-79, 54:4-1; N. J. S. A. 54:4-78; 54:4-79, 54:4-1. A guess as to the policy underlying the different and more stringent legislative treatment of delinquent personal property taxes, may furnish a clue as to the legislative intent in the matter now in hand. The ease of removal and disposition of personalty generally, as contrasted with the fixity of real estate, undoubtedly induced the provision of extraordinary remedies for the satisfaction of delinquent personalty taxes. Similarly, -with personalty consisting of stock in trade, in order to avoid depletion thereof in fraud of taxes, prior to the assessing date, the statute provides for the estimation of this type of property at its average during the year preceding the assessing date. R. 8. 54:4-11; N. J. S. A. 54:4-11. These considerations are strongly persuasive of the view that the property here in question, constituting as it does the stock in trade of the petitioner, as fully and as realistically as that of merchants
The courts of two other jurisdictions have regarded it as sound for shrubs and trees of nurserymen to be assessed as personalty, although the particular issues before them were controlled by statutes. See Swain Nelson and Sons Co. v. Department of Finance (1937), 365 Ill. 401; 6 N. E. Rep. (2d) 632, 633; Miethke v. Pierce County (Wash., 1933), 23 Pac. Rep. (2d) 405. In the case first cited the court specifically considered that such property was properly assessable as personal property, for the reason that it was grown for the express purpose of sale, independently of the requirement of the statute.
’ While it is true that prior to the Tax Act of 1903, the general tax laws defined “real estate” and “personal estate,” for general tax purposes, Pamph. L.‘ 1866, p. 1078, §§ 3 and 4, and that the definition of real estate included “trees and underwood growing thereon,” we have not regarded it as significant in the present connection, that the act of 1903 (Pamph. L., p. 394) omitted the inclusion of this definition, as did also the later and present statutes. It is uncertain whether the former reference to “trees, &e.,”’ would have comprehended such property as is here involved, and the significance, if any, of the elimination of the definition, is questionable, in view of the detailing of several other tj'pes of property as realty, under the former act.
Our conclusion is that petitioner’s growing shrubs and trees were properly assessed as personal property. The cases will be set down on the day calendar for hearing as to valuation.
So ordered.