74 N.J.L. 127 | N.J. | 1906
'The opinion of the court was delivered by
The commissioners of appeals of the township of Madison, by a resolution adopted December 28th, 1905,
1. Ten acres of land (mentioning the bounds thereof), upon which are situate four dwellings, a power-house, sheds and railroad tracks; valued at $28,000.
2. One hundred acres of land (mentioning the bounds thereof), valued at $3,000.
3. “Personal property, including railroad tracks and ties and other personal property,” valued at $1,000.
A transcript of this resolution having been furnished by the commissioners to the collector of taxes for his guidance, the prosecutor sued out this writ of certiorari, and seeks thereunder to set aside the assessment, on the ground that the property in question was used for public purposes, to wit, for its public water-supply and pumping station, and is therefore exempt from taxation.
Under the former Tax law (Gen. Stat., p. 3320, pl. 200), an exemption from taxation was extended to “the property of the counties, townships, cities and boroughs of this state.” Thisc exemption was independent of the use to which the property was devoted. Camden County v. Washington Township, 31 Vroom 367; S. C., 32 Id. 695; Newark v. Bellville, Id. 455; Hackettstown v. Mount Olive, 34 Id. 191.
By the revised Tax law of 1903 (Pamph. L., p. 395, § 3, ¶ 2), the exemption is of “the property of the United States and of the State of Mew Jersey, and of the respective counties, school districts and taxing districts when used for public purposes.”
Testimony has been taken herein to show the purposes for which the property in question was used at the time the assessment was laid.
From this evidence we find that the one-hundred-acre tract was not in fact used for public purposes. It had been purchased for the purpose of providing for an extension of the water-supply system of Perth Amboy, but had not as yet been devoted to that purpose, excepting to a small extent and
'Fhe first tract, called ten acres in the assessment, -but comprising- in fact only five acres, is that whereon is situate the main pump works of the public water-supply system of Perth Ambojq by means whereof water from a pond nearby, and occasionally the water from certain artesian wells that are located upon another part of the five acres, is driven to.the city. This tract we find, as matter of fact, was used for public purposes, if the water works themselves constitute “public purposes,” within the meaning of the Tax law. It was used for the maintenance and operation of the water-supply system. The dwellings were and are likewise devoted to the same public purpose, they being occupied by the engineers and other employes engaged upon the water works; the same is true of the power-house and sheds.
It is argued that the “public purposes” contemplated in the Tax law are only governmental purposes, strictly so called, and not such as are carried on for the mere convenience of the people of a municipality or to supply some personal need, such as water, light or the like. This, we think, is too narrow a view of the exemption clause, our opinion being that the furnishing of a general water-supply, when authorized by statute (as admittedly it is in the present ease), is authorized because it is a public purpose, and that land held and used for such a purpose is within the exemption. Nor do we see any force in the argument that under the Tax law-the exemption only’extends to lands located within the bounds of the municipality that owns them. If this were the extent of the exemption it would have a very narrow limit, for so far as the taxes laid by such municipality itself are concerned the exemption would be of no practical benefit; any taxes laid by it upon its own property would be paid out of its own treasury and returned into the same treasury. We think the main purpose of the exemption clause is to exonerate property owned by one municipality or taxing district from taxation at the hands of another of these governmental agencies.
As to tire personal property the evidence is somewhat conflicting. Our finding is that it was in use for public purposes. It consisted of some rails, ties and other material for railroad construction that had been brought upon the so-called ten-acre lot for the purpose of building a switch or branch track leading from a main line of railroad nearby. This branch track is a reasonable appendage to the pump works, and, like those works, is devoted to a public purpose. We think the materials deposited upon the ground, presently to be annexed to the realty, were devoted to the public use as clearly as they would be when built into the finished track.
These views lead to an affirmance of the tax upon the one hundred acres, and a reversal of the tax upon the so-called tract of ten acres and upon the personal property.
No costs will be allowed.