386 Pa. 382 | Pa. | 1956
Opinion by
Where a county becomes the purchaser of a property at a tax sale which it subsequently disposes of after the late owner’s right of redemption has expired, who is entitled to the residue of the proceeds from such sale or conversion by the county in excess of the amount of the delinquent tax claims against the property, including interest, penalties and costs? Such is the question which the instant appeals present except for the immaterial fact that the conversion of the property while in the County’s ownership was by way of condemnation and not a sale.
On August 4, 1938, the treasurer of Fayette County sold to the County at a public sale for delinquent taxes an improved - farm owned by cotenants in inter
The conclusion ultimately reached by the court below rested on a misconception of the scope of our ruling in Bernitsky v. Schuykill County, 381 Pa. 128, 112 A. 2d 120. We there held that the right of an owner to redeem property sold to a taxing district at a tax sale terminated when the property came into the possession of the local Tax Claim Bureau. The Real Estate Tax Sale Law of 1947, P. L. 1368, 72 PS §5860.702 (the statute involved in. the Bernitsky case) expressly
Inasmuch as the property here involved was acquired by the County at a treasurer’s tax sale more than two years prior to January 1, 1949, it follows that it passed into the control and management of the County Tax Claim Bureau on that date pursuant to the applicable provision of the Beal Estate Tax Sale Law of 1947. Actually, the transfer occurs by operation of law; hence, its form or regularity is immaterial and may not be appropriately inquired into. In Tremont Township School District Appeal, 366 Pa. 404, 409, 77 A. 2d 403, we had occasion to observe that “The Act does not prescribe any formality by which the transfer was to be made. Indeed, it might well be considered to have occurred automatically because of the law’s positive direction.”
The learned court below concluded that, since the Real Estate Tax Sale Law of 1947 terminates a tax delinquent’s right of redemption after possession of his property has passed to the Tax Claim Bureau, his right to the excess proceeds from the Bureau’s sale of the property likewise comes to an end correspondingly. The fallacy in the court’s reasoning lies in the fact that neither the Act of 1947 nor the B emit sky case makes the former owner’s right to the excess proceeds from the Bureau’s sale of his property dependent upon the contemporaneous existence of a right of redemption in him at the time of such sale. On the contrary, the rights and priorities of those entitled to the proceeds of a sale of property by the Tax Claim Bureau are specifically spelled out in the Act of 1947.
Section 304 provides that “. . . the bureau selling such property shall, through the county treasurer, pay out the proceeds arising from such sale in the order of their priority, first, the costs of sale and the proceedings upon which it is made.; second, the tax liens
By Act of May 6, 1955, P. L. 40, 72 PS §5860.304 Pkt. Part, the above-quoted provision of Section 304 of the Act of 1947, as amended, was further amended so that the “fifth” category imposed on a Tax Claim Bureau the duty of paying, through the county treasurer, “any balance remaining to the real owner at the time of sale”, meaning, of course, the delinquent former owner. As the condemnation here involved occurred in 1953, it is clear that the law governing the distribution of the proceeds from the conversion of the property, while in the Bureau’s hands, is the Act of 1947, amended by the Act of June 30, 1951, P. L. 991, in part not now material. The amendment of 1955 is, however, so plainly declaratory of existing law— merely making specific what theretofore was stated in general terms — that the Act of 1947 is to be interpreted in keeping with the intent imputed to it by the 1955 amendment. The present appellants are, there
The order of the court below is reversed and the record remanded for the entry of a decree of distribution in accordance with this opinion; costs on these appeals to be paid out of the fund for distribution.