The issue which the parties seek to have determined on this appeal is a very narrow one. It is whether, upon a motion for a deficiency judgment made after judgment of strict foreclosure of a real estate mortgage, the court committed error in its determination of the amount of the deficiency because it refused to deduct from the value of the property as appraised under the provisions of § 49-14 of the General Statutes the amount of a municipal sewer assessment where a notice or caveat regarding the assessment had been recorded prior to the institution of the foreclosure action, but where construction work on the sewer, although commenced prior to the law day, had not been completed by that date.
Briefly stated, the material factual circumstances were as follows: The plaintiff secured strict foreclosure of a real estate mortgage from the named defendant, who did not redeem on or before the law day. On the plaintiff’s motion, pursuant to § 49-14 of the General Statutes, the court appointed three appraisers, who filed their appraisal report as to the value of the property. The record does not disclose any remonstrance to the report, and it was accepted by the court. The plaintiff thereupon moved for a deficiency judgment. In this motion, the plaintiff included a claim that, in determining the amount of the deficiency between the amount of the mortgage debt, with interest and costs, and the value of the premises as appraised, the court should
Section 49-14 of the General Statutes provides that upon the motion of any party to a foreclosure action the court shall appoint three disinterested appraisers who shall return to court a written report of their appraisal of the property and “such appraisal shall be final and conclusive as to the value of such mortgaged property.” It further provides that the mortgage creditor in any further action upon the mortgage debt “shall recover only the difference between the value of the mortgaged property as fixed by such appraisal and the amount of his claim”, and the court “may, if such appraisal and report thereof have been made, render judgment for the plaintiff for the difference between such appraisal and the plaintiff’s claim.”
Although § 49-14 is silent as to the deduction of prior encumbrances from the appraised value, it is well settled that the court should deduct from the amount of the appraisal the aggregate of prior
In this case the court found that the sewer assessment was made by the sewer authority of the town of Farmington pursuant to chapter 103 of the General Statutes. Section 7-252, which is included in this chapter, provides that sewer assessments shall be due and payable at such time as is fixed by the sewer authority “provided no assessment shall become due until the Avork or particular portion thereof for which such assessment was levied has been completed.” This is in accord with the general policy of the state with regard to the assessment of benefits for public improvements. See General Statutes § 7-140.
Section 7-254, also included in chapter 103, provides that any sewer assessment not paid within thirty days after the due date shall be delinquent and that any unpaid assessment shall constitute a lien upon the real estate against which the assessment was levied from the date of such levy. As wo have already noted, however, in order for the assessment to be due the work must have been completed. “[T]he lien can have no existence prior to the date of the act which constitutes it. That act is — not the commencement of the work of constructing the public improvement in question — but the making of the assessment of the expense of the improvement upon the property benefited. That assessment cannot of course be made until the work is completed and the cost ascertained.”
Tomes
v.
This conclusion of course is not a holding that under no circumstances in the exercise of its broad equity jurisdiction in mortgage foreclosure cases may a court deduct from the appraised value charges against the property for public improvements in the course of construction at the time of foreclosure. The fundamental principle upon which assessments of benefits from public improvements are made and justified is that the owner of property is benefited by the improvement to the extent of the assessment and that the assessment is imposed and collected as the equivalent for the benefit and to pay for the improvement.
Connecticut Ry. & Ltg. Co.
v.
Waterbury,
Section 49-14 provides that the value of the foreclosed premises as fixed by the appraisers shall be “final and conclusive.” This precludes a review by the court of the question of value as a question of fact and limits an inquiry before the court to questions of law.
Buck
v.
Morris Park, Inc.,
The only other question raised on this appeal relates to the court’s exclusion of questions directed to the town engineer as to when the sewer would be completed and when the bills for the sewer assessment were due to go out. In view of the court’s finding that construction work was in process but not completed on the law day and in the light of
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
