123 F. 961 | W.D.N.Y. | 1903
This is an application by the city of Rochester for an order directing the trustee in the above-entitled proceeding to pay certain taxes and assessments for improvements out of the fund in the possession of the trustee, amounting to $2,600. The referee denied the application. The matter comes before me on a petition for a review of that decision. The facts are not controverted. General city taxes amounting to $2,477.85 were assessed for the years 1893 to 1901, inclusive, except for the years 1892, 1897, and 1899, upon various parcels of land owned by the bankrupt, some of which were sold by him subject to taxes before adjudication. In addition to such taxes, $1,267.16 for local improvements and $157.97 f°r water rates were assessed against said property, amounting in all to $3,895.98. This amount was subsequently diminished, as will be seen presently. The various pieces of real estate taxed were offered for sale by the city following each default of payment of the taxes and assessments in compliance with the provision of its charter, and, no one appearing to bid at the sales, the property taxed was struck off to the city for the amount of the general taxes, with the charges thereon. Claims for unpaid taxes and assessments were filed by the city with the referee in bankruptcy, and thereafter certain mortgages and other liens upon certain pieces of property of the bankrupt were foreclosed, the decree of foreclosure directing payment of taxes and assessments out of the purchase price. It does not clearly appear whether the taxes upon the property affected were paid as a result of such mortgage foreclosure. If they are unpaid, the city, by its lien, which still remains, if the property was sold subject thereto, is secured; and the city is not equitably entitled to a priority of payment from the bankrupt estate where the premises subject to taxes are owned by third parties, who purchase the same subject to the taxes. Each separate piece of land so sold exceeded in value the amount of the taxes upon it, but was less than the value of both the mortgage debt and the taxes. Since the decision of the referee, the equity of redemption of the bankrupt and of any other person having a lien or interest in certain of the property previously struck off to the city on tax sale has been foreclosed by the city under the charter provisions. As a result of applying the proceeds of such sale upon the amount due, the total claim has been reduced to $1,632.99. Priority of payment from the bankrupt estate in advance of the payment of dividends to the creditors is demanded by the city under section 64a of the bankrupt act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 563 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3447]). If such priority is allowed, the fund will be greatly diminished, leaving little for the general creditors after the payment of expenses of administration. The unsecured debts amount to $30,000.
Various legal propositions of considerable importance are presented upon this application. The trustee contends that the claim in question is not within the scope of the section which declares all taxes legally due and owing by the' bankrupt to be preferred in payment, for the
The referee was of opinion that the tax sales terminated the personal liability of the bankrupt for the payment of the claim, and where appropriate statutory legislation empowers the city to collect a debt for taxes by independent legal procedure a fair construction of section 64a does not contemplate an indiscriminate payment of taxes which have become liens upon the property. The point as to whether bidding in the property by the city of Rochester, on foreclosure of the equity of redemption subsequent to the tax sale, is a satisfaction of the claim, was recently determined in the negative by the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, Fourth Department, in Re Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Simon M. Elsnor, Executor, etc. (decided in July, 1903) 83 N. Y. Supp. 670. It was there held that by section 206 of the charter of the city of Rochester a personal liability is created to the city against the owner of land assessed, and that an action is maintainable to recover the amount from the landowner. In addition to such an action, the city may have recourse to another remedy for collection of the taxes by sale of the property in the manner specifically provided for by its charter. It was further held that by bidding in the property the city did not preclude itself from pursuing a right of action against the personal estate. The court will assume the correctness of this decision. The city, after tax foreclosure proceedings, exhausted the available remedy in rem for the collection of the debt for taxes and assessments, and is without security for the balance unpaid. I am unable to subscribe to the holding that, by bidding in the property on tax sale and by foreclosing the equity of redemption, it waived or forfeited its right to preferential payment. A different question would be presented if the city still had a defeasible title to the property. It might then be held that the taxes secured by liens upon the real estate were secured claims, especially as such security takes precedence of any prior incumbrance. In this respect the facts in In re Veitch, 4 Am. Bankr. Rep. 112, 101 Fed. 251, are quite distinguishable. In that case the municipality had no real interest in the recovery, and the practicable result of the payment of the taxes would have inured solely to the benefit of the mortgagee. By the stipulation of the parties submitted with the briefs, it appears that the amount now claimed to be due is for a balance unpaid upon certain lands affected by the city’s liens. There was no extinguishment of the debt by the foreclosure sale, as the amount realized was insufficient for that purpose. The significance of section 64a, as applied to a municipality, is that a claim for taxes is paramount to all other claims, because of the pecuniary needs and requirements of the municipality, and so as to relieve the general taxpayers from the payment of an unfair proportion of taxes. Some seemingly unjust features may be presented by the application of the
The objection by the trustee that a portion of the claim is barred by the statute of limitations has merit. By section 382 of the Code of Civil Procedure of the state of New York, it is provided that actions to recover upon a liability created by statute shall be instituted within six years* It is not seriously disputed that an action upon a debt for
I conclude that the decision of the referee must be modified in accordance with these views. The report is therefore recommitted to the referee, with the direction that he ascertain and direct payment of the amount of taxes and assessments becoming due and payable less than six years before the filing of the petition in bankruptcy. See In re Ray, Fed. Cas. No. 11,589. These should be paid, except in case of property, if there be any, which has been sold on mortgage foreclosure subject to taxes. In that event, on the authority of In re Veitch, supra, no preference should be allowed.
So ordered.