216 Mass. 260 | Mass. | 1913
This is an appeal pursuant to the provisions of St. 1909, c. 490, Part I, from the decision of the assessors of the town of Swampscott refusing to abate a tax upon certain land and buildings of the petitioners situated in said town.
The case was sent to a commissioner,
It appeared that the premises in question were conveyed to Giles H. Lodge the petitioners’ testator, by one George Foster Williams, and formed a part of a larger tract of land conveyed to Williams by one Boyce, trustee under the will of Jonathan Phillips. The remainder of the tract so conveyed to Williams by Boyce was conveyed by Williams to one James L. Little by a deed simultaneous with that by Williams to Lodge. The judge found and ruled that “The deeds from Williams to Lodge and to Little each contained a provision that no structure of any kind should be erected on a certain described area (the description being the same in each deed) four acres of which area were included in the tract conveyed to Lodge and a portion of it in the tract conveyed to Little. Whether these provisions were intended to be for the benefit reciprocally of the Little and Lodge estates, and therefore reciprocally enforceable, or whether they were to be considered merely as conditions the breach of which could be availed of only by the heirs of Williams (now deceased), I rule that this language in the deed to Lodge constitutes a valid and existing incumbrance.”
We also think that the ruling requested by the respondent that the restriction if valid did not affect the value of the land for the purpose of taxation was rightly refused. The dominant intention of the statute is that property shall for the purpose of taxation be assessed at its fair cash value considered with reference to all the uses to which it may be put by any owner. Troy Cotton & Woolen Manuf. Co. v. Fall River, 167 Mass. 517, 523. Tremont & Suffolk Mills v. Lowell, 163 Mass. 283. In the present case the judge found as a fact that "by reason of this restriction the fair cash value of the land is substantially diminished, ” and went on to find the value of the land without and subject to the incumbrance and to fix the amounts for which the tax should be abated accordingly, — being, in case there was no incumbrance, $432 and interest from September 28, 1912, and in case the restriction constituted an incumbrance, $672 and interest from September 28, 1912.
To assess this property without regard to the restriction would (in view of the finding by the judge) be to assess it for an amount in excess of its fair cash value and in violation of the statute. No doubt assessors cannot be compelled to inquire into all the details affecting the title to property, but when their attention is duly called to matters relating to its value they are bound to pay proper regard to them.
We likewise think that the court had power to make alternative findings. Whatever question, if any, there may have been before St. 1913, c. 716, § 2, as to the existence of such a power, there can be none, it seems to us, since the passage of that statute. The statute expressly provides that “When any such question of law [meaning such question of law as is previously defined in
It follows from what we have said that judgment should be entered in favor of the petitioners for the larger sum, viz., $672 with interest from September 28, 1912.
So ordered.
Harry R. Dow, Esquire,
McLaughlin, J.
This finding was made on August 8, 1913, and was as follows:
“Upon all the evidence I am satisfied and find that by reason of this restriction the fair cash value of the land is substantially diminished.
“If there was no such incumbrance I should fix the value of the land at $110,000. As it is, in view of the restriction I find the fair cash value of the land to be $95,000 and that of the buildings $5000.
“Complainants therefore are granted abatement accordingly, and judgment should be entered for them in the sum of $672 with interest from September 28,1912, this being the amount which is in excess of the amount of the tax
"If there were no incumbrance judgment should be entered for the complainante in the sum of $432 and interest from September 28, 1912, being the amount which is in excess of the amount of the tax which would have been assessed upon the complainants had their estate been valued in the sum of $115,000.
“Respondents’ requests for rulings, so far as they are inconsistent with the rulings made, are refused.”
The petitioners were trustees under the will of Giles H. Lodge.