84 N.J.L. 43 | N.J. | 1913
On May 20th, 1911, the property subjected to the-present tax belonged to the Jersey City Water Supply Company, and was assessed to them. On October 10th that company conveyed the property to the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City, and the city now claims exemption from the whole or a portion of the tax. I think this claim of the city c-annot be allowed. The Tax act requires that property shall be taxed as of the 20th of May. In this respect it is like the act of 1866, under which it was held that the assessment must relate to that day, and that real estate could not be assessed in the name of one who became an owner subsequent to May 20th. Shippen v. Hardin, 5 Vroom 79. It follows almost necessarily that exemptions from taxation must be as of that day, and that land is not exempt because subsequently it passes to an owner who is exempt. We are not left, however, to this inference. Section 7 of the act (Comp. Stat., p. 5087) requires the assessor to enter on his list a description of real property exempt from taxation: section 22 required the county board of taxation not later than the third Tuesday in September to fill out a table of aggregates showing, among other things, the total valuation of property exempt from taxation, specifying among other items the amount of public property other than school property, and the total value of exempt property in each taxing district. By the act of 1906 (Comp. Stat., p. 5118, pl. 37s) the assessors were required to have their duplicates before the county board on the first Tuesday of August; the county board was required to perform the duties of county boards of equalization or other county boards charged with the review of the tax assessments, of tax lists and of the county board of assessors (Comp. Stat., p. 5119, pl. 37t); and to fix the rates per dollar "which shall be such as according to the valuation on the duplicate will be sufficient to produce the sum required.” The act requires the duplicate thus prepared to be delivered to the collectors on or before October 1st. Comp. Stat., p. 5119, pl. 37w. The scheme obviously requires that the amount of the ratables and the rate of taxation shall be fixed before October 1st. This is impossible
The fact that the property passed to Jersey City before the tax became a lien does not prevent the collection of the tax. The statute expressly provides that the lien shall be a first lien paramount to all prior or subsequent alienations and descents of the land except subsequent taxes. The effect is to make the taxes, when properly assessed, a lien paramount to a deed made between the 20th clay of May and the 20tli day of December. Every one purchasing land must be held to know that it is liable to taxation, and certainly if he purchases after the 1st of October, and probably if he purchases after the 20th of May, that no notice will be given to him, and that the notice required by statute will be given to the owner as of the 20th of May. He must therefore be held to know that his right may be subjected to a lien without notice; the lien depends not upon any procedure as against him but upon the procedure against a former owner. He is in the position of one bciying pendente lite. The provision that the owner may redeem (section 57), and that notice must be given in order to foreclose his right to redeem (section 59), indicates that unless he redeems, his rights will be cut out. This right of redemption was relied upon in Paterson v. O'Neill, 5 Stew. Eq. 386, to demonstrate that a tax lien would take precedence of a prior mortgage. It is well settled in this state that the legislature may make taxes a lien paramount to prior claims. Morrow v. Dows, 5 Id. 676; Vreeland v. Jersey City, 10 Id. 574. The last was a case of water rents, the principle of which was subsequently approved by the United States Su