313 Mass. 746 | Mass. | 1943
This is an appeal from a decision of the Appellate Tax Board dismissing an appeal from the refusal of the assessors to grant an abatement of the tax for 1941 upon real estate in Brookline which the appellant owned on January 1, 1941. The tax was assessed to the appellant.
The appellant owned a large tract of land in Brookline which he conveyed on April 1, 1941, to one Rhodes, who assumed liability for the payment of the tax and was credited with the sum of $1,152.02 from the purchase price as an adjustment to cover the proportionate share of the tax for the period from January 1, 1941, to April 1, 1941. The tax for 1941 upon this realty amounted to $4,151.25. The land was subdivided by the purchaser into sixteen lots and
The tax upon the entire tract of land was properly assessed to the appellant. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 11, as appearing-in St. 1939, c. 175. Crocker-McElwain Co. v. Assessors of Holyoke, 296 Mass. 338. Assessors of Weston v. Trustees of Boston College, 296 Mass. 399. Irving Usen Co. Inc. v. Assessors of Boston, 309 Mass. 544. Prior to the amendment of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 59, by St. 1933, c. 165, § 1, an application for an abatement could have been filed only by a person “aggrieved by the taxes assessed upon him” or, in certain circumstances, by a tenant of real estate paying rent therefor and obligated to pay not less than one half of
The original tract of land was divided by the purchaser into sixteen lots. The owners of two of these lots, in accordance with G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 79, as amended by St. 1938, c. 150, § 1, requested the assessors to apportion the tax and the assessors, although they knew the names and addresses of the owners of the remaining lots, failed to mail a notice to them stating that a request for an apportionment had been made and the time appointed for making the apportionment, as required by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 80, which provides that such notice shall be mailed “to every person interested in said real estate whose address is known to” the assessors. The appellant received no notice of the apportionment, which was made on July 11, 1941. Bills for the tax as apportioned were sent to the various lot owners. The appellant filed his application for an abatement after this apportionment was made. He contends that the apportionment was void because notice as prescribed by § 80 was not given by the assessors. The appellant has no right to challenge the validity of the apportionment on the ground that notice was not sent to some of the owners of the lots into which the land was divided. There was no privity between him and them. They were strangers to him in reference to the apportionment of the tax. Lampasas v. Bell, 180 U. S. 276, 284. The appellant could defend his own rights but he has no standing to defend the rights of strangers who had not been notified. McGlue v. County Commissioners of Essex, 225 Mass. 59. Hogarth-Swann v. Weed, 274 Mass. 125. Mullholland v. State Racing Commission, 295 Mass. 286. The requirement of notice was for the benefit of the owners of the various lots in order that they might appear and be heard as to the amount of the tax that should be apportioned to their respective lots. They, and not the appellant, were the parties directly and immediately interested in the distribution of the burden of the tax that had been assessed upon the original tract of land. The assessors had the power to make the apportionment, and the failure to give notice to some
The appellant was not entitled to notice of the apportionment. The only matter before the assessors was to shift the burden of the tax from the original owner, to whom the entire tax had been assessed, in proportional parts to the owners of the lots. The appellant was not interested in the amount of the tax that was to be borne by each of the lot owners. He was not entitled to be heard on that question. He had already parted with all his right, title and interest in the entire tract and, as a result of the apportionment, he was released from all personal liability for the payment of the tax that had been assessed to him. He was in no way prejudiced by the action of the assessors in making the apportionment. See G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 59, § 79, as amended by St. 1938, c. 150, § 1; Rogers v. Gookin, 198 Mass. 434.
The appellant contends that, as a result of the apportionment, he lost the right to control and supervise the prosecution of his appeal for an abatement of the tax before the Appellate Tax Board. The short answer to that contention is that he had no right to file or prosecute such an appeal. At the time the appeal was entered the tax had been apportioned and paid. No property owned by the appellant was encumbered by the tax and he had been relieved of personal liability to pay. There is nothing in Hamilton Manuf. Co. v. Lowell, 274 Mass. 477, that aids the appellant. There the tax that was assessed to the company was not paid when the application for abatement was filed. At that time it was not apparent that the burden of this tax might not have to be borne by the company, notwithstanding the existence of an executory agreement for the sale and purchase of the taxed property which was outstanding when the assessment was made in which the purchasers agreed to assume the tax. When the property was conveyed subsequently to the assessment date and the tax was paid by the purchasers and by those to whom they had sold portions of the prop
In the next place, the adjustment between the appellant and his grantee in reference to the tax did not constitute a part payment of the tax, as the appellant contends it did, whatever its effect was between him and the purchaser. Preble v. Baldwin, 6 Cush. 549. Nichols v. Bucknam, 117 Mass. 488. Phinney v. Foster, 189 Mass. 182. J. L. Hammett Co. v. Alfred Peats Co. 217 Mass. 520. What the appellant sold and was paid for was a parcel of land the value of which was diminished by the tax lien. Natick Five Cents Savings Bank v. Bailey, 307 Mass. 500. He advanced no money for the payment of the tax. The collector of taxes was not bound by any such adjustment, and if there had been no apportionment and the tax had remained unpaid the appellant would not be entitled, in an action by the collector to recover the tax, to set up as a credit the amount of the adjustment he had made with the purchaser. The appellant, who never paid any part of the tax to the town and whose liability for the tax has been fully discharged by a valid apportionment of the tax to others who have paid the tax, was not a person aggrieved by the assessment of the tax to him as the owner on January 1,1941, and proves no right to seek an abatement of the tax. There was no error in dismissing his appeal. Lawless v. Reagan, 128 Mass. 592. Hough v. North Adams, 196 Mass. 290. American Can Co. v. Milk Control Board, ante, 156, 161.
Appeal to the Appellate Tax Board dismissed.