248 Mass. 569 | Mass. | 1924
The plaintiff is the owner of a certificate of title of land upon which there have been entered as incumbrances four tax deeds to the city of Revere. The petition is brought to have these memoranda of incumbrances stricken from the certificate, on the ground that the tax deeds are invalid.
The petitioner contends that, when the sales took place, the lien for taxes had terminated. The respondent, relying on Abbott v. Frost, 185 Mass. 398, contends that the lien existed, and had not been terminated. G. L. c. 60, § 37, provides that taxes assessed on land shall be a lien from April first in the year of assessment, and the lien shall “ terminate at the expiration of two years from October first in said year, if the estate has in the meantime been alienated and the instrument alienating the same has been recorded, otherwise it shall continue until a recorded alienation thereof; . . .” The alienation of the land from the former - owner to the petitioner was duly registered and a certificate of title issued to him. The instrument of alienation was duly recorded within the meaning of the statute. See Jenckes v. Court of Probate of Smithfield, 2 R. I. 255.
On February 28, 1923, the deed of conveyance was delivered to the petitioner and it was duly registered. On this date the hen for taxes terminated, because more than two years had expired from the first of October in the year in which the taxes were due; the taxes being for the years
The judge of the Land Court was right in ruling that the liens of the respondent, on which it attempted to levy by the sales in question, continued only until the recorded alienation of the land on February 28, 1923; and that at the date of the attempted levy the liens had terminated and the sales were invalid.
The respondent offered to show that the petitioner was not a bona fide purchaser for value, but held the title for the benefit of Desmazes, the former owner; the respondent contending that such a conveyance was not an alienation under the statute. This offer of proof was excluded properly. The deed to the petitioner was duly registered and a certificate of title issued to him. By G. L. c. 185, § 54, the certificate of registration is conclusive “as to all matters contained therein, except as otherwise provided in this chapter.”
Order allowing the petition affirmed.