131 F.2d 562 | 3rd Cir. | 1942
On February 26, 1937 the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania approved the petition of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company for reorganization under Section 77B of the
The petitioners contend that the taxes assessed were chargeable to the debtor as administrative expenses. It may not be doubted that taxes upon land, just as wages and rent, may become an obligation of a receiver, trustee in bankruptcy or a debtor in possession as' a proper charge in the administration of the estate. This is so when the receiver, trustee or' debtor actually utilizes in the operation of the business the land upon which the taxes are assessed. Taxes then become an administrative expense and as such are payable without respect to whether the land has been described by the assessors as seated or unseated. Hennepin County, Minn. v. M. W. Savage Factories, 8 Cir., 1936, 83 F.2d 453, cert. den. 299 U.S. 555, 57 S.Ct. 16, 81 L.Ed. 408. If, therefore, the debtor here used the land during the two years when it held title the taxes thereon would be payable by the debtor as an administrative expense. The record before us contains no evidence that such was the case. The petitioners argue that the dearth of evidence on this issue was due to no fault of theirs, that they offered evidence at the special master’s hearings that the land was in fact used by the debtor, but that this evidence was excluded by the special master upon objection by the debtor. These rulings of the special master are assigned as error and form the subject matter of several exceptions to the special master’s report. They need not be considered further by us, however, since the cause must go back for further hearing for reasons about to be stated. Upon that hearing the petitioners 'will have the opportunity to offer any evidence which is relevant to the question whether the debtor utilized the land in the conduct of its business during the period of reorganization and while the land was owned by it.
The debtor contended in the district court that it had no personal liability for taxes assessed against unseated lands. In answer to this contention the petitioners urged that though the lands were placed upon the unseated list they were in fact seated. They offered evidence to prove this to be so but the special master sustained the debtor’s objections to the admission of this evidence. The district court dismissed the exceptions based upon these rulings. The petitioners argue that this was error. We are thus confronted with 'the question whether there is personal liability on the part of the owner for taxes assessed upon Pennsylvania land which has been assessed as unseated but which was at the time of assessment in fact seated. As a preliminary to the consideration of this question it will be useful to examine briefly the early statutes dealing with the taxation of lands in Pennsylvania in order to ascertain just when and how the distinction for tax purposes between seated and unseated lands arose.
The earliest act of the provincial legislature which dealt with the raising of county rates provided for the assessment of taxes upon lands but contained no provision for a classification of lands as seated or unseated. Collection was by distraint upon the goods of the owner.
In 1755 in an act levying provincial taxes to procure funds for the King’s use the legislature expressly provided that the exemption of unimproved lands from assessment which had been granted by the Act of 1724-25 for raising county rates was inapplicable, and the act provided for the assessment and taxation of such lands. By that act, for the first time, the unimproved lands themselves were authorized to be sold for unpaid taxes.
Our resume of the statutes demonstrates that in early colonial times taxes on land were collectible from the owner by dis-traint upon his goods and chattels or by imprisonment of his person. This was undoubtedly true as to both seated and unseated lands prior to 1724. Between 1724 and 1755 unseated lands were wholly exempt from taxation. Commencing with the Act of 1755 the legislature in dealing with the methods for collecting the taxes which it had again imposed (for provincial purposes) on unseated lands concerned itself solely with provisions for the sale of the lands and did not at any time refer to the collection of such taxes from the owner or to his personal liability therefor. On the other hand there were during this period many legislative references to the personal liability of owners of seated lands for taxes. In fact it was not until 1844 that statutory provision was made for the sale of seated lands for taxes and then only if it appeared that personal property could not be found thereon sufficient to meet them and that the owner after demand had neglected or refused to pay them for the space of two years.
The difference in the legislative treatment of the problems of delinquent tax collection involved in the two types o f land is quite understandable. In the case of seated lands the owners mostly resided on the lands and they or their tenants nearly always had goods or chattels thereon. Under these circumstances collection from the owner was indicated and it was the method adopted. In the case of unseated lands, however, there were never on the lands goods or chattels subject to distraint. The owners were very frequently nonresidents of the ¡county and often land speculators
We think that the petitioners’ contention is supported by the Pennsylvania authorities and must be sustained. In Everhart v. Dolph, 1890, 133 Pa. 628, 642, 19 A. 431, 432, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said: “Whether a tract of land is seated or unseated depends altogether upon the appearance it presents to the assessor at the time of the assessment. If it has been or is being improved by clearing or cultivation, or by the grection of a building upon it, or if the property shows such permanent improvements as indicate a personal responsibility for the taxes, it is the assessor’s duty to enter it upon the seated list.”
The rule thus laid down is that the question whether land is seated or unseated depends altogether upon what has been or is being done upon it, the court indicating that personal liability for taxes arises as a direct consequence of the improvement itself.
As was quite to be expected, in the early days when the amount of unseated land in the state was much greater than it is today many cases arose in which it appeared that land actually seated had been erroneously assessed on the unseated list and sold for taxes as unseated land. In these cases the question arose as to whether the validity of the purchaser’s title rested on the fact that the lands were actually unseated when the assessment was made or whether the purchaser could rely on the assessor’s classification of the lands as unseated even though the classification was mistaken.
In Kennedy v. Daily, Pa. 1837, 6 Watts 269, one of the earliest of these cases, the plaintiffs who claimed title under the former owner brought an action of ejectment against the purchaser of land sold for taxes as unseated. The plaintiffs were permitted to prove that the land was in fact seated when it was assessed as unseated, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court saying (p. 272): “In all controversies, as in the present instance, it becomes an important inquiry whether the land sold was seated or unseated, at the time it was assessed; for if the former, it has been repeatedly decided that the sale is void.” This rule, based upon the proposition that the validity of the title procured at the tax sale depends upon whether the land sold was in fact unseated at the time it was assessed as unseated, has been frequently applied.
That the actual character of land rather than its classification by the assessor determines the way in which taxes on it are to be collected appears also from the cases which hold that unseated land assessed as seated, may, with notice to the owner, he transferred by the county commissioners for purposes of tax sale to the unseated list and sold as such.
It will be seen that this act, while validating sales of lands as seated or unseated which were not so in fact, made it clear that the validation did not extend to lands which were in fact seated if there was sufficient personal property on the premises liable to pay the taxes. The act thus clearly contemplated that the true character of land as seated should always be open to inquiry in determining the validity of proceedings taken to collect the taxes upon it.
The debtor points to the rule that eince there is in Pennsylvania adequate statutory provision for the correction of assessments by way of administrative revision and appeal to the courts
We conclude, therefore, that the debtor is liable for the taxes upon any of the lands here involved which were in fact seated at the time of assessment and that the petitioners should have been permitted to offer evidence as to the actual character of the land. It follows that the rejection of the evidence offered as to this was prejudicial error. The cause must go back for a further hearing of the question since the court must determine whether the lands here in controversy were in fact seated or unseated.
The decree of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this "opinion.
Nov. 27, 1700, 2 Stat. 34.
Feb. 22, 1717-18, 3 Stat. 175.
Mar. 20, 1724-25, 4 Stat. 10.
Nov. 27, 1755, 5 Stat. 201.
Apr. 22, 1758, 5 Stat. 337; Apr. 12, 1760, 6 Stat. 7; May 27, 1769, 7 Stat. 307.
Apr. 3, 1779, 9 Stat. 360; Mar. 16, 1785, 11 Stat. 454.
Mar. 25, 1785, 11 Stat. 503.
Sept 11, 1786, 12 Stat 264; Nov. 27, 1786, 12 Stat. 338; Sept 22, 1788, 13 Stat. 83; Mar. 18, 1789, 13 Stat. 224; Sept. 20, 1789, 13 Stat 836; Apr. 6, 1790, 13 Stat. 530; Mar. 24, 1791, 14 Stat. 27; Apr. 3, 1792, 14 Stat. 229; Apr. 17, 1795, 15 Stat. 322; Apr. 3, 1804, 4 Sm.L. 201.
Mar. 13, 1815, P.L. 177, 72 Pa.P.S. § 5981.
Apr. 29, 1844, P.L. 486, § 41, 72 Pa. P.S. § 5984.
“And forasmuch as large tracts of valuable lands have been located and held in this province without intention of improvement, but merely in expectation
Erwin v. Helm, Pa.1825, 13 Serg. & R. 151, 154; Fager v. Campbell, Pa. 1836, 5 Watts 287; Neill v. Lacy, 1885, 110 Pa. 294, 1 A. 325.
Ellis v. Hall, 1852, 19 Pa. 292; Stoetzel v. Jackson, 1884, 105 Pa. 562.
Erwin v. Helm, Pa.1825, 13 Serg. & R. 151, 154; Campbell v. Wilson, Pa. 1833, 1 Watts 503; Harbeson v. Jack,. Pa.1833, 2 Watts 124; Sheaffer v. Me-Kabe, Pa.18-34, 2 Watts 421; Fish v.. Brown, Pa.1836, 5 Watts 441; Patterson, v. Blackmore, Pa.1839, 9 Watts 104;. Cranmer v. Hall, Pa.1842, 4 Watts & S., 36; Ellis v. Hall, 1852, 19 Pa. 292; Ma~ dara v. Eversole, 1869, 62 Pa. 160.
Larimer v. McCall, Pa.1842, 4 Watts & S. 133; Milliken v. Benedict, 1848, 8 Pa. 169; Commercial Bank v. Woodside, 1850, 14 Pa. 404; Stewart v. Trevor, 1867, 56 Pa. 374.
Article V of The General County Assessment Law, 72 Pa.P.S. §§ 5020 — 501 to 5020 — 521, inel., provides full opportunity for the revision by the county board of revision, upon the appeal of interested owners or municipalities, of the assessments made by the assessors. Furthermore any owner or municipality aggrieved by the action of the county board of revision may appeal to the court of common pleas and from its decision to the Supreme or Superior Court. The right of cities, boroughs, townships, school districts and poor districts aggrieved by any assessment to appeal therefrom to the board of revision and the courts was first granted by the Act of May 10, 1921, P.L. 441, 72 Pa.P.S. § 5183, and was continued in section 520 of The General County Assessment Law, 72 Pa.P.S. § 5020 — 520.
Van Nort’s Appeal, 1888, 121 Pa. 118, 15 A. 473; Stratford v. Franklin Paper Mills Co., 1917, 257 Pa. 163, 101 A. 349; Philadelphia v. Phillips, 1917, 65 Pa.Super. 578; Susquehanna Collieries Company’s Appeal, 1939, 335 Pa. 337, 6 A.2d 831.
“The rate per cent, being fixed, and a valuation of the land returned, constituted an assessment.” Heft v. Gephart, 1870, 65 Pa. 510, 518.
“Assessed, as used in our taxing statute and as here used, means a certain sum of money, fixed under a given rate on property valuation, due and payable as taxes.” Broad & Sansom Eealty Co. v. Fidelity Bldg. Corp., 1928, 292 Pa. 287, 291, 141 A. 34, 35.
“Assessment is thus defined: ‘A valuation of property for the purpose of tax
“The word ‘assessment’ is often loosely used to mean the preliminary valuation of the subject matter of a tax by a board of assessors rather than more accurately a certain sum of money fixed under a given rate on property valuation.” Hart’s Appeal, 1938, 131 Pa.Super. 104, 108, 199 A. 225, 227.
Rosenburger v. Schull, Pa.1838, 7 Watts 390; Stoetzel v. Jackson, 1884, 105 Pa. 562; Everhart v. Dolph, 1890, 133 Pa. 628, 19 A. 431.