31 N.J. Eq. 199 | New York Court of Chancery | 1879
The Chancellor.
The questions presented for decision are, whether the-building and loan association, which is the holder of a mortgage subsequent to those of the complainant, is entitled to priority over the latter for money paid for taxes assessed upon the mortgaged premises by the city of Elizabeth subsequently to the making of the complainant’s mortgages; and, if so, what rate of interest the money should hear. The complainant’s mortgages are dated January 1st, 1872. One is for $4,500 and interest, and the other for $600 with interest. The former was recorded January 20th, 1872, and the latter May 3d in that year. Eor non-payment of the taxes of 1872, 1873 and 1874, the premises were sold by the city and bid in by it each time for a term of nine hundred years., The building and loan association (its mortgage is dated
The charter of the. city of Elizabeth (P. L. 1863, p. 109 § 73) provides that any assessment of taxes thereafter made upon any lands and real estate in the city, shall be and remain a lien on such land and- real estate, with interest thereon, and all costs and fees, for the space of two year(s from the time when such assessment shall be made, notwithstanding any devise, descent, alienation, mortgage or other encumbrance thereof, &c. By a supplement to the charter (P. L. 1869, p. 1093), it is enacted that all assessments for taxes shall be a lien on the lands and real estate bound by such assessments, from the day in each year when the duplicates are delivered to the receiver of taxes, and shall, with the interest and expenses accruing thereon, remain a lien thereon for the space of four years, unless sooner paid or discharged by the sale of the lands and real estate. The taxes assessed upon the property were a lien thereon paramount to the complainant’s mortgages when the sales were made, and, if the sales had been duly made pursuant to the provisions of the charter, the title would have been paramount to those mortgages. Trustees of Public Schools v. City of Trenton, 3 Stew. 667. But they were not legal. At each of them, the property was struck off to the city for a term of nine hundred years, while fifty years was the term fixed in the charter.
The charter (P. L. 1863, p. 109 § 83) provides that, if any tax or assessment remain unpaid on the day specified in the notice, the city treasurer shall proceed to sell, by public
The building and loan association must account for the rents and profits while it has had possession of the mortgaged premises, to the end that it may appear whether anything is due to it for taxes paid. In the account, it will have credit for necessary repairs, and, for any balance in its favor, it will' be entitled to a lien paramount to the complainant’s mortgages. If there appears to be a balance in