Opinion by
This is an appeal from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County, Civil Division, in an ejectment action, entered after a trial without a jury and a decision in favor of the defendant-appellees, Jack Constantino and Genevieve Constantino, his wife, and against the plaintiff-appellant, Joseph Torch and Rosella Torch, his wife, sustaining a claim of title by adverse possession; and from the dismissal of exceptions filed by the appellants to this finding. The dis
The appellants claim title to the land by virtue of a tax deed granted to them by Lackawanna County after a treasurer’s tax sale. Both parties have recorded their respective titles. Appellees recorded their claim of title by adverse possession on December 21, 1970. The appellants recorded a quit claim deed from the county on August 31, 1971. The deed had been delivered on September 27, 1966.
Included in the period making up the prescribed period is the time period during which the land in question had been returned to the county for nonpayment of taxes. The appellants contend that the prescription period does not run against property owned by the county after return for nonpayment of taxes and removal from the assessment list.
There is no question that adverse possession will not lie against lands held by the Federal Government. U.S. v. Oglesby,
The court below relied heavily on two cases: (1) Goldman v. Quadrato,
The other case, Evans v. Erie County, supra, emphasized by the court below, as establishing the law in Pennsylvania, was decided in 1870, and Mr. Justice Sharswood said at page 228: “That the Statute of Limitations runs against a county or other municipal cor
The question now before us is whether the passage of time and the entry of government into so many fields not considered public domain in the past calls for a re-examination of whether the duty of collection of taxes placed by legislative mandate on local governments, imposing as it does a trusteeship for all tax bodies involved, is not in fact a governmental function.
The recent case of Johnson v. Pennsylvania Homing Finance Agency,
I am concerned with the situation where land is returned to local government for nonpayment of taxes and for the legislative purpose of collecting taxes lying fallow and despite numerous tax sales remain the property of the county without contributing to the cost of local government. It is possible to conceive of a situation where land may be held by the county for the full period of prescription and a smart manipulator claiming title by adverse possession obtains title without consideration and without the payment of any taxes. As pointed out in Thompson v. Frazier,
The legislature has struggled with this problem over the years. See, 72 P.S. §5860.101 et seq. The intent is clear to impose on counties a governmental function of collecting delinquent taxes as a trustee for the taxing districts so that real estate does not lie fallow and that tax titles are so improved as to attract buyers and restore real estate to the tax lists. The time has come for the courts to recognize and respect the intention of the legislature in this field and to realize that “changing conceptions of the scox>e and functions of government”, clearly call for a determination that adverse possession does not run against the political subdivisions holding land for tax sales for nonpayment of taxes, as trustee, and to hold that this function is a governmental one.
Judgment reversed with a procedendo.
