37 N.J. Eq. 574 | N.J. | 1883
The opinion of the court was delivered by
On bill filed by the complainant, Garret G. Vreeland, to foreclose a mortgage made by James O’Neil and wife to secure the payment of a bond for $1,600, dated February 10th, 1872, the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City were made defendants, because they claim a lien fojr certain water rents on the mortgaged premises as prior encumbrances to the complainant’s mortgage. An interlocutory decree having been made establishing the priority of these water rents over the complainant’s mortgage, this appeal has been taken to test its validity.
The water works of Jersey City have been constructed by special legislative authority, and their purpose is expressed in the title of the original act, approved March 25th, 1852 (P. L. p. 1/.19), which is entitled, “ An act to authorize the construction of works for supplying Jersey City and places adjacent with pure and wholesome water.”
Section 81 of this charter gives the powers of the commissioners, under the original act, to the board of public works to regulate the distribution and use of the water in all places and for all purposes where the same may be required, and from time to time to fix the prices for the use thereof and the times of payment, and enacts that the owner and occupier of any house, lot or tenement where water shall be taken, shall each be liable for the payment of the price so fixed; that the said water rents shall, until paid, be liens upon the property charged therewith; and that on certificate of water rents in arrear, and delinquencies in payment of the rents and penalties, the board of finance and taxation shall cause said lands to be sold for the payment of said water rents and penalties and the interest thereon, in the same manner as lands may be sold for payment of taxes thereon. The imposition of the lien and the means »for its enforcement are fully provided for .in this charter. The time when the lien shall attach and its priority are established in section 151, which ■enacts “ that all taxes and assessments which shall hereafter be assessed or made upon any lands, tenements or real estate situate in said city, shall be and remain a lien thereon from the time of the confirmation thereof until paid, notwithstanding any devise, descent, alienation, mortgage or other encumbrance thereof” &c. There is a proviso in this section that the lands, tenements or real estate sold may be redeemed by the owner, mortgagee, occupant or person interested therein.
This charter, which was passed March 31st, 1871, took effect immediately, and being a public act the complainant was charged with notice of its provisions when he took his mortgage at a later date. That the word “ assessments ” used in section 151 should be applied to the rating of any house, lot or tenement where water shall be taken, is apparent from the use of the word “ assessment ” in that section in connection with water rents, which are made liens upon the property charged therewith.
By section 151, this lien shall be and remain thereon until paid notwithstanding—that is, prior to, any mortgage or other encumbrance.
This being the contract under which the city of Jersey City, by its appropriate board, supplied the owner and mortgagor James O’Neil, with water from its water works, the complainant, who took his mortgage with full legal notice of these provisions in the charter for securing the payment of the water rents, can stand in no better position than O’Neil. Every one claiming under him by devise, descent, alienation, mortgage or other encumbrance of the land, took only such title as he had to give, and subject to all liens perfected or inchoate of which he had legal notice under the charter.
The lien claimed in behalf of the city is for water rates during the years 1874, 1875, 1876, 1877, 1878, 1879, 1880, 1881, for water actually used by the owner of the land on the premises where he lived. If they were allowed to accumulate it was the fault of the owner, and also of the mortgagee, who might have learned, on inquiry, if the charges had been paid from year to year. The remedy, for the oppression of which he now complains, has always been in his own hands. If he was not satisfied to make the loan of his money on mortgage subject to the liability of being postponed to water rates that might become in arrear, he could have kept it. If, on inquiry, he had found that the mortgagee was delinquent in payment of his water rates, after he had taken the mortgage, he could have demanded payment of the bond, and, if refused, foreclosed his mortgage.
Decree unanimously affirmed.