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Rivard v. Ross

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Dec 15, 1954
99 N.H. 299 (N.H. 1954)

Summary

mailing of tax bill to property owner without post office address invalidates tax sale; to comply with statute, taxing authorities must give notice "in a manner that will make it reasonably probable that the taxpayer will receive them"

Summary of this case from Boddie v. Robinson

Opinion

No. 4340.

Argued October 6, 1954.

Decided December 15, 1954.

The depositing by a tax collector of a letter enclosing a tax bill and of a later registered notice of the tax sale in a post office in the name of the person to whom the real estate was assessed with no post office address, both of which were returned, did not meet with the requirements and the object of the statutes (R. L., c. 77, s. 9; c. 80, s. 19) that such notices should be given in a manner that it is reasonably probable that the taxpayer will receive them.

The failure of the tax collector to give sufficient notice, in such case, rendered the tax sale invalid and the decree of the Court setting aside both the deed from the collector to the city and from the city to the purchaser of the property upon reimbursing the purchaser for taxes he paid plus interest was proper.

In such case, it was likewise proper for the Court under R. L., c. 371, s. 5; c. 80, s. 39, as amended, to require the person seeking to redeem the property to pay such fees and expenses of the purchaser's attorney in the litigation as the Court shall determine to be reasonable under the circumstances.

In an action contesting the validity of a tax sale for failure of tax collector to comply with statutory provisions relative to notice evidence as to the number of pieces of taxable property in the city indicative of the duties and responsibilities of the assessors was properly excluded as immaterial.

In such action, evidence of market value of the real estate acquired by the city at a tax sale and sold for a small sum was material in determining what decree justice requires under the statute (Laws 1947, c. 3, s. 2).

Where a certain exchange of deeds already in evidence showed the consideration therefor to be a nominal sum it was not error to admit testimony of lack of consideration and absence of federal revenue stamps.

PETITION, to quiet title to certain real estate in Manchester situate on the south side of Hancock Street east of the Boston and Maine Railroad tracks.

Trial by the Court (Sullivan, J.), with a view, resulted in, among others, the following findings of fact.

Defendant Consolidated Rendering Company, doing business as, Manchester Rendering Company, obtained title to this 4.29 acre tract by duly recorded warranty deed on May 18, 1931. At the time of purchase there were structures on this land, the dwelling thereon being numbered 138 Hancock Street. These buildings were removed in 1942 or 1943. In 1949 and for at least three years prior thereto there was a painted sign posted on this property respecting its use over the name Manchester Rendering Company. Part of the property was leased by Consolidated for outdoor advertising, part was cultivated with its permission and part was used as a parking lot by Consolidated and its employees. Consolidated owned and operated for about fifty years, a rendering plant on an adjoining tract of land on the west side of the tracks.

On January 26, 1948, for certain business reasons, Consolidated conveyed the tract in question to defendant Fred D. Ross who has been continuously employed by it at its Boston office for about 40 years. He was described therein as of Malden, Massachusetts. This deed was duly recorded on April 19, 1948.

On January 27, 1948, Ross executed and delivered back to Consolidated a quitclaim deed of said real estate which has never been recorded.

Consolidated filed an inventory with the assessors of Manchester on or before April 15, 1948, in which it declared the real estate owned or held by it on April 1 to be "Land and buildings foot of Hancock Street Land 138 Hancock Street." The same was done in 1949. Fred D. Ross never filed an inventory therefor.

Taxes thereon for 1949 were assessed to Fred D. Ross and on August 11, 1949, the tax collector deposited in the Manchester post office a letter containing a bill therefor with the name Fred D. Ross on it but without any post office address. The letter was returned to the tax collector by the postal department.

On August 18, 1950, the tax collector deposited in the Manchester post office a registered letter containing a notice of tax sale for 1949 taxes with the name Fred D. Ross on it but without any post office address. This letter was also returned.

At a tax sale held September 15, 1950, the premises were purchased by the city of Manchester. It received a deed thereto from the tax collector on September 18, 1952. The plaintiff, William J. Rivard, obtained a quitclaim deed from the city on December 22, 1952.

The Court also found that when the tax collector sent out the tax bill in 1949 and the notice of tax sale in 1950 Ross was, and had been for about seven years, a resident of Malden, Massachusetts. Neither Ross nor Consolidated nor Manchester Rendering received any notice of the tax sale of this property for 1949 taxes from anyone prior to December 24, 1952, when the plaintiff informed them of his purchase from the city. The assessors had no knowledge of the unrecorded deed from Ross to Consolidated or that the latter owned or claimed any interest in the premises and neither they nor the tax collector had any communication with respect to these premises from Consolidated or Ross after the 1949 warrant until after the conveyance to Rivard.

The Court ruled "that the real estate in question was legally and properly assessed for the year 1949 to . . . Ross . . . that the tax collector for 1949 did not comply with the requirements of R. L., 1942, c. 77, s. 9, as amended, of sending to . . . Ross, a bill for 1949 taxes on the real estate in question. That the tax collector for 1950 did not comply with the requirements of R. L., 1942, c. 80, s. 19, as amended, of sending a notice of the tax sale by registered mail to the last known post office address of. . . Ross." The Court further ruled that those failures of the tax collector to comply with those requirements of the law invalidated the tax sale and decreed it invalid.

The Court further ordered and decreed that upon payment by Ross to Rivard of the sum of $142.05 which he paid the city at the time of the conveyance to him with interest from that date to the date of the decree plus $44.00, the amount of the 1952 taxes plus interest from the date of payment, the tax sale "is hereby set aside" and the deeds of the tax collector to the city and of the city to the plaintiff "are hereby declared void."

The Court further ordered "that the Petitionee, Fred D. Ross, pay to the Petitioner, William J. Rivard, such fees and expenses of his attorney as shall be determined by this Court to be reasonable."

The exceptions of the parties to the admission and exclusion of evidence to findings and rulings made and to the denial of requests for findings and rulings and to certain portions of the decree were reserved and transferred as well as plaintiff's exceptions to the denial of his motion for a directed verdict and defendants' exceptions to the denial of their several motions to dismiss.

J. Francis Roche (by brief and orally), for the plaintiff.

Willoughby A. Colby (by brief and orally), for the defendants.


Plaintiff's title to these premises must rest on the validity of the tax sale thereof made by the tax collector for the city of Manchester on September 15, 1950, for unpaid taxes thereon for the year 1949. His authority and power to thus sell these premises the tax collector must find in the statutes for "collectors have no power to sell land except in pursuance of the provisions contained in the statute." Cahoon v. Coe, 57 N.H. 556, 571; Perham v. Fibre Co., 64 N.H. 485; Black, Tax Titles (2d ed.) s. 154; Blackwell, Tax Titles (5th ed.) 117. "And in all such cases the law requires that every prerequisite to the exercise of the power must precede its exercise . . . or his act will not be sustained." Cahoon v. Coe, supra, 569; Salem v. Sperber, 88 N.H. 374.

Where the requirements of the statute have for their object the giving of notice so that a taxpayer may have an opportunity to pay his taxes and save his land those provisions cannot be deemed directory merely or declared non-essential. Weeks v. Waldron, 64 N.H. 149. R. L., c. 77, s. 9 and c. 80, s. 19, being in our opinion provisions of this type, must be complied with and a sale made without such compliance is necessarily invalid. Weeks v. Waldron, supra; Greeley v. Beckman, 75 N.H. 413; Salem v. Sperber, supra; Tris v. Adams, 96 N.H. 387.

Section 9 of chapter 77 (as amended by Laws 1947, c. 221), provides that "The collector shall, on or before September first, or within thirty days after the receipt of such list [of taxes assessed on real estate] send to every person taxed, or his agent, if known, a bill of his taxes." Section 19 of chapter 80 (as amended by Laws 1945, c. 98), provides that the tax collector "shall also, at the same time [as he posts advertisements of the tax sale] send a like notice [giving certain specified information] by registered mail to the last known post office address of the owner or of the person against whom the tax was assessed."

In an attempt to comply with the requirements of section 9 the tax collector deposited in the post office at Manchester a letter containing a bill for the 1949 taxes with the name Fred D. Ross on it but without any post office address. It was returned to him. As to the notice of sale required by section 19 he enclosed it in a registered letter deposited at the same post office addressed in the same manner. It also was returned.

It is true that if instead of sending an agent to secure the transfers at the registry of deeds the assessors relied on the information required to be supplied them by the register of deeds under the provisions of R. L., c. 49, s. 13, they would not receive the information as to the city in which the grantee resided. However a telephone call to the grantor, Consolidated, as was made by the plaintiff after he received his deed or the simple expedient of their agent noting the residence of the grantee as recorded in the deed would have supplied this information. It seems to us that if said sections 9 and 19 are designed to give a taxpayer an opportunity to pay his taxes so as not to have his property subjected to a tax sale for nonpayment or advise him of such a pending sale, as we say the Legislature intended, then the taxing authorities must give these notices in a manner that will make it reasonably probable that the taxpayer will receive them. See Mouldings Division of Thompson Ind. v. Review Board, (Ind.App.) N.E.2d 402, 404; Conner v. Miller, 154 Ohio St. 313; 5 Am. Jur. 831, s. 591.

In our opinion the procedure followed in this case did not meet that standard. The tax sale held September 15, 1950, was therefore invalid and the Court's decree setting it aside and declaring void the deed of the tax collector to the city and that of the city to the plaintiff upon the repayment by Ross to the latter of the taxes paid by him plus interest was proper.

We are also of the opinion that the Court could, under the authority granted it by R. L., c. 371, s. 5 and c. 80, s. 39 as amended by Laws 1947, c. 3, make such orders as justice requires and properly order Ross to pay the plaintiff "such fees and expenses of his attorney as shall be determined by this Court to be reasonable." Without detracting in the least from what we have said as to the duty imposed on city and town officials to comply with the requirements of the applicable statutes, a taxpayer, in our opinion, has some obligation to see that the taxes on his land are paid within the required time. He cannot therefore complain if under certain circumstances the Trial Court in the exercise of sound discretion orders him to reimburse the purchaser at a tax sale, which he maintains was improper, for expenses other than those made mandatory by R. L., c. 371, s. 5, as amended.

It is true as pointed out by the defendants that such an order might be construed as an invitation to litigation in which attorneys' fees and expenses are assured. We are sure that the Trial Court will take that danger into consideration when it makes orders for such reimbursements. Defendants' exception to that part of the decree is overruled. Also in view of the fact that that part of the decree which invalidates the tax sale has been sustained the other exceptions of the defendants "are of no moment" as stated by them in their brief.

We consider now plaintiff's exceptions to the admission and exclusion of evidence and to certain findings. We see no error in the Court's exclusion of evidence as to how many pieces of taxable property there were in Manchester in 1949 offered by plaintiff as bearing on the statutory duties and responsibilities of the assessors. That is not the test. Nor was there error in admitting testimony that the land in question bought by plaintiff for $142.05 had a market value of at least $10,000. Being an equitable proceeding this evidence would be material to the Court in determining what decree "justice requires" (Laws 1947, c. 3). See Perham v. Fibre Co., supra.

The deeds or copies thereof from Consolidated to Ross and from Ross to Consolidated being in evidence we see no error in the admission of testimony that there were no revenue stamps thereon or that there was no consideration passed between the parties when there was a recital therein that the consideration was less than $100. Plante v. Wendell, 95 N.H. 188.

The evidence as to the willingness of Consolidated to pay charges and costs assessed against the property in question was material as bearing on any order the Court might make against it as a defendant in this action. Neither do we see prejudicial error in the Court allowing the secretary of Consolidated to testify that they claimed to own the property in question in 1949 or in the technically erroneous finding that taxes for the year 1948 on said real estate were assessed to and paid by Manchester Rendering Co. when in fact they were paid by Consolidated doing business as Manchester Rendering Co.

In view of the result reached the accuracy of the Court's finding that "all the real estate sold for taxes was sold at one and the same time" at the tax sale in question has become moot.

All exceptions relied on by the parties having been disposed of, the order is

Decree affirmed.

All concurred.


Summaries of

Rivard v. Ross

Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough
Dec 15, 1954
99 N.H. 299 (N.H. 1954)

mailing of tax bill to property owner without post office address invalidates tax sale; to comply with statute, taxing authorities must give notice "in a manner that will make it reasonably probable that the taxpayer will receive them"

Summary of this case from Boddie v. Robinson
Case details for

Rivard v. Ross

Case Details

Full title:WILLIAM J. RIVARD v. FRED D. ROSS a

Court:Supreme Court of New Hampshire Hillsborough

Date published: Dec 15, 1954

Citations

99 N.H. 299 (N.H. 1954)
109 A.2d 857

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