Lantry v. Sage
Lantry v. Sage
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court, was delivered by
This writ is prosecuted to review a certificate signed by the mayor of Camden respecting a search against a lot of land in the city which had been sold for taxes under what is known as the Martin act. The matter is controlled by the supplements to that act approved April 5th, 1892 (Pamph. L., p. 395), and April 3d, 1902 (Pamph. L., p.
In the case before us, the certificate of the mayor endorsed on the memoranda of search is as follows: “I, Joseph E. Nowrey, Mayor of the City of Camden, State of New Jersey, by virtue of authority under the statute, do hereby approve of the within search as set forth.”
This, manifestly, is not the specific approval of the amount which the statute authorizes and requires.
But the defendant questions the right of the prosecutor to review the matter because his interest, it is claimed, is not shown. His interest, we think, is at this' stage of the proceeding to be assumed, since no contrary suggestion was made before final hearing. Such was the deliberate judgment of the Court or Errors in Avon v. Neptune City, 28 Vroom 701. Although, in the opinion delivered by Chief Justice Beasley in West Jersey Traction Company v. Camden, 29 Id. 362, there is expressed some disapproval of that rule, the expression is merely obiter, for not only was the proof there lacking necessary to show the illegality of the action under review, but the status of the prosecutor was expressly challenged by the defendant while the evidence in the case was being produced. We regard the rule laid down in Avon v. Neptune City as being still in force.
But the case now presented shows affirmatively the interest of the prosecutor. One of the witnesses, being asked “Who has the legal title to this property now?” answered, “Mathew Langtry, by deed from Binder, Beiderbeck & Schmidhauser.” No objection was made to either question or answer and cross-examination was waived. This should be deemed an acquiescence in the legality of the testimony.
The order of the mayor is annulled, with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.