Gordon v. Quinn
Gordon v. Quinn
Opinion of the Court
This is a bill in equity to remove a cloud upon the complainants’ title to certain land.
It appears that the complainants were the owners of thirty-eight houselots upon a certain plat in the town of Warwick. The value of each of said lots was small; and the tax assessed against each of said lots on December 14 1914, was very small. The complainants are nonresident, heirs at law of a former owner, and appear to have been unaware of their ownership of said lots at the time said tax was due and payable. Said tax was not paid upon said lots, and for such nonpayment the lots were sold at public auction by the tax collector of the town of Warwick to the respondent Robert J. Quinn. At such auction sale it was necessary to sell' the whole of each lot in order to pay the *475 tax, interest, costs and expenses charged against such lot. A separate deed for each lot was delivered by the tax collector to said Robert J. Quinn.
After hearing in the Superior Court a final decree was entered adjudging said tax sale to be illegal, that said deeds purporting to convey title to said land constituted a cloud upon the title of the complainants, and were illegal and void. The decree ordered that said deeds be cancelled.
The case is before us upon the respondents’ appeal from said' decree. Section 12, Chapter 60, General Laws, 1909, provides for the sale of real estate for nonpayment of taxes and is as follows: “In all cases where any parcel of real ■estate is liable for payment of taxes, so much thereof as is necessary to pay the tax, interest, costs and expenses, shall be sold by the collector, at public auction, to the highest bidder, after notice has been given of the levy, and of the time and place of sale, in some newspaper published in the town, if there be one, and if there be no newspaper published in the town, then in some newspaper published in the county, at least once a week for the space of three weeks, and the collector shall also post up notices in two or more public places in the town for the same period.” Under said section the tax collector is authorized to sell so much of any parcel of land as is necessary to pay the tax in arrears upon such parcel together with the interest upon the tax' and the, collector’s legal costs and expenses.
The contention of the complainants is that the tax sales now in question are void for that the tax collector sought to obtain at such salé certain illegal and excessive amounts for expenses and hence in disregard of the provisions of the statute he sold more of each of said parcels than was necessary.
Beside the tax and interest, the amount of costs and expenses to recover which the collector sold each lot was as follows: levy $1, advertising $1, preparing advertisement $ 1, examining title, drawing deed, auctioneer’s fees, etc., $4; a total of $7.
*476
In regard to the charge for advertising it appears that it is the custom for tax collectors to publish in one advertisement the sale of all parcels of land to be sold on the same day for taxes in arrears. In our opinión in such circumstances a collector should charge against each parcel sold' a *478 fairly proportionate part of the sums actually paid to the newspaper publisher for the advertisement which includes notice of the sale of such parcel. It appears that the notice of the sale of the thirty-eight lots in question was included in an advertisement giving notice of the sale of a number of other parcels of land. There is no testimony before us from which we can positively determine the amount paid by the collector for the newspaper advertisement which included notice of the sale of these houselots. Counsel for the complainants in his brief and argument before us treats it as established that such payment was $97.20. Such was not the fact. In the examination of a witness counsel for the complainants assumed that the amount so paid was $97.20 and treated that, sum merely as an assumption used in such examination. The most that we can say in the matter is that we might conjecture, if it were permissible for us to do so, that of the newspaper bill some cents, slightly less than one dollar, rather than one dollar, should have been charged against each of said lots.
The fee of one dollar for preparing the advertisement of sale is warranted by statute.
We may fairly say that the complainants have failed to establish that the sum of the collector’s charges against each of said lots is excessive.
Respondents’ appeal is sustained, the decree appealed from is reversed, the cause is remanded to the Superior Court with direction to enter a decree dismissing the bill.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Hamilton A. Gordon Et Al. vs. Robert J. Quinn Et Al.
- Status
- Published