The plaintiff brings this action as collector of taxes of the town of Chelmsford, to recover a tax assessed upon the personal property off the defendant on May 1, 1904. His right to recover is questioned only on the ground that a part of the tax was assessed upon the defendant’s money at interest, secured by mortgages on St. Peter’s Cemetery in the city of Lowell, which cemetery is exempt from taxation under the R. L. c. 12, § 5, cl. 8.
Seemingly the case might be decided in favor of the plaintiff on the ground that, if the tax was wrongly assessed, the defendant’s only remedy was by an application for an abatement. R. L. c. 12, §§ 73, 74. Hicks v. Westport, 130 Mass. 478. But as both parties have argued the question whether the property is liable to taxation, we prefer to put our decision on broader grounds.
The R. L. c. 12, § 2, provide that “All property real and personal situated within the Commonwealth, . . . unless ex*379empted by law, shall be subject to taxation.” Personal property subject to taxation includes “ money at interest, and other debts due the person to be taxed more than he is indebted or pays interest for; but not including in any such debts due him or indebtedness from him any loan on mortgage of real estate, taxable as real estate, except the excess of such loan above the assessed value of the mortgaged real estate.” R. L. c. 12, § 4, cl. 2. The property in question is money at interest represented by promissory notes secured by mortgages. But it is not a “ loan on mortgage of real estate, taxable as real estate,” because the mortgages which secure it are upon a cemetery, and cemeteries are exempt from taxation. Loans on mortgages are taxable as real estate only under the R. L. c. 12, § 16. That section makes taxable as real estate, the interest of a holder of a duly recorded mortgage on real estate not exempt from taxation under § 5. If the mortgaged real estate is exempt from taxation under § 5, the loan on the mortgage cannot be taxed as real estate, and it is left subject to taxation as personal property like other money at interest. See Knight v. Boston, 159 Mass. 551.
It follows that there is no ground for the defendant’s contention that the tax upon these mortgage loans was wrongly assessed.
Exceptions overruled.