Cooper v. Mayor of Cape May Point

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, J.

This is an application for a ma.ndamus to require Edward W. Springer, Percy L. Haldeman and Albert B. Scliellinger, the members of the common council of the borough of Cape May Point, to revise an assessment of taxes made by the assessor of the borough for the purpose of paying a judgment recovered by the relator against the borough.

Relator's judgment is founded upon a debt that was contracted by a de fado borough government organized under an unconstitutional law.. Afterwards the legislature passed the act of March'24th, 1899, entitled “An act relating to certain illegal borough governments, requiring the payment of their debts.” Pamph. L. 1899, p. 534. This act has been sustained by the Court of Errors and Appeals as constitutional and efficacious for purposes limited by the scope of its title. *165Cooper v. Springer, 36 Vroom 594. Pursuant to that decision, a tax assessor and a tax collector have been appointed for the borough. In a subsequent decision (Cooper v. Cape May Point, 38 Id. 437), this court held, in effect, that, for the purpose of effectuating the beneficial intent of the act of 1899 the respondents, being members of the last governing body of the de facto borough, axe the representatives of the governmental establishment created by that act. The act makes the new borough government responsible for the obligations of the de facto government, and provides that it shall be subject to the general laws of the state relating to the government of boroughs. This refers us to the General Borough act of 1897, section 45 of which (Pamph. L., p. 307) provides that “all general laws applicable to the assessing and collection of taxes in the several townships of this state shall apply to the assessing and collection of taxes in boroughs.”

By a supplement of 1878 to the general act of 1874 respecting executions (Pamph. L. 1878, p. 182; Gen. Stat., p. 1421, pl. 34), it is provided that when any execution shall be issued against a borough and there shall be no property belonging to the borough sufficient to satisfy the same whereon to levy, the officer authorized to execute the process shall serve a copy of it upon the assessor and collector, and the assessor shall assess the amount due upon the execution upon the property within the borough; and this tax shall be assessed and collected at the same time and in the same manner and under the same conditions, restrictions and regulations as taxes for other purposes are required to be assessed in such borough, and when collected shall be paid over to the officer serving the process. A similar provision is embodied in the new “Act for the assessment and collection of taxes,” approved April 8th, 1903. Pamph. L. p. 410, § 25. This act, by its terms (Pamph. L. 1903, p. 435, § 66), took effect December 20th, 1903, and its provisions apply to proceedings on and after that date relating to taxes assessed for the year 1903.

In the present case it is made to appear that a writ of execution was issued out of this court on March, 9th, 1903, commanding the sheriff of Cape May county to make the *166amount of the relator’s judgment ag'ainst the borough. It was served upon the assessor and the members of the borough council were duly notified thereof. The assessor proceeded, in April, 1903, to make an assessment upon all the property in the borough for the purpose of paying the execution, and submitted the same and a duplicate thereof to the council for approval and confirmation. No action has been taken by the members of the council in the matter, and the present application is for a writ that shall require them to do their duty in the premises.

By section 19 of the new Tax law the assessor is required to submit his tax list and tire duplicate to the governing body of the taxing district, who are required to examine, revise and correct the same, the assessor attending their meetings to assist them, and the duplicate, with the corrections entered therein, is to be returned by them to the assessor. A similar duty of revision was imposed upon the governing bodies of boroughs and other municipalities by the supplement of April 11th, 1867, to the General Tax law of 1846. Pamph. L. 1867, p. 934; Gen. Stat., p. 3301, pl. 93. This was among the acts repealed at the time of the revision of the Tax law in 1903. Pamph. L., p. 436, § 1. Under this provision it has been held by this court that the revision and correction of the duplicate by the council or other governing body is a continuation of the work of the assessor, and is necessary to make a complete assessment. Vanderpool v. Bonnell, 20 Vroom 317, 320, 321; Ridgefield v. Goodday, 36 Id. 153, 155.

Upon the whole, it is plainly incumbent upon the members of the borough council, in furtherance of the design of the act of 1899 and as a necessary step in the collection from the taxpayers of the moneys due upon the relator’s execution, to examine and revise the assessor’s tax list and duplicate, to correct the same, if they require correction, and return the duplicate to the assessor with the corrections, if any, entered therein. As the facts of the present case are not at all in dispute, let a peremptory mandamus be issued accordingly.