Anderson v. Essex County Board of Taxation

The rule to show cause in this case was allowed on the 14th of January, 1939, returnable on the 28th of the same month. It was based upon a petition and affidavits which have never been filed and the original of which has been submitted to me as part of the case for consideration and decision. The rule to show cause was never filed in the clerk's office for the purpose of being entered in the minutes as required by rule 214 of this court, which provides, among other things, that "all rules, whether granted by the court or a justice, shall be entered in the minutes within ten days from the granting of the same, and in default thereof shall be of no effect." *Page 159

In the case of Jersey City v. Davis, 80 N.J.L. 609, a similar situation existed in a mandamus case and two rules to show cause were ordered quashed because not entered in time. In the later case of Singer v. Juechter, 2 N.J. Mis. R. 714, the Supreme Court relaxed the rule as a matter of grace, and particularly on the ground (page 716) that the rule was filed in ample time but the failure to enter it was apparently that of the clerk. In Emma v. Loggia, c., 6 Id. 413, the court relaxed the rule in view of the fact that, if entered, it would have directed the issue of a writ of alternative mandamus, and that in fact such writ had issued and was before the court.

There seems to be nothing in the present case to call for a relaxation of the rule. So far as appears, the petition, which should have been filed immediately upon presentation, was never filed, and the rule to show cause based thereon has been held in the office of petitioners' attorney.

The present rule to show cause under the circumstances is simply nugatory and, consequently, requires no judicial action either way; but in order that the situation may be made a matter of record, I am filing the petition and the rule to show cause with this memorandum, and if counsel for the respondents desire to have a formal discharge of the rule on the grounds above indicated, they may present such a rule for signature.

It may do no harm to add that I see no substantial merit in the present application, which is by two independent taxpayers to intervene in a tax litigation between the taxing authority and the parties subjected to the tax. The statute allowed these relators to apply to the county board within a limited time to include omitted property of other parties, but that time expired before their present application to the court, and there seems to be no statutory or other warrant for intervention in any other way. *Page 160