SYLLABUS
(This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has
been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the
reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please
note that, in the interests of brevity, portions of any opinion may not
have been summarized).
Anthony Malinowski v. Victor Jacobs , et al. (A-46-05)
[ NOTE: This is a companion case to Simon v. Cronecker and Simon v.
Rando , also decided today. ]
Argued November 29, 2005 Decided January 29, 2007
ALBIN, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
Plaintiff Anthony Malinowski purchased a tax sale certificate for property located in Raritan
Borough. He filed a complaint to foreclose on the tax certificate. The last
day for redemption was set for March 1, 2004. On February 24, 2004,
Cherrystone Bay, LLC purchased the mortgage, allegedly for $55,900 -- the value of
the mortgage. Cherrystone, now as the mortgage holder, asserted that it had the
statutory right to redeem the tax certificate. Without intervening in the foreclosure action,
Cherrystone made various attempts to redeem the certificate, valued at over $49,000 in
the tax collectors office. On March 3, 2004, judgment was entered in favor
of Malinowski, foreclosing on the tax sale certificate. The next day, unaware that
judgment had been entered, Cherrystone redeemed the tax certificate. Cherrystone then filed for
the first time to intervene in the foreclosure proceedings and to vacate the
final judgment. The trial court denied the motion. Cherrystone appealed. While Cherrystones appeal
was pending, the Appellate Division decided Simon v. Rando.
The Appellate Division reversed in an unpublished per curiam opinion. It concluded that
Simon v. Rando announced a new rule requiring that a third-party purchaser/assignee intervene
in the foreclosure action prior to redeeming a tax certificate, and that Rando
should have prospective application only. Judge Payne dissented, explaining that Rando merely applied
existing rules to a new factual variant. Malinowski appealed to the Supreme Court.
HELD: The Courts decisions in Cronecker and Rando must be given retroactive effect.
1. The principles enunciated in the Courts decisions in Cronecker and Rando come
from a straightforward reading and interpretation of the governing statutes. Because there is
no new rule of law and because the parties and their lawyers are
presumed to know the applicable statutes, it would be inequitable to plaintiffs to
apply these decisions prospectively. (pp. 8-10)
2. In the case of Cherrystone, who acquired a property interest after the
commencement of a tax sale foreclosure action, no plausible interpretation of N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1
and 54:5-98 would lead to the belief that redemption could occur without first
intervening in the action. The Court is not swayed by the argument that
the statutes in question should be interpreted in line with the purported customs
of some practitioners. Prospective application would allow practitioners who have chosen to ignore
the clear import of the Tax Sale Law to benefit from their transgressions.
(pp. 10-12)
3. In response to the argument that compliance with the statutory language may
be inefficient in practice, the Court does not pass on the wisdom of
statutes or substitute its preferences for the policy choices made by the Legislature.
The Courts role is to give meaning to the clearly expressed words in
the Tax Sale Law. (p. 12)
The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED. The judgment of the trial
court is REINSTATED.
JUSTICES LAVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO join in JUSTICE ALBINs opinion. JUSTICE LONG
did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-
46 September Term 2005
ANTHONY MALINOWSKI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VICTOR JACOBS, Individually and as Executor of the Estate of Mary Jacobs, Deceased,
STATE OF NEW JERSEY, RICHARD CORNELISON, FCC NATIONAL BANK, assignee of FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF CHICAGO, n/k/a FIRST USA BANK,
Defendants,
and
CHERRYSTONE BAY, LLC,
Proposed Intervenor-Respondent.
Argued November 29, 2005 Decided January 29, 2007
On appeal from the Superior Court, Appellate Division.
Keith A. Bonchi argued the cause for appellant (Goldenberg, Mackler, Sayegh, Mintz, Pfeffer,
Bonchi & Gill, attorneys).
Robert W. Keyser argued the cause for respondent (Kaplin, Stewart, Meloff, Reiter &
Stein, attorneys; Mr. Keyser and Lisa A. Buckalew, on the brief).
JUSTICE ALBIN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Simon v. Cronecker, ___ N.J. ___ (2007), decided today, we held that
after the filing of an action to foreclose a tax certificate on property,
a third-party investor purchasing that property may not redeem the certificate without first
complying with N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 and 54:5-98, which require timely intervention in the foreclosure
action and the payment of more than nominal consideration for the property. Id.
at ___ (slip op. at 42-45). In the post-foreclosure complaint period, without the
courts oversight and permission, the investor has no right to participate, directly or
indirectly, in the redemption process. Id. at ___ (slip op. at 42-44). In
Simon v. Rando, ___ N.J. ___ (2007), also decided today, we applied that
same principle to a third-party investor purchasing prior tax sale certificates after the
holders of subsequently issued tax certificates instituted foreclosure proceedings. Id. at ___ (slip
op. at 8). In Rando, we affirmed the Appellate Division, which held that
[t]he obligation to intervene in the action is essential to judicial review of
the adequacy of consideration paid for a post-complaint assignment of an interest in
property subject to foreclosure.
374 N.J. Super. 147, 155 (App. Div. 2005), affd,
___ N.J. ___ (2007). Thus, in Rando, because the third-party investor acquired prior
tax certificates in the post-foreclosure complaint stage and failed to intervene in the
foreclosure proceedings commenced by the holders of the subsequently issued certificates, the investor
was barred from participating in the redemption process.
In this appeal, the only issue before us is whether the rule of
law announced by the appellate panel in Rando, which we essentially affirmed in
both Cronecker and Rando, is to be retroactively applied to the facts of
this case. That issue comes to us as of right based on the
dissent in the Appellate Division. R. 2:2-1(a)(2).
To frame the issue, a brief recitation of the relevant facts will suffice.
I.
A.
In 1999, at a public auction, plaintiff Anthony Malinowski purchased a tax sale
certificate for property located in Raritan Borough. After waiting more than the two-year
period required by
N.J.S.A. 54:5-86, plaintiff filed a complaint to foreclose on the
tax certificate. The complaint named the property owner and the holder of a
mortgage as persons having the statutory right to redeem the certificate. The last
date for redemption was set for March 1, 2004. The failure to redeem
the certificate would result in final judgment in favor of plaintiff, who would
then take fee simple title to the property.
On February 24, 2004, Cherrystone Bay, LLC (Cherrystone), purchased the mortgage, allegedly, for
$55,900 -- the value of the mortgage. Plaintiff later questioned whether Cherrystone in
fact paid that sum of money. Cherrystone, now as the mortgage holder, asserted
that it had the statutory right to redeem the tax certificate. Without intervening
in the foreclosure action, Cherrystone then made various attempts to redeem the certificate,
valued at over $49,000, in the tax collectors office.
See footnote 1
The details of those
efforts are not relevant to this appeal. On March 3, 2004, judgment was
entered in favor of plaintiff, foreclosing on the tax sale certificate. The next
day, unaware that judgment had been entered, Cherrystone redeemed the tax certificate.
Cherrystone then filed for the first time a motion to intervene in the
foreclosure proceedings in the Chancery Division and to vacate the final judgment. The
trial court denied Cherrystones motion. While Cherrystones appeal was pending, the Appellate Division
decided
Rando.
B.
In a split decision, the Appellate Division held in an unpublished per curiam
opinion that
Simon v. Rando announced a new rule that should have only
prospective application. The majority contended that before
Rando, questions concerning whether a third-party
purchaser/assignee paid nominal consideration for a property interest were typically resolved
after an
attempt to redeem. The majority recognized that the rule in
Rando now requires
that the resolution of these disputes be triggered by a motion to intervene
prior to an attempt to redeem. While expressing some concerns about whether this
new rule provides an efficient method of resolving [nominal consideration] disputes, the majority
declined Cherrystones invitation to reach a different conclusion than the
Rando panel.
The majority determined, however, that the new rule should not be applied retroactively.
The majority maintained that neither preexisting case law nor the customary manner in
which courts had handled redemption challenges would have placed Cherrystone on notice of
a duty to intervene in a foreclosure action before seeking redemption. In the
majoritys view,
Rando interpreted
N.J.S.A. 54:5-98 (redemption shall be made in that cause
only) in a way that it had never before been understood by the
courts or practitioners. Concluding that
Rando announced a new rule of law and
fearing that retroactive application could have inequitable consequences, the majority decided to apply
Rando prospectively only.
In a dissenting opinion, Judge Payne expressed her view that
Rando did not
announce a change in the law, but merely applied existing rules to a
new factual variant of alleged intermeddling in the redemption process. For that reason,
Judge Payne could find no principled reason why [
Rando] should not be retroactively
applied.
Judge Payne placed
N.J.S.A. 54:5-98 and 54:5-89.1 in historical context. Those statutes mandate
that after the filing of a tax sale foreclosure complaint, a third-party investor
who acquires an interest in the subject property must intervene in the foreclosure
action before redeeming the certificate. Judge Payne stated that
N.J.S.A. 54:5-98
provides, and has provided in substantially similar form since amendments to the Tax
Sale Law in 1928, [
L. 1928,
c. 211, § 49], that [a]fter the complaint
[for foreclosure] has been filed redemption shall be made
in that cause only,
provided notice of the suit has been filed in the office of the
tax collector. (Emphasis supplied.) Parties who hold a recorded interest and have either
appeared or defaulted may thus redeem until final judgment is entered, and their
redemption will be deemed in the cause. However, parties who do not hold
a recorded interest and thus were never parties to the foreclosure proceeding, must
move to intervene.
This procedural requirement of intervention appears as well in
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1, which as
enacted in 1954, [
L. 1954,
c. 186, § 1], provided that the holder of
an unrecorded interest in property would be barred by the foreclosure action in
the same manner as if he had been made a party to and
appeared in such action, and the judgment therein had been made against him
as one of the defendants therein. However, the statute provided additionally that such
a holder, upon recordation of his interest, may apply to be made a
party to such action.
Significantly, the intervention procedure set forth in
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 was amended in response
to the abuses of the tax sale process by heir hunters identified by
the Supreme Court in its decision in
Bron v. Weintraub,
43 N.J. 87
(1964) . . . . As amended,
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 [
L. 1967,
c. 149
§ 1] permits scrutiny of proposed intervenors, (including heir hunters) prior to foreclosure .
. . .
Thus, Judge Payne determined that the requirement that a third-party investor intervene in
a tax sale foreclosure is integral to the Legislatures response to the abuses
illustrated in Bron. She also disagreed with the majority that the statutory intervention
requirement has been commonly ignored. To highlight this point, Judge Payne cited to
Savage v. Weissman,
355 N.J. Super. 429, 443 (App. Div. 2002), a case
decided before Rando addressing a third-party investors obligation to intervene in the post-foreclosure
complaint period in accordance with the demands of N.J.S.A. 54:5-98. The Savage court
stated that to allow a party which obtains an interest in the property
after the filing of the complaint to proceed directly to the tax collector
would totally frustrate the public policy of this State as announced by the
Supreme Court and codified by the Legislature. Ibid.
Judge Payne reasoned that a sophisticated commercial entity such as Cherrystone should have
been aware of the statutory procedures and decisional law governing redemption, and that
Cherrystones failure to intervene in the foreclosure action before attempting redemption leads to
the inference that it sought to avoid the scrutiny of its business transactions
that would have occurred if intervention in the cause had been sought as
required by N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1.
Based on the dissent in the Appellate Division, plaintiff appealed to this Court
as of right pursuant to Rule 2:2-1(a)(2). We now reverse the appellate panel,
substantially for the reasons given by Judge Payne in her dissenting opinion. The
logic of that conclusion leads us to hold that Cronecker and Rando must
be given retroactive effect. We add the following for the sake of clarity
and to elucidate further the reasons for our decision.
II.
The principles enunciated in our decisions in
Cronecker and
Rando, and in Judge
Paynes dissent, come from a straightforward reading and interpretation of the governing statutes.
We are merely applying the rules in effect at the time of the
decisions in those cases and in this case. Because there is no new
rule of law and because the parties and their lawyers ar
e presumed
to
know the applicable
statutes
, it would be inequitable to plaintiffs to apply our
decisions prospectively.
We begin by noting that judicial decisions generally apply retroactively.
Green v. Auerbach
Chevrolet Corp.,
127 N.J. 591, 600 (1992). We depart from that general principle
and turn to prospective application when considerations of fairness and justice, related to
reasonable surprise and prejudice to those affected counsel us to do so.
N.J.
Election Law Enforcement Commn v. Citizens to Make Mayor-Council Govt Work,
107 N.J. 380, 388 (1987) (citation and quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, prospective application is appropriate
when (1) the decision establishes a new rule of law, by either overruling
past precedent or deciding an issue of first impression, and (2) when retroactive
application could produce substantial inequitable results.
Velez v. City of Jersey City,
180 N.J. 284, 297 (2004).
In confirming that a third-party investor has a statutory requirement to intervene in
a tax foreclosure action in the circumstances presented in
Cronecker and
Rando, we
are not overruling precedent. Indeed, those cases were foreshadowed by the Appellate Divisions
ruling in
Savage. As discussed in Judge Paynes dissent,
Savage,
supra, explained that
to allow a party which obtains an interest in the property after the
filing of the complaint to proceed directly to the tax collector without first
intervening in the tax sale foreclosure action would violate both
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 and
54:5-98. 355
N.J. Super. at 443. From a practical viewpoint, the tax collector
knows who can redeem a tax certificate from reviewing the foreclosure complaint, which
lists the names of those with an interest in the subject property. Only
when a third-party investor, who acquires a post-complaint interest in the subject property,
intervenes in the foreclosure action does the tax collector learn of the investors
right to redeem.
See N.J.S.A. 54:5-98 ([N]otice of the suit [must be] filed
in the office of the tax collector.). We find that our decisions today
have merely construed provisions of the Tax Sale Law in an unremarkable way.
Thus, we cannot conclude that Cherrystone reasonably relied on a plausible, although incorrect,
interpretation of the law, or that a member of the public could reasonably
have relied on a different conception of the state of the law.
Sasco
1997 NI, LLC v. Zudkewich,
166 N.J. 579, 594 (2001) (citation and internal
quotation marks omitted). Indeed, in the case of a third-party investor, such as
Cherrystone, who acquired a property interest after the commencement of a tax sale
foreclosure action, no plausible interpretation of
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 and 54:5-98 would lead to
the belief that redemption could occur without first intervening in the action.
N.J.S.A. 54:5-98, which has remained unchanged for decades, provides that [a]fter the complaint
has been filed redemption
shall be made
in that cause only. (emphasis added).
That legislative directive is reinforced by
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1, which provides that a third-party
investor shall not be admitted as a part
y to [a tax sale foreclosure]
action, nor shall he have the right to redeem the lands from the
tax sale whenever it shall appear that he has acquired such interest in
the lands for a nominal consideration after the filing of the complaint. For
the reasons we expressed in
Cronecker, we do not see any ambiguity in
the text of those statutes. Nor have we found any relevant statutory history
inconsistent with our reading of those statutes.
Cronecker,
supra, ___
N.J. at ___
(slip op. at 42-45)
. As we held in
Cronecker,
supra, and
Rando,
supra,
requiring a third-party investor to intervene in the foreclosure action guarantees both payment
of more than nominal consideration for property interests and judicial review of the
integrity of the redemption process. ___
N.J. ___ (slip op. at 43-44); ___
N.J. ___ (slip op. at 5-7).
We are not swayed by Cherrystones argument that we should interpret
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1
and 54:5-98 in line with the purported customs of some practitioners. A statute
is no less clear merely because those who should abide by its dictates
decide to disregard them. Prospective application would allow practitioners who have chosen to
ignore the clear import of the Tax Sale Law to benefit from their
transgressions.
Last, both Cherrystone and the appellate panel majority suggest that compliance with the
statutory language of
N.J.S.A. 54:5-89.1 and 54:5-98 may be inefficient in practice. The
Legislat
ure, however, has placed the
safeguards embodied in those statutes into place for
policy reasons pertaining to the integrity of the redemption process. We do not
pass on the wisdom of statutes or substitute our preferences for the policy
choices made by the Legislature. Our role is simply to give meaning to
the clearly expressed words in the Tax Sale Law,
N.J.S.A. 54-1 to -137.
III.
For the reasons expressed, we reverse the decision of the Appellate Division and
reinstate the judgment of the trial court.
JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ZAZZALI, WALLACE and RIVERA-SOTO join in JUSTICE ALBINS opinion. JUSTICE LONG
did not participate.
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
NO. A-46 SEPTEMBER TERM 2005
ON CERTIFICATION TO Appellate Division, Superior Court
ANTHONY MALINOWSKI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
VICTOR JACOBS, Individually
and as Executor of the Estate
of Mary Jacobs, Deceased,
STATE OF NEW JERSEY, RICHARD
CORNELISON, FCC NATIONAL
BANK, assignee of FIRST
NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO,
n/k/a FIRST USA BANK,
Defendants,
and
CHERRYSTONE BAY, LLC,
Proposed Intervenor-
Respondent.
DECIDED January 29, 2007
Justice LaVecchia PRESIDING
OPINION BY Justice Albin
CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
DISSENTING OPINION BY
CHECKLIST
REVERSE AND REINSTATE
JUSTICE LONG
---------------------
-------------------
JUSTICE LaVECCHIA
X
JUSTICE ZAZZALI
X
JUSTICE ALBIN
X
JUSTICE WALLACE
X
JUSTICE RIVERA-SOTO
X
TOTALS
5
Footnote: 1
Plaintiff claims that the property is worth approximately $415,000. He complains that Cherrystone
stands to make a $300,000 profit for an investment of just over $100,000
(cost of the mortgage and redemption of the tax sale certificate).