Under Article VII-A, Title 3, of the New York Tax Law, a town
proceeded to foreclose a lien for delinquent taxes on the real
estate of a long-time resident. In accordance with the statute, the
taxpayer was given no notice except by mail, posting notice at the
post office, and publication in two local newspapers. She filed no
answer, judgment of foreclosure was entered, and a deed to her
property was delivered to the town. A few days later, she was
adjudged insane and committed to a hospital for the insane.
Subsequently, appellant was appointed committee of her person and
property, and he filed a motion in the trial court where the
judgment of foreclosure had been entered to have the default
opened, the judgment vacated and the deed set aside. He alleged
that, prior to entry of the judgment of foreclosure, the taxpayer
was well known by town officials to be financially able to meet her
obligations but mentally incompetent to handle her affairs or to
understand the meaning of any notice served upon her, and that no
attempt had been made to have a committee appointed for her person
or property.
Held: assuming the truth of these allegations, the
notice provided under the statute was inadequate as applied to this
incompetent taxpayer, and the taking of her property would violate
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
351 U. S.
142-147.
(a) It appears that, in an action to set aside the deed (which
is contemplated by the statute), only such irregularities as
failure to observe the statutory procedure may be attacked. The
state court has recognized the existence of equitable power to
entertain a motion to open a default in an
in rem tax
proceeding, and the State Court of Appeals amended its remittitur
in this case to disclose that a constitutional question was
presented and necessarily decided on the appeal to that Court.
Therefore, the constitutional question is properly before this
Court. Pp.
351 U. S.
143-144.
(b) Notice to a person known to be an incompetent and without
the protection of a guardian does not measure up to the
requirements of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pp.
351 U. S.
146-147.
308 N.Y. 798, 941, 125 N.E.2d 862, 127 N.E.2d 90, reversed and
remanded.
Page 351 U. S. 142
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The application of Article VII-A, Title 3, of the New York Tax
Law to the mentally incompetent ward of appellant is challenged as
being repugnant to the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of
the Fourteenth Amendment.
The statute, in § 165
et seq., provides for the
judicial foreclosure of tax liens on real property. The filing at
the county clerk's office of a list of taxes delinquent more than
four years constitutes the filing of a notice of
lis
pendens and of a complaint, and commences an action against
the property. Provision is made for notice by publication, by
posting, and by mailing. The prescribed notice is to the effect
that, unless the amount of unpaid tax liens, together with interest
and penalties which are a lien against the property, are paid
within 7 weeks, or an answer interposed within 20 days thereafter,
any person having the right to redeem or answer shall be forever
foreclosed of all his right, title, and interest and equity of
redemption in and to the delinquent property. Provision is made for
entry of a judgment of foreclosure awarding possession of the
property to the tax district
Page 351 U. S. 143
and directing execution of a deed conveying an estate in fee
simple absolute to the district. The provisions of Title 3 purport
to be applicable to and valid and effective with respect to all
defendants, even though one or more of them be infants,
incompetents, absentees, or nonresidents of the State of New
York.
Section 165-h(7) makes the deed presumptive evidence of the
regularity of the proceedings. After two years, this presumption
becomes conclusive. The Section further provides that no action to
set aside the deed may be maintained unless commenced and a
lis
pendens notice filed prior to the time the presumption becomes
conclusive.
We are met at the outset with the contention of appellee and the
State of New York,
amicus curiae, that an action, as
distinguished from the motion in the original proceeding here
utilized, was the exclusive remedy in this case. The statute itself
contains no suggestion that a new action is the exclusive remedy;
it merely limits the time within which an action may be brought to
set aside the deed. The Second Department of the Appellate
Division, which decided this case, has recognized the existence of
equitable power to entertain a motion to open a default in an
in rem tax proceeding. [
Footnote 1] If that were not enough, appellee, on oral
argument, conceded that, in an action of the sort contemplated by
§ 165-h(7), the appellant would have been able to attack the
deed only on the ground of alleged irregularities in the assessment
and foreclosure proceedings. Although the Attorney General of New
York has supported a contrary position, it was
Page 351 U. S. 144
admitted at the argument that there was no decision to support
his view. Our conclusion that the constitutional question was
properly raised by appellant's motion is reinforced by the action
of the Court of Appeals which amended its remittitur to disclose
that a constitutional question was presented and necessarily
decided on the appeal to that court. 308 N.Y. 941, 127 N.E.2d 90.
Manifestly, no constitutional question could have been reached if
the Court of Appeals had been of the opinion that the appellant had
pursued the wrong remedy.
This proceeding started on May 8, 1952. The Town of Somers
instituted it to foreclose many tax liens, one of which was its
lien against the parcel of real property owned by the incompetent.
In compliance with the statute, notice was given to the incompetent
taxpayer by mail, by posting a notice at the post office, and by
publication in two local newspapers. No answer having been filed by
the incompetent, judgment of foreclosure was entered on September
8, 1952, and on October 24, 1952, a deed to her property was
delivered to the town. Five days later, on October 29, 1952, Nora
Brainard was certified by the County Court as a person of unsound
mind, and one week later, November 6, 1952, she was committed to
the Harlem Valley State Hospital for the insane. Thereafter, on
February 13, 1953, appellant filed bond pursuant to an order
appointing him Committee of the person and property of the
incompetent.
Sometime prior to September 22, 1953, the town offered the
incompetent's property for sale at a minimum bid price of $6,500.
The unpaid taxes, interest, penalties, costs of foreclosure,
attorney's fees, and maintenance charges on the property to
September 22, 1953, aggregated $480. On that date, appellant's
attorney appeared before the Town Board and offered to repay the
town the amount due on the property in consideration
Page 351 U. S. 145
of its return to the incompetent's estate. The offer was
refused. [
Footnote 2]
Appellant then filed a motion in the County Court of Westchester
County, where the judgment of foreclosure had been entered, for an
order to show cause why the default should not be opened, the
judgment vacated, and the deed set aside, and permission granted
"to answer or appear or otherwise move with respect to" the notice
of foreclosure. He alleged in a supporting affidavit that, although
Nora Brainard's incompetency was known to the town officials, no
guardian was appointed until shortly after the foreclosure.
Appellant contended that the notice given to Nora Brainard,
although in compliance with the statute, was inadequate in the case
of a known incompetent, and, therefore, that the statute as applied
was repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment.
The trial court, finding that the incompetent had not been
deprived of her constitutional rights and that the statute is
valid, denied the motion. The Appellate Division of the Supreme
Court, one judge dissenting, affirmed on the ground that the rights
of the parties are fixed after expiration of the 7 weeks and 20
days provided for redemption or answer in § 165-a of the tax
law. 283 App.Div. 883, 129 N.Y.S.2d 537. The Court of Appeals,
which, as noted before, certified that a question under the
Fourteenth Amendment was raised and necessarily decided, likewise
affirmed. 308 N.Y. 798, 125 N.E.2d 862. We noted probable
jurisdiction. 350 U.S. 882.
At this stage of the proceedings, we are bound, as were the
courts below, to assume that the facts are as disclosed by the
uncontroverted affidavits filed with appellant's motion for an
order to show cause. From these it appears that Nora Brainard was a
long-time resident of the Town
Page 351 U. S. 146
of Somers in the State of New York, and a person of means at all
times financially able to meet her obligations, owning four pieces
of improved real property in addition to the home property which
has been taken by foreclosure. She lived alone, however, and had no
relative in the State of New York or any other person present or
available to assist her or to act in her behalf in connection with
her taxes, despite the fact that she was and for upwards of 15
years had been an incompetent. Although she was known by the
officials and citizens of the Town of Somers to be a person without
mental capacity to handle her affairs or to understand the meaning
of any notice served upon her, no attempt was made to have a
Committee appointed for her person or property until after entry of
the judgment of foreclosure in this proceeding.
Appellee argues that the Fourteenth Amendment does not require
the State to take measures in giving notice to an incompetent
beyond those deemed sufficient in the case of the ordinary
taxpayer.
"An elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in any
proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably
calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested
parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an
opportunity to present their objections. . . . [W]hen notice is a
person's due, process which is a mere gesture is not due process.
The means employed must be such as one desirous of actually
informing the absentee might reasonably adopt to accomplish
it."
Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
339 U. S. 306,
339 U. S.
314-315.
Notice to a person known to be an incompetent who is without the
protection of a guardian does not measure up to this requirement.
Assuming the truth of the uncontradicted
Page 351 U. S. 147
assertions that the taxpayer Nora Brainard was wholly unable to
understand the nature of the proceedings against her property (from
which it must be inferred that she was unable to avail herself of
the statutory procedure for redemption or answer), and that the
town authorities knew her to be an unprotected incompetent, we must
hold that compliance with the statute would not afford notice to
the incompetent, and that a taking under such circumstances would
be without due process of law. The question was appropriately
raised and the issue improperly decided against the appellant. The
judgment must therefore be reversed, and the cause remanded for
proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
Nelson v. City of New York, 283 App.Div. 722, 127
N.Y.S.2d 854. A subsequent motion to open the default was denied,
284 App.Div. 894, 134 N.Y.S.2d 597. That action was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals, 309 N.Y. 94, 127 N.E.2d 827, and the case is
pending on appeal to this Court,, No. 636, O.T. 1955,
[
Footnote 2]
Thereafter the town rescheduled the sale of the property at a
minimum bid price of $3,500.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER.
If the Court of Appeals saw the case as this Court sees it,
reversal of its judgment, for the reasons given in the Court's
opinion, would be required. My difficulty arises from the fact that
this is so clear that I am compelled to wonder whether the New York
Court of Appeals, whose judges again and again have evinced due
regard for due process, would, by a summary disposition, sanction
such a denial of due process. This Court has had frequent occasion
to advert to the darkness which confronts us in trying to determine
the meaning of state legislation and the scope of state remedies.
This is particularly true when we are vouchsafed no light either
from the Appellate Division or the Court of Appeals regarding the
availability of subdivision 7 of § 165-h of the New York Tax
Law in a situation, like the present, so obviously calling for
relief as a matter of due process. The uncertainties of state law
are not removed by conflicting views expressed at the bar of this
Court by New York counsel.
Page 351 U. S. 148
Nor is my difficulty dissipated by the amended remittitur of the
New York Court of Appeals. It reads as follows:
"Upon the appeal herein, there was presented and necessarily
passed upon a question under the Constitution of the United States,
as follows: whether the taking by the Town of Somers of the
property here involved was, on this record, a deprivation of due
process and equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth
Amendment. The Court of Appeals held that there was no denial of
any constitutional right of the petitioner."
308 N.Y. 798, 125 N.E.2d 862, as amended in 308 N.Y. 941, 127
N.E.2d 90.
To be sure, the Court of Appeals thus held "that there was no
denial of any constitutional right of the petitioner." But, as that
court said, it was only answering the question that was before it,
namely, whether, "on this record," there was "a deprivation of due
process." The court may have reached the conclusion it did because,
as a matter of state law, the only thing it deemed before it was a
reopening of the judgment of foreclosure under § 165-a, and
that remedy was barred by the statute of limitations. Since the
State has power to put a time limit on the reopening of the
judgment of foreclosure under that provision, such action is not a
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. The amended remittitur, thus
read, does not preclude a setting aside of the foreclosure deed in
a separate proceeding in accordance with § 165-h, subd. 7, on
a recital of circumstances such as those which lead this Court to
find a violation of due process.
If this hypothesis was in fact the basis of the judgment of the
Court of Appeals, I assume it to be within the power of that court,
when the case is returned, to allow full scope to state remedies
still open to the petitioner.