Citation Numbers: 100 A.D.2d 693, 474 N.Y.S.2d 629, 1984 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 17676
Filed Date: 3/29/1984
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/28/2024
Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court at Special Term (Torraca, J.), entered December 13, 1982 in Ulster County, which, inter alia, granted summary judgment to plaintiff. H Starting in June, 1975, defendant rented a lot from Douglas and Margaret Kolvenback in the Town of Rochester, Ulster County, where he parked his mobile home. The Kolvenbacks subsequently defaulted in the payment of real property taxes on the lot, which was then sold at a tax foreclosure sale to plaintiff. The deed from the County of Ulster to plaintiff, dated August 10, 1979, purported to convey “3 Acres, described as Trailer”. Plaintiff then brought suit, pursuant to RPAPL article 15, to bar defendant’s claim to the mobile home. II Special Term granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiff, ruling that the mobile home was part of the realty and was conveyed to plaintiff via the tax foreclosure deed. We reverse. 11 Special Term based its decision on section 102 (subd 12, par [g]) of the Real Property Tax Law which provides that “[tjhe value of any trailer or mobile home shall be included in the assessment of the land on which it is located”. The court concluded that since the value of defendant’s mobile home was assessed against the Kolvenbacks, it was subject to the foreclosure sale following their default in payment of the real property taxes, and that the mobile home was conveyed to plaintiff by the tax sale deed together with the land on which it was parked. This reasoning is faulty. U While the value of defendant’s trailer was assessed to the Kolvenbacks for tax assessment purposes under section 102 (subd 12, par [g]) of the Real Property Tax Law, they certainly did not obtain title to defendant’s mobile home by this procedure.
The legislative purpose of section 102 (subd 12, par [g]) of the Real Property Tax Law was to ensure that mobile home owners receiving the benefits of public services from municipalities where their homes were parked would pay for them, albeit indirectly, through the increased rent which would be charged to them by the owners of the lots on which the homes were parked, against whom the value of the mobile homes was assessed (see Memorandum of Association of Towns, March 30, 1954, Governor’s Bill Jacket, L 1954, ch 726; see, also, New York Mobile Homes Assn, v Steckel, 9 NY2d 533, app dsmd 369 US 150).