The defendants appeal on constitutional grounds from a judgment entered on a submission of controversy, declaring defendants barred from all right, title or interest in real property in the Village of Walton, Delaware County, and that plaintiff is vested with title thereto in fee simple absolute.
On May 11, 1854 there was recorded in the Delaware County Clerk’s office a deed from John Townsend and wife to the trustees of the Walton Academy subject to the proviso: “ Provided nevertheless that the said lot and the building thereon shall be used for the purposes of an Academy and no other then this deed shall remain in full force and effect otherwise it shall become Void and the premises herein conveyed shall revert to the said John Townsend party of the first part and to his heirs.”
It was used for educational purposes by the Walton Academy, its successors or assigns, until April 1, 1962, when its use for such purposes was discontinued.
Eugenia T. Miles and John Townsend (defendants-appellants) are the sole heirs at law and devisees of the now deceased grantor. Plaintiff-respondent has succeeded to the rights of the Walton Academy.
This action or proceeding has been instituted to obtain a judicial determination of appellants’ claim that they have been entitled to possession of the aforesaid premises, vested with title in fee simple absolute as tenants in common since April 1, 1962, when use for school purposes was discоntinued.
Unless their reversionary interest has been extinguished by section 345 of the Real Property Law (enacted by L. 1958, ch. 865), appellants’ contention is correct (Nichols v. Haehn, 8 A D 2d 405). This legislation emanated from reports of the Law Revision Commission (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1951, No. 65, pp. 695-780; 1958, No. 65, pp. 211-374). It was enacted by chapter 865 of the Laws of 1958 along with what are now sections 1951 through 1955 of the Real Property Actions and Proceedings Law, also recommended by the Law Revision Commission at the same time and originally enacted by chapters 863, 864, and 866 of the Laws of 1958. These statutes were designed to limit or extinguish nonsubstantial restrictions on the use of land, possibilities of reverter or right of entry on *368 failure of conditions subsequent and similar interests in real proрerty. The section whose constitutionality is challenged on this appeal (Real Property Law, § 345) was thus described in the 1958 Report of the Law Revision Commission (p. 217): “Its purpose is to provide for recording of a ‘declaration of intention to preserve ’ certain interests in land arising from ancient restrictions on the use of land and to extinguish such interests if such declarations of intention are not recorded within the time provided.” This section is not limited to the elimination of what the report of the commission calls “ old and useless ” restrictions, but falls rather within the category thus described at pages 712-713 of its 1951 Report: “It is almost certain that an appreciable number of owners of old but useful restrictions will lose thеm without countervailing compensation, through failure to record the declaration which, under the statute, would be prerequisite to their continued life. Such failure might occur under a variety of circumstances. Unless the owner for some reason had regular occasion to watch for new legislation, or unless he frequently engaged in real estate transactions, he might never learn of the enactment of the proposed requirement.”
The object of requiring declarations of intention to preserve rights of reverter and of re-entry on breach of condition subsequent, and periodic renewal of such recording, is not in furtherance of the usual purpose of recording acts, as sucсinctly stated in an often-quoted excerpt from
Jackson ex dem. Merrick
v.
Post
(
*369
Section 345 of the Real Property Law appears not to have been designed to protect subsequent purchasers for value and without notice, but for an object more akin to that of title registration acts which are designed to perfect the marketability of titles (see Real Property Law, art. 12, §§ 370-435, known as the Torrens Act;
American Land Co.
v.
Zeiss,
The constitutionality of section 345 of the Real Property Law is challenged on this appeal on the grounds that it impairs the obligation of a contract and deprives appellants of property without due process of law. No such question could arise in regard to conveyances delivered after the adoption of this statute, but it is a familiar rule that retrospective legislation, unless adopted in pursuance of the poliсe power, cannot impair vested rights
(Matter of Pardee
v.
Rayfield,
The alteration of the rights of the grantee in an unrecorded conveyance is incidental to preventing the perpetration of fraud upon subsequent purchasers or mortgagees in good faith. Since grantees in successive conveyances cannot each get good title to the same property from the same grantor, the Constitution permits the earlier unrecorded deed to be invalidated to prevent a subsequent bona fide purchaser from being defrauded. Statutes may be enacted under the police power to prevent fraud or oppression in business or commercial transactions
(People
v.
Arlen Serv. Stas.,
If the “ recording ” requirements of section 345 of the Real Property Law are to be sustained, therefore, it would be on a theory more nearly analogous to the registration of titles rather than to the recording acts. In this regard they bear some resemblance, also, to the marketable title acts which have been adopted in different forms in about nine different States (see, e.g., Paul E. Basye, Trends and Progress — The Marketable Title Acts, 47 Iowa L. Rev. 261 [1961-1962]; Ralph W. Aigler, Constitutionality of Marketable Title Acts, 50 Mich. L. Rev. 185 [1951] and A Supplement to “ Constitutionality of Marketable Title Acts ”-1951-1957, 56 Mich. L. Rev. 225). Those acts,
*372
whose main object is to render titles marketable without a lengthy back title search, where an owner is in possession and can show record title in fee simple absolute in himself or his grantors for a preceding limited period of years, contain provisions extinguishing in the absence of recqrding interests, сlaims or charges whose existence depends upon acts, transactions, events or omissions that occurred prior to the commencement of the period in question. It will be noted that such clauses purport to terminate earlier adverse interests against an owner in possession showing record title for the period of years enumerated in the statute. Those statutes, although not entirely analogous to our section 345 of the Real Property Law, have a common characteristic in that failure to record or renew the recording of a declaration of intention to preserve the adverse claim results in its extinction for the benefit of the person in possession, withоut necessarily involving any third parties. If the “recording” provisions in section 345 be constitutional, there must be some relationship to the purposes of the police power in clearing titles from contingent reversionary interests in this manner. The registration of titles, as well as the marketable title acts, are not designed primarily to extinguish valid but inconvenient сlaims. It has been said that the object and purpose of a title registration act is “ ‘ to register good titles, not to cure bad ones ’ ”
(Partenfelder
v.
People,
However that may be, and without ruling upon the constitutionality of the other portions of section 345 of the Real Property Law or of marketable title acts in general, about which we express no opinion, we consider the particular portion of .section 345 of the Real Property Law which applies to the facts of this case to be constitutionally invalid. It is not overlooked that under the Minnesota Marketable Title Act (Minn. Stat., § 541.023) the Supreme Court of that State recently voided a reverter expressly drawn to take effect if the property ceаsed to be used for school purposes
(Wichelman
v.
Messner,
We rule on no other aspects of section 345. of the Real Property Law.
The judgment appealed from should be reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division, and the matter remitted to the Appellate Division for the entry of a judgment declaring that appellants are vested with title in fee to the property free frоm any claim of the plaintiff thereto.
Judges Dye, Burke and Scileppi concur with Judge Van Voorhis; Chief Judge Desmond and Judge Fuld dissent and vote to affirm upon the opinion at the Appellate Division; Judge Bergan taking no part.
Judgment reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division, and matter remitted to the Appellate Division for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.
