154 N.Y.S. 759 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1915
Plaintiff brings this action under the provisions of chapter 384 of the Laws of 1909 of this state, as amended, to foreclose a claimed lien of city and county tax certificates of sale; it is not an action to divest or forfeit title to land, but an action to recover back moneys claimed to have been paid for taxes levied against the lands of another.
A considerable number of points have been raised by defendant Hatch. Inasmuch as I have decided to find for the plaintiff I shall discuss these points separately in order that the parties may have my reasons for reaching my conclusion.
Defendant Hatch’s first claim is that none of the assessment rolls upon which these tax sale certificates were based were -verified or certified as required by law. Section 138 of the charter provides that the first part of said assessment rolls “ shall contain the assessed valuations of the taxable lands of each ward substantially in the form in which town assessors are
The assessments were made to the persons appearing to be owners under tax deeds open to the inspection of the assessors. This is a sufficient compliance
Defendant Hatch claims that the descriptions of the property were incomplete and insufficient. Inasmuch as the frontage and depth were set forth, the frontage being specified as on the northeast corner of Sixth street, at the north corner of Hudson street, in the city of Buffalo, I think that the sufficiency of the description is sustained by the opinion in Fulton v. Krull, 200 N. Y. 105. It also meets the requirements of section 115-f, supra.
Defendant Hatch claims that the acquiring by him of a tax deed on October 7, 1913, bars the plaintiff from asserting any rights under this statute. As to this,it suffices to say that defendant Hatch’s assignor, Wiltsie, in his answer herein elected to recover his money back instead of taking a conveyance. 1 think that thereby defendant Hatch is estopped from claiming under his deed from the city of Buffalo as against this plaintiff, who is endeavoring merely to recover amounts paid as mentioned in certificates of tax sales. The claim is further made that all tax sales embraced in this action which were more than twenty-two years old at the time the action was brought are outlawed. The answer to this is that the plaintiff’s cause of action did not accrue till 1909; therefore it is not barred even by the six-year statute of limitations. Carey v. Kerner, 200 N. Y. 253.
The claim of the defendant Hatch that he has “suffered actual injury” (§ 115-f, supra) is not tenable. To be sure, when he took title in 1897 he acted upon what we should all probably deem to be good legal advice as to the legality of these assessments. But that legal advice seems to have turned
Plaintiff is entitled to the relief demanded in his complaint, ‘with costs, and he may present findings.
Judgment accordingly.