203 A.D. 530 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
“ The City Building Property ” belonging to the city of Albany was sold at public auction August 21, 1922, to the defendant. All the requirements of the statute (Second Class Cities Law, § 37), save one questioned, have been complied with and the parties are ready and willing to complete the contract, except that defendant refuses because he questions the validity of the sale, in that it occurred eighteen days after the first publication of the notice rather than twenty-one days thereafter.
The proceedings are regulated by this statute, the terms of which must be strictly complied with. It provides that a sale of real property by a second-class city “ shall not be valid or take effect ” unless the sale be made at public auction “ after public notice to be published once each week for three weeks in the official paper or papers.”
There have been a number of decisions in this State in respect to section 1434 of the Code of Civil Procedure,
We find, therefore, that the publication in this case for eighteen days was not the publication required by the statute, and that at the sale, which occurred eighteen days after the first publication of the notice, a purchaser could not acquire a marketable title.
Judgment should be awarded accordingly.
H. T. Kellogg, Acting P. J., and Kiley, J., concur; Hinman and Hasbrouck, JJ., dissent upon the authority of Wood v. Morehouse (45 N. Y. 368).
Judgment in favor of the defendant directed, without costs.
Now Civ. Prac. Act, § 712.— [Rep.
Now Civ. Prac. Act, § 234; Rules Civ. Prac. rule 50.— [Rep.
Now Surr. Ct. Act, §§ 58, 59.— [Rep.