95 N.Y. 477 | NY | 1884
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This action was brought to set aside a certificate issued by the comptroller upon a sale of lands for taxes on the ground that the same was irregular and void, and to cancel such certificate if the same had been issued; and if such certificate had not been issued, to enjoin the comptroller from issuing the same, and also to enjoin him from executing a deed by virtue of the sale made for said taxes. The right to maintain the action is based upon the ground that such certificate of sale is a cloud upon the plaintiff's title to the lands in question. There is no doubt that the taxes for which the lands were sold were irregularly and illegally laid, and hence there was no valid ground for making the sale, and the certificate issued by virtue of such sale would be unauthorized. It is well settled *482
by the decisions of this court that to authorize the interposition of the court to remove the lien of an assessment as a cloud upon title, it must appear that the record of proceedings are not void upon their face, and that the claimant under it would not, by the proof which he would be obliged to produce in event of an attempt to enforce his claim, develop the defect rendering it invalid. (Dederer v. Voorhies,
The claim of the plaintiff, however, rests upon the effect to be given to the certificate by the deed of the comptroller, which might afterward be executed in pursuance of the certificate and in accordance with the statute. After the certificate has been issued as the statute requires, it is provided that the comptroller, six months prior to the expiration of the two years allowed for redemption of the lands, shall give notice of the failure to redeem, and that in case redemption is not made by a day certain, the lands will be conveyed. And it is further provided that in case of the failure of the person entitled to redeem such lands within two years, the comptroller is required to execute to the purchaser, his heirs or assigns, in the name of the people of the State, a conveyance of the lands so sold, and such conveyances are made presumptive evidence that the sale and all proceedings prior thereto, from and including the sale of the lands, and all notices required to be given prior to the expiration of the two years allowed to redeem, were regular. (2 R.S. [7th ed.] 1026, § 46; id. 1028, §§ 61, 62, 63, 65.) It would appear that when the deed has been executed that the introduction of the same as evidence would on its face show title in the grantee, and hence such deed might *483 well be considered as a cloud upon the title of the owner whose lands had been illegally sold for taxes.
The plaintiff's action is evidently brought to avoid the effect to be given to the certificate in connection with the subsequent proceedings. While a court of equity may entertain a suit to remove a cloud upon a title and also to prevent one, in the latter case it must be made to appear that there is a determination, on the part of the defendant, to create the cloud, and it is not sufficient that the danger is merely speculative. (Sanders v. Yonkers,
The authorities hold that in cases instituted for the purpose of setting aside the certificate of sale upon assessments on the ground of invalidity of prior proceedings, unless the certificates are a presumptive lien under the statute, an action to set them aside as a cloud upon title cannot be maintained. (Allen v. Buffalo,
The claim of the plaintiff's counsel that the case of Sanders
v. Yonkers (
It cannot, we think, be said that within the case of Sanders *485
v. Yonkers (
We are referred to numerous authorities in the courts of other States which, it is claimed, sustain the position of the appellant's counsel. We do not deem it necessary to discuss them in detail in view of the fact that the question considered is fully settled by the decisions of our own courts already cited.
From the examination which we have given to the case under consideration, we are brought to the conclusion that the action of the plaintiff was prematurely brought, and that no error was committed upon the trial.
The judgment should be affirmed.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed. *486