60 N.Y.S. 181 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
• Maria A. Dever, for several years prior to May 12,1886, was the owner of an irregular plot of land on Hamilton avenue in the then city of Brooklyn, containing several ordinary city lots.- On that day the registrar of arrears sold it on account of unpaid taxes to the defendant Hagerty for $675, pursuant to chapter 114 of the iaws of 1883, entitled “An act .concerning the settlement and collection of arrearages of unpaid taxes, assessments and water rates in the
This action was brought to recover the possession of the premises and for damages for the withholding of them from the owner. The court rendered judgment, holding that the plaintiff, for the benefit of Harriet A. Gaulkins, was owner in fee simple of the premises and entitled to judgment for damages for withholding the same, and from this judgment the defendant appeals.
The defendant Hagerty contends that this action cannot be maintained, for the reason that it is provided by the Revised Statutes (Vol. 2 [9th ed.], § 147, p. 1813) that every grant of land shall be absolutely void where the land is in the actual possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to the grantor, and that this is reinforced by section 130 of the Penal Code, which' declares the ■person making or receiving such a grant to be guilty of a misdemeanor. But section 1501 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that an action to recover real property or the possession thereof may be maintained by a grantee in the name of the grantor, where the conveyance is void because the property, was held adversely to the grantor; and this action is thus brought and is maintainable under the section cited.
The theory of the action is that the sale of the premises by the .registrar was irregular and void for the reason that the premises were not properly described in the assessment, certification, advertisement and notice. This requires a more precise reference to the act. Section 1 of the act of 1883 requires the board of assessors to adjust and determine, “ as to each parcel of land,” how much of certain arrears of taxes, assessments and water rates ought “ in fairness and justice” to be levied and collected of such parcel.
Section 3 provides that, upon the delivery to the registrar of such Certificate, the amount of assessment, “ certified in respect of each and every parcel'. * * * shall become due and payable,” and if not paid within twelve months the registrar “ shall Sell said parcel at public auction,” after giving notice thereof by advertisement which “ shall include a designation of * * * the ward or wards in which the property' then and there to be sold is situated, and shall .state that further particulars of the property to be sold may be obtained at the said registrar’s office, and it shall not be necessary in said advertisement to include any further particulars of the property to be sold.-” The same section provides that it shall not be necessary to state in the list, advertisement or any notice, the name of the owner of the premises, nor “ to describe the premises affected otherwise than by the said block and lot numbers on the assessment map of th'e ward.”
Section 4 requires the registrar to give a deed of the premises within -oné year after the sale, under which deed the purchaser takes “ a good and sufficient title, in fee simple absolute to the property sold, of which the said deed shall be presumptive evidence; and in any proceeding or action to be by such purchaser, his heirs, legal representatives or assigns, taken, prosecuted or defended for the recovery of the possession of the property so sold as aforesaid, or in the establishment or defense of his or their title shown as aforesaid by such deed, such title shall not fail or be defeated by reason of any irregularity or formal defect in the procedure: taken .under this act, upon- which such sale shall have been made or such-title’ conveyed as aforesaid.” The record does not contain the- determination of the assessors or the certification of the amount due, or a copy of the advertisement. There is, however, in the deed of the registrar, which is of record, a recital that such determination and certification had been made. The record contains the notice -of the
The court found that the premises, at the time of the sale and since 1868, were situated in the twenty-second ward.
We are thus brought first to the consideration of the sufficiency of the assessment of the premises as one lot. The design' of the statute was to give fair riotice of sale to the owners of the property. We think there is no evidence that the assessors complied with the provision that they should “ fix, adjust and determine as to each parcel of land,” the amount to be levied thereon. Upon the assessors? map the premises in question were divided into three lots or parcels, which were designated as 1, 2 and 3, on block 90. It will be observed that the act makes constant reference to separaté lots or parcels, as has been stated. If premises are laid out upon, the assessment map in a parcel larger than the ordinary city lot, a designation of such parcel by number and block would be a compliance with the statute ; but if the parcel is laid out in lots of any size, so that each lot has a lot and block number, the law requires the board of assessors to assess on each óf such lots the amount due thereon, and to certify the'same to the registrar, and such designation is to be carried through all the subsequent proceedings, including advertisemerit and notice to the owners' to redeem, and a failure to do this constitutes a fatal defect.
Such was the decision in Litchfield v. City of Brooklyn (13
In addition to this, the premises were described in the notice of sale which Hagerty served upon the plaintiff Dever as being in the twelfth ward. This was another error, as the court found that the premises, since 1868, were located in the twenty-second ward. I think we may assume, so far as Hagerty is concerned, that this description was-taken either from the advertisement of sale or the certificate of sale, which, by section 4 of the act, is to be given by the registrar to the purchaser at the auction sale.
One of the objects of the statute was that owners of property should have ample notice of the time, and place of the sale of their property, so that they might protect their interests therein. It is reasonable to believe- that an owner of property in the' twenty-second ward, which was to be sold'under the statute, would naturally examine simply that part of the advertisement which contained property situated in the twenty-second ward. If his property was not included therein, he would not be likely, and certainly would not be bound, to examine the entire advertisement to. see whether the property was advertised as being in some other ward; and even if he did so examine the entire notice, a description reading “Lot number 1, 2 & 3 on Block number 90,” in the twelfth ward, would not inform him definitely that it referred to his property in the twenty-second ward, as there might be precisely similar reference to and description -of lots in the twelfth ward. This misdescription was of vital importance in the proceedings which resulted in the sale, and constitutes another fatal defect therein.
The act of 1883 provides that the registrar’s deed to the purchaser conveys a title in fee simple absolute and that the deed shall be presumptive evidence thereof in any proceeding or action for the establishment or defense of -the title, and that “ such title shall not fail or be defeated by reason of any irregularity or formal defect in the procedure taken under this act, upon which such sale shall have been made or such title conveyed as aforesaid.” This
For these reasons we hold that the proceedings resulting in the sale were not a sufficient compliance with the provisions of the act in question and that the deed of the registrar did not convey a title to the defendant Hagerty.
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.