141 Pa. 334 | Pa. | 1891
Opinion,
In this action of trespass, the plaintiffs sought to establish title to the locus in quo under a treasurer’s deed for unseated lands. They exhibited in evidence a patent dated May 1,1815, from the commonwealth to John Reed and James Gibson, executors, in trust for the use of the heirs of George Clymer, deceased, and Samuel Meredith, for a tract of land in Abington township, Luzerne county, containing 433 acres and 37 perches, and allowance; surveyed in the warrantee name of Moses Starr. Also a patent, dated April 29, 1815, to the same parties, for a tract of land in Abington township, Luzerne county, containing 433 acres, 108 perches, and allowance; surveyed in the warrantee name of Samuel Giffin. They then gave in evidence a connected draft of these two tracts of land, situate when surveyed in the county of Luzerne, now in the county of Lackawanna, certified from the office of the secretary of internal affairs. The dates of the original warrants and surveys are not stated in the paper-book.
The plaintiffs followed this bjr some evidence of the location of these surveys. The testimony was slight, perhaps, but we are of opinion it was sufficient to establish a prima facie location. The maple tree from which the surveyor Lawrence started, was a recognized living corner of four different tracts •of land, surveyed probably about the years 1784 to 1790. The tree is marked on four sides, and well-defined straight lines run from it, north, south, east, and west, forming the admitted boundary lines of four original surveys, in the names of the Cadwaladers, Deal, and Upson, and which are now owned and occupied to these lines by the present owners, Fell, Hall, Parker, the Shermans, and the Millers. The original warrants and surveys were not put in evidence, as they might have been, but it was shown that the Moses Starr adjoined the Cadwalader; and that upon running from the maple, according to the official
The plaintiffs then introduced the assessment of unseated lands in North Abington township, Lackawanna county, for the year 1879, among which was, “100 acres, warrantee names, Moses Starr and Samuel Griffin, valuation, $400.” The assessment is stated to be “for school purposes,” but upon it a six-mill tax of $2.40 was subsequently levied for county purposes for the year 1879; and a treasurer’s deed, dated July 12,1882, recited a sale of the lands, thus assessed and taxed, to the plaintiffs and others, for the tax mentioned. The plaintiffs claim under this deed, in their own right and as lessees of the other grantees named in the deed. The county commissioners had the power to adopt this valuation for county purposes; indeed, in the absence of any valuation by the assessors, the commissioners had the right to adjust a valuation corresponding with the valuation of other unseated lands in the county.
for the payment of taxes, as one tract and for a gross sum, will confer no title upon the purchaser; each tract must be sold separately: Morton v. Harris, 9 W. 319. The whole system of laws on this subject, says Mr. Justice Huston, in the case cited, “ contemplates an assessment, advertisement, and sale of each tract, and the practice has accorded therewith.” See, also, Brown v. Hays, 66 Pa. 229. It is true that the patent for each of the tracts, respectively, was issued to the same persons ; but the land in question was not assessed in the name of the patentees, nor in the name of any other person Avho Avas in any way associated or connected with the ownership of both tracts; and non constat that both tracts were held as one, or were owned by the same person, at the time of the assessment. It has not been shown that Moses Starr, at any time, had any interest in the Samuel Giffin, or that Samuel Giffin had any interest in the Moses Starr, or that their names were in any way associated or connected with any other than their oavh tracts respectively. In Harper v. McKeehan, 3 W. & S. 238, and in Russel v. Werntz, 24 Pa. 337, it was held that the assessment of tAvo contiguous tracts of unseated land as one tract, when owned by the same person, was an unimportant irregularity, under the curative provisions of the act of 1815. But,
Although the decisions were not formerly to this effect, it is now well settled that the land must in some way be identified, from something appearing in the assessment; and this rests the proof of identification solely upon what is found or once existed in the commissioner’s office: Philadelphia v. Miller, 49 Pa. 440; Lyman v. Philadelphia, 56 Pa. 488. In Philadelphia v. Miller, supra, Mr. Justice AGtNevv, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “ Identity is said to be matter for the jury. Certainly, this is so; but from its very nature the fact of identity is dependent on circumstances which attach themselves to the land. It is because the thing described answers to the circumstances of description we are able to identify it. The evidence of identity is the record which contains the description and fixes the duty. Assessment is, from its legal requirement, and the necessity for preserving its evidence, a written entry, and must depend upon the records of the commissioner’s office, and not upon parol testimony, or the private duplicate of the assessor. McCall v. Lorimer, 4 W. 351, 355, is full on this point.....Land is often claimed by adverse owners, and it is not the duty of the tax officers to decide between them. It is sufficient, therefore, if the assessment be in the name of one connected by some title with the land. There is no hardship in this, for owners seldom are ignorant of adverse title.” “ In short,” he concludes, “ it seems to me, from a review of the law, and the nature and justice of the thing, it is essential to the validity of the sale that the assessment should afford the
Lily lake was in 1879, in a small way, perhaps, a summer resort for persons seeking rest, diversion, health, or pleasure. All the land immediately surrounding the lake was in the occupancy of actual residents who owned to the low-water line; in some instances, the lots extended into the lake. A number of hotels had been erected upon the shores, for the accommodation of visitors, who, as guests of the hotels, rowed in boats, fished for pickerel and other fish, and plucked the lilies. The plaintiffs owned one of these hotels, and the defendants another. This fact, taken with the sequel, may perhaps explain why this pond, which for a quarter of a century, at least, does not appear to have been taxed at all, was suddenly supposed to be unseated land, and was returned and taxed as such in this obscure and misleading manner. It was not returned, assessed, or sold as “Wall Pond” or “Lily Lake,” by which names it was popularly or generally known, or by any description which was likely to arrest the public attention. Nor was it described by the adjoiners, nor in the name of the patentees, nor in the name of any other person who at any time owned it or was interested in or connected with the title to it, or made claim to it as a connected tract, but in the names of Moses Starr and Samuel Griffin, who (assuming that Griffin was intended for Giffin) were the original warrantees of the several
The judgment is reversed.