Hoyt v. Dillon

19 Barb. 644 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855

By the Court,

Brown, J.

JSTo evidence was offered, upon the trial, to establish the, truth of the recitals contained in the deed or instrument of conveyance from the common council of the city of Brooklyn to William Beard, the defendant’s grantor, of the date of May 3d, 1843. The deed professes that the sale was made for an unpaid tax or assessment imposed upon the lands therein described, under the act to incorporate the .city of Brooklyn, passed April 8th, 1834. Without proof of the facts contained in the recitals that all the requisites of the statute had been complied with and the power given to the common-council duly executed, they are presumed not to exist, and without their existence the conveyance is a nullity. The principle is stated by Mr. Justice Bronson in Sharp v. Speir, (4 Hill, 76,) in these words: <( Every statute authority in derogation of the common law, to divest the title of one and transfer it to another, must be strictly pursued or the title will not pass. This is a mere naked power in the corporation, and its due execution is not made out by intendment. It must be proved; it is not a case for presuming that public officers have done their duty; what they have in fact done, must be shown. The recitals in the conveyance are not evidence against the owner of the property, but the facts recited must be established by proof aliunde.” (See also Striker v. Kelly, 2 Denio, 323; Beekman v. Bigham, 1 Selden, 366.)

The point made by the defendant, that a deed of land held adversely to the grantor is void as against the person thus holding and all those claiming under him, admits of no dispute. The real question is whether possession under the deed from the common council of the city of Brooklyn, claiming to hold for the term therein mentioned, constitutes a good adverse possession. There is no affirmative proof as to the exact nature of the defendant’s claim, but as the proof showed that he was in under William Beard the grantee of the common council, and *650afterwards took a conveyance for the unexpired term for years mentioned in the deed to Beard, I assume, for all the purposes of this discussion, that his claim corresponded with the interest mentioned in the deeds.

The plaintiff claimed title to the premises under a deed from Charles Hoyt, dated May 15th, 1847. He produced a regular chain of title from David Leavitt, who was the owner in fee in 1843, and conveyed them to John Cleaveland'by deed bearing date January 2, 1845. In May 1843, John Martin entered into possession under an agreement with William Beard for a conveyance, and erected a house thereon. He remained until March, 1844, when he sold such right as he had to the defendant, who entered into the possession and so continued until the commencement of this action. On the 1st of March, 1849 and before the commencement of the action, William Beard and wife, by their deed bearing date on that day, conveyed the premises to the defendant, to hold the same to him for and during the rest, residue and remainder yet to come of the term of one thousand years mentioned and contained in the aforesaid conveyance from the mayor and common council of the city of Brooklyn to the said William Beard.” The defendant, at the trial, requested the court to charge the jury that if the defendant was in the possession under William Beard,, claiming title under him, at the time of the execution of the several deeds under which the plaintiff claimed, such deeds were void as against the defendant,' The court declined so to instruct the jury ; the defendant excepted, and the plaintiff had a verdict. And thus the defense depends exclusively upon the character of the possession.

The conveyance to William Beard is executed under the provisions of sections 42 and 45 of the act to incorporate the city of Brooklyn, passed April 8,1834. (Sess. L. 1834; p. 106, 108.) Section 42 provides for the sale of lands charged with the pay? ment of any assessment or tax for local or city purposes, which remains unpaid, for the lowest term of years for which any per? ' son will take the same and pay the amount of such assessment with the interest and expenses. Section 45 directs the execu*651tian of a conveyance to the purchaser or his assigns, for the term for which the same' shall have been sold, and declares that by force of such conveyance the grantee shall be entitled to the possession of the premises sold, for the term therein specified. The conveyance may be for the term of one year, or ten years, or for the term of one thousand years, as in the instance before us; but there is no power to sell and convey the entire estate. The grantee takes an estate for years, while the estate in remainder with all its incidents remains with him who was the owner in fee at the time of the sale. At the common law, livery of seisin, or the delivery of the corporeal, possession of the land, was held necessary to pass the estate. “In all well governed nations some notoriety of this kind has been ever held requisite in order to acquire and ascertain the property of lands. In the Roman law ‘plenum dominum was not said,to subsist unless where a man had both the right and the corporal possession; which possession could not be acquired without both an actual intention to possess and an actual seisin or entry into the premises, or part of them, in the name of the whole.” (2 Black. Com. 311, 312.) A right of entry was not assignable, because as was said, “ under color thereof pretended titles might be granted to great men, whereby right might be trodden down and the weak oppressed. Here we have the origin as well as the reason for the rule embodied in our written law, (1 R. S. 739, § 147,) that every grant of land shall be absolutely void, if at the time of the delivery thereof such lands shall be in the actual possession of a person claiming under a title adverse to that of the grantor.” A rightful title is not one of the requisites of a good adverse possession, but “ whenever the defense is set up the idea of right is exclusive : the fact of possession and the quo anima it was commenced or continued are the only tests. And it must necessarily be exclusive of any other right,” (Smith v. Burt is, 9 John. 174.) The person in possession must claim to be the owner, in opposition to all the world. The claim must be of the entire title. (Livingston v. The Peru Iron Co., 9 Wend. 511.) The deed from William Beard and wife to the defendant is for the same estate as that in the conveyance from the common. *652council of Brooklyn to William Beard. Assuming the truth of the facts contained i$ the recitals of the latter instrument, and its validity to pass the term for years under his deed, the defendant did not and could not claim the entire inheritance. The estate in remainder belonged to another. He did not claim the entire title, nor in opposition to all the world. An estate in remainder is defined to be an estate limited to take effect and be enjoyed after another estate is determined. An estate for a term of years, and after that an estate-for life with remainder over in fee, may all be carved out of the inheritance. These several estates are parts and portions of the same inheritance, and together make up the entire title in exclusion of every other right. In creating an estate of freehold—as a remainder in fee —the enjoyment of which is postponed to some future time, it must be preceded by and founded upon some particular estate, as an estate for years or for life, and the delivery of the possession by the grantor to the tenant of the particular estate is a delivery of the possession to him in remainder, because both estates are one and the same in law. (2 Black. Com. 164, 166.) An estate for years is a very inferior interest in lands. The tenant is not said to be seised, nor in a strict legal sense can he be' said to be possessed of land. “ No livery of seisin is necessary to a lease for years. Such lessee is not said to be seised, or to have the true legal seisin of the lands. Nor indeed does the bare lease vest any estate in the lessee; but only gives him a right of entry on the tenement, which right is called his interest in the term or inter esse termini, and when he has actually so entered and thereby accepted the grant, the estate is then, and not before, vested in him, and he is possessed not properly of the land but of the term for years; the possession and seisin of the land remaining still in him who hath the freehold.” (2 Bl. Com. 144. 1 Cruise's Dig. 247, § 12.) The defendant cannot, therefore, be said to have been in the possession of the premises in dispute claiming under a title adverse to the plaintiff’s grantor, at the time of the execution and delivery of any of the deeds under which the plaintiff claims. Giving full effect to the deed from the common council of the city of Brooklyn, the possession *653and seisin of the land was in strictly legal parlance in the grantors, and their several deeds were valid and effectual to pass such estate as they had in the premises. To sustain an adverse possession upon the proof produced in this action would subvert and set aside rules in regard to the tenure of land which ■ have been settled and recognized for ages. The doctrine contended for by the defendant leads to this result, that there could be no voluntary conveyance of an estate in remainder which would be good as against the tenant of the particular estate while he was in the occupation claiming to hold for life or a term for years. Tet nothing is better settled than the rule that vested remainders are estates and interests in lands which may be passed from one person to another under the usual forms of conveyance. I conclude, for these reasons, that the court were entirely right in refusing to instruct the jury as requested by the defendant’s counsel.

[Orange General Term, April 3, 1855.

Brown, S. B. Strong and Rockwell, Justices.]

The other ground assigned for error depends also upon the same question of adverse possession, and it is not necessary to examine it further.

The judgment is affirmed.

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