79 N.J. Eq. 386 | New York Court of Chancery | 1911
Tliis is a suit for specific performance of a contract for the sale of real estate. The complainants are the vendors and the defendants the vendees. The vendees refuse to perform because of alleged defects in the complainants’ title. Two objections are made: The first relates to ihe manner of execution by an attorney in fact of a deed which is in the chain of title of the complainants; the second objection relates to the existence of certain alleged outstanding interests arising under declarations of sale for taxes.
As to the execution of the deed by the attorney, the following are the essential facts: The premises in question belonged to Jacob Newkirk in his lifetime. He died intestate in the year 1888, leaving his widow, Elizabeth Newkirk, and the following children, his heirs-at-law, Abraham, Jacob B., William E., John H. New’kirk and Jane E. (Newkirk) Birdsall, Gertrude E. (New-kirk) Schanck and Mary C. (Newkirk) Yanderbeek. At the time of the execution of the powers of attorney hereinafter referred to Abraham was married to Mary C., Jacob B. was married to Ivate M., William E. was married to Fannie; John H. was married to Emma. Gertrude E. Schanck was a widow. Jane E. Birdsall’s husband’s name wras George W., and Mary C. Yanderbeek’s husband’s name wras Abraham. The above-named per
“Between Elizabeth Newkirk (widow of Jacob Newkirk, deceased), Abraham Newkirk and Mary C., his wife, Jacob B. Newkirk and Kate M., his wife, William E. Newkirk and Fannie, his wife, John H. New-kirk and Emma, his wife, * * * George W. Birdsall and Jane E., his wife, and Gertrude R. Schanck, widow, parties of the first part, by George W. Birdsall, their attorney in fact, and Mary G. Vanderbeek, * * * party of the second part.”
The testatum clause is as follows:
“In testimony whereof, the said George W. Birdsall hath, by virtue of two certain letters of attorney given to him by the said party of the first part, the one bearing date the 9th day of June, a. d. 1888, and duly recorded in the Hudson Oounty Register’s Office, in Book 461 of Deeds, on page 56, &e., the other bearing date the 11th.day of May, a. d. 1891, and duly recorded in the Register’s office of Hudson County aforesaid, in Book 532 of Deeds, on page 12, &c., hereunto set the hands and seals of his principals, the parties of the first part, the day and year first above written.
“George W. Birdsall. [seal]
“Individually.
“George W. Bindsall. [seal]
“Attorney in fact for the heirs of Jacob TJewMrli, deceased.”
Of course, some of ihe grantors were and some were not heirs of Jacob Newkirk, deceased; but I am informed by counsel that deeds have been procured from all of the persons named in the deed as grantors who were not, in fact, heirs of Jacob New-kirk, deceased.
Whether it should properly be held to be a proper execution by the attorney of the power, and whether it should properly be held that the deed does convey the interests of the principals, I do not propose to determine for reasons to be hereafter stated.
The other objection urged by the defendants arises out of the following circumstances: It appeared that in the year 1861 the mayor and common council of Hudson City, within which the premises in question were then situated, sold the two lots in question for unpaid assessments for the improvement of Warren, or Centre street, for a term of three thousand years, to one Carl Struber. Two declarations of sale were issued, one dated February 7th, and the other February 17th, 1861. With respect to the latter objection the complainants rely upon the decision of Vice-Chancellor Howell, in the case of Beatty v. Lewis (1907), 68 Atl. Rep. 95. This was a suit under the act to quiet title, and, in effect, held that the declarations of sale for taxes under which possession was not taken within twenty years after the two years allowed for redemption had passed, were useless thereafter as instruments of title, as entry under them was barred.
It will be seen that the latter question rests upon the doctrine of adverse possession, and that in a case where the issue was squarely between the parties claiming paper title as against adverse possession, the court held against the paper title. In the case at bar there has been enough said to show that there are questions of two kinds to be considered—the first, relating to the execution of the deed, is a question of law, the second, relating to the declarations of sale and the question of adverse possession, is an issue of fact. They are both properly characterized as “doubtful.”
The court of chancery, in a line of specific performance cases, has been dealing with the question of how far it should go in deciding doubtful questions of law—holding that upon a question of fact it would not force the title upon an unwilling purchaser unless the facts to be established to make his title good were provable by public records, or by othef evidence obtainable by a
I incline to the opinion that, in view of two recent decisions in the court of errors and appeals, the court of chancery has gone farther than it should go in deciding doubtful questions of law; and, of course, is fully vindicated and justified in not attempting to decide an issue of fact affecting the title where proof of the facts is not of record or always available to use. The two cases to which I refer are Van Riper v. Wickersham (1910), 77 N. J. Eq. (7 Buch.) 232, and Doutney v. Lambie (1910), 78 N. J. Eq. (8 Buch.) 277. Under the language of these cases, this court should not force a title upon the defendant where there exists a legitimate question or doubt, either of law or of fact, affecting the title.
Undoubtedly, in the case at hand, there is a doubt as to the proper decision of either of the questions.
As to the execution of the deed, each side has furnished me with briefs of many pages, containing numerous citations; and the courts of other jurisdictions have varied from a requirement that the execution in the name of the principal is not good unless his name appears followed by that of the attorney, to those in which the court has stated that it might draw an inference from the whole document irrespective of the technical way in which it was executed.
The cases in New Jersey have not decided this matter because it has never squarely been raised. The nearest approach to it is
Unquestionably, therefore, there is great doubt as to whether or not this was a proper execution of the power and whether the deed conveyed the land of the principals.
With respect to the question of the declarations of sale, while it lias undoubtedly been settled in this court (Brady v. Lewis, supra), that in a direct issue between those presently entitled to the declarations of sale and the occupiers of the land in a suit to quiet title, a failure to prove entry as against adverse possession will defeat the holders of the declarations of sale, there is still open in this suit, where the holders of the declarations of sale are not represented or bound, all the questions of fact which must rest for their proof in the memory of witnesses, and must proceed either from the mouths of witnesses or from written documents even the existence of which is not now known. In other words, as I have pointed out in the ease of Sulk v. Tumulty (1910), 77 N. J. Eq. (7 Buch.) 97, each case of title by adverse possession must of necessity rest upon its own facts, and every fact entitling the party to adverse possession must be made out by clear proof and proper inference; and, therefore, it is improper, where the parties between whom such an issue would be raisable are not present, to decide that a title by adverse possession is made out; and it is certainly improper in a specific performance case; the
For these reasons I am constrained to deny the prayer 'for specific performance, and the bill must be dismissed, with costs.