151 N.Y.S. 785 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The action is brought under article 12 of the Real Property Law, as amended by chapter 627 of the Laws of 1910 (known as the Torrens Land Title Registration Law), to register the title of plaintiff to certain real property described in the complaint, consisting of a plot about twenty-five feet in width and two hundred and fifteen feet in depth extending from Bergen avenue and Third avenue, fronting on both.
After a trial at Special Term the plaintiff recovered the judgment appealed from which adjudges her to be the owner in fee simple absolute of the property in question, and grants registration thereof in accordance with the provisions of the statute.
Exceptions were duly filed by the Attorney- G-eneral of the State of New York, and he now prosecutes this appeal. The questions presented are in part technical, having to do with the proper procedure to be followed in such cases, and in part
It is well settled that the purpose of the act is to register good titles, not to certify bad ones. (Partenfelder v. People, 211 N. Y. 357.) A good title which may be registered we understand to be one which is marketable and free from reasonable doubt, or in other words, such a title as a court of equity would compel an unwilling purchaser to accept in an action for specific performance. In the nature of things actions to register a title under the act will frequently be practically ex parte especially in view of the somewhat loose provisions for service of process upon absent defendants and possible claimants. The People of the State of New York have an interest to see that imperfect "titles are not registered, and it is not only the right but the duty of the Attorney-General in the protection of that interest to insist in each case that proper proof of title be made, acting in effect as amicus curice. This is expressly held in Barkenthien v. People (212 N. Y. 36, 44), wherein the court uses the following language: “In the provision that the complaint shall state what interest, if any, the State has in the property involved in the action ‘other than the general governmental interest, or such as exists as to all land in private ownership,’ is the recognition of the fact that there inheres in the People of the State an interest in a true, just and conclusive registration of the titles to the lands within the State. A system or procedure which would secure or permit the registration of false, defective or questionable titles would give rise to conflicts of ownership, litigation or appeals for legislative relief, and be inimical to public peace and con
In the' present case the plaintiff makes no claim to a record title to that part of the premises described in the complaint which fronts on Third avenue, and extends easterly therefrom about 200 feet. Her claim is that she has established a title, good against all the world, by adverse possession. The record title is in one Peter Wurm, to whom the lot was conveyed by Casper Zuern and wife by deed, dated March 23, 1854, and recorded February 6, 1857. There is no record of any conveyance by Peter Wurm. There is extant, however, a paper writing, in the German language, signed by him and dated September 26, 1852, the translation of which reads as follows: “ I am about to travel, and hereby promise in case I should not return within four to ten years Mr. Peter Biecker shall be my lawful heir, and owner of my lot situate at Melrose. ”
It will be observed that - this paper antedates by about eighteen months the deed by which Wurm acquired the title to the property. This fact is apparently accounted for by another paper said to. be in Wurm’s handwriting, but not signed by him, which recites that he, Wurm, had already paid for the lot; that Zuern, the vendor, had not been able as yet to obtain a deed himself, and that said Zuern agrees to satisfy a mortgage on the lot within a year, and “ to let me have, as legal owner of the lot bought of him, the deed of said property through the intervention of Mr. Peter Biecker of Hew York.” This paper is dated September 28, 1852, and is signed by Caspar Zuern and his wife Agnes, as well as by a witness.
After signing the paper above quoted, under which plaintiff claims title, Peter Wurm departed upon his travels and has not been heard from since. At some time thereafter Peter Biecker went into possession of the plot of land, improved it, built a fence around it, and he and the plaintiff, his daughter,
Apart from this fundamental objection to the registration of plaintiff’s alleged title there are deficiencies in the proceedings as disclosed by the papers on appeal. It was attempted to make substituted service upon Peter Wurm and an order therefor was obtained based in part upon the certificate of
It may not be out of place to call attention to the wide discrepancy between the certificate of the official examiner and the testimony given on the trial. It is stated by the official examiner, relying upon an affidavit by plaintiff, that “Peter Wurm borrowed part of the purchase money for said premises from her father and after the conveyance to him and in or about the month of March, 1854, the said Wurm departed on a journey to Mew Orleans and Mexico, and was never heard of again although diligent efforts have been made to locate him, and" that at the time of his departure the said Wurm was unmarried and had no living relatives. That before his departure, the said Wurm delivered to Peter Biecker, the father of Catherine Meighan, the said deed, together with a letter in the German language to the effect that if he, the said Wurm, did not return from four to ten years, that then and in that event Peter Biecker, the father of the said Catherine Meighan, was to be and become the owner of the said premises in consideration of the money advanced by him for the purchase price and for the payment of taxes, etc. ”
The official examiner states that these facts appear from an affidavit of said Catherine Meighan and from other papers in possession of and conversations had with her. The affidavit of Catherine Meighan upon which the examiner thus relies shows that she was born on February 27, 1851, and thus was less than two years old when Peter Wurm signed the paper relied upon and less than four years old when the deed to him appears to have been made. Her testimony as to what took place at that time, and as to whether Peter Wurm was unmarried and had no living relatives is certainly lacking in probative force. There was no evidence produced on the trial to show that Peter Wurm borrowed any part of the consideration from Peter Biecker, and the paraphase by the official examiner of the purport of the paper signed by Peter Wurm is wholly inaccurate and misleading.
Official examiners of titles are public officers, and great importance is attached by the Registration Law to their certificates
The judgment appealed from must be reversed and the complaint dismissed, with costs to appellant in this court and the court below.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Clarke, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs. Order to be settled on notice.