3 Abb. Ct. App. 382 | NY | 1860
[After questioning the whether the order was appealable.] — If the appeal is effectual for any purpose, it must be confined to the questions made by the second and ‘third points presented by the appellant.
The first relates to the necessity of making the appellant a party to the proceedings in partition, and the second to alleged irregularities in the proceedings, by which it is averred that a good title was not offered to the purchaser.
As to the first objection, it is sufficient to say that the appellant was not a tenant in common of the premises at the time of the commencement of the proceedings for partition. He purchased from some of the parties and took a conveyance pendente lite, and after the statutory notice had been filed.
Besides, he purchased subject to the proceedings then pending, and this was expressed in terms by a clause in the conveyance he received, and which vested in him the shares of the grantors, as parties to the proceedings. By purchasing at the sale, with the knowledge that he held such a conveyance, he became vested with the title of the parties to the suit in partition, as well by virtue of the sale under the judgment in that suit, as by the conveyance; and it would be a strange proposition, if he could be heard to object to his title as defective, because, in addition to his purchase upon the sale, he had also a conveyance from some of the parties to the proceeding itself. The case of Burhans v. Burhans, 2 Barb. Gh. 398, decides nothing adverse to this conclusion; since it clearly appeared in that ease that the title of the person who was not made a party to the proceedings in partition accrued many years before the suit was instituted.
The second ground on which the appellant asks to be released from his purchase is, alleged irregularities in the partition suit. The answer to this, given by J udge Ingraham, at special term, is entirely conclusive, to wit: that they do not
The objections, too, are of a light and almost frivolous character. It is said, for instance, that to the report of the referee upon the title there is appended no search for mortgages or conveyances incumbering or affecting the title. There is no rule that I am aware of that requires this to be annexed, although, doubtless, it is a common and very convenient practice to do so. In his report, the referee states the fact explicitly that he had caused the necessary searches to be made, and he certifies that no creditor not a party to the suit had any lien by way of mortgage, devise, or otherwise, excepting the mortgage of the defendant Cromwell, the amount of which he specifies.
The other objection, that it does not appear that the referee advertised for liens, is equally untenable. Since the case of Gardiner v. Luke, 12 Wend. 269, the practice has been uniform, in accordance with the construction which the court gave to the statute in that case, not to publish the notice unless by advice of the court, or unless it is required by some party to the suit. If there are no liens, the advertisement is an expensive superfluity. The report of the referee distinctly certifies that there are no such liens. It is not enough for the purchaser simply to allege the omission of an advertisement, and ask the court to infer therefrom that perchance there may be some outstanding incumbrance that may affect his title. If any such liens in fact exist, the purchaser should furnish affirmative evidence thereof, and ask to have them removed, or that he be relieved from the .obligations incurred by him as such purchaser. Until this is done, he presents no case for the interference of the court.
The judgment should be affirmed,