40 N.J.L. 92 | N.J. | 1878
The opinion of the court was delivered by
These proceedings were before this court on certiorari at the suit of the prosecutrix, Rebecca R. Alden v. Mayor, &c., of Newark, 7 Vroom 288. On motion, David H. Tichenor, who had become owner of the land in controversy, by declaration of sale, and who had warranted the title to another to whom he had conveyed the land sold for taxes, was admitted to defend the title. At that time-the Citizens’ Gas Light Company had become purchasers of these lots of land, but were not mentioned or defended in that action. "Why it was so, does not appear. After the death of Joseph L. Alden, the former owner of these lots at the time they were assessed for taxes, the prosecutrix, his widow, on March 10th 1870, brought an action in the Essex Circuit Court. In June, 1871, the first writ of certiorari was sued out by her in aid of her action of ejectment, which was still pending. This practice of attacking the tax title directly by certiorari, instead of indirectly by action of eject
The former writ of certiorari in this case failed in its purpose, because the Citizens’ Gas Light Company were not made parties to it, and were not, therefore, bound by its adjudication. Fleischauer v. West Hoboken, 10 Vroom 421.
Hence this writ has been prosecuted to test the title of the gas light company. It is defended by them, and their counsel has made a preliminary motion to set aside and dismiss the writ on the technical ground that there is no record brought here by the writ. The return contains a certified copy of the ordinance, assessment, warrant, return of collector of taxes, notices, advertisements and proceedings, which are in the nature of records, under which the sale of Joseph L. Alden’s house and lot of land was made for taxes assessed in 1859. There is technically no record, and these certified copies and papers have been returned for the record. Trans-scripts are often returned as the record, and sometimes, in judgment of law, are such. Nichols v. State, 2 South. 540; Morrel v. Fearing, Spencer 670; Browning v. Cooper, 3 Harr. 196; Morris Canal ads. State, 2 Green 411; Stone v. Mayor, &c., of New York, 25 Wend. 157.
But the specific objection is, that the record,being already in this court in the former suit, it is, in legal contemplation, not in the custody of the city of Newark, to* be sent here in answer to the writ. But the record is only removed as to the parties in the former certiorari, and a second writ may now be used to bring in other parties, to conclude them by the record. If the record were actually here, there can be no objection to issuing a second writ of certiorari as an auxiliary writ to bring in these new parties.
This reason, however, if it were valid, should not prevail.
It is an answer to the further objection that the prosecutrix was not entitled to the writ against these defendants, by reason of the delay in its prosecution, to say that this was a proper matter for the consideration of the justice who allowed the writ, and was passed upon by him. This court will not, therefore, dismiss the writ for laches, unless there is manifest error in its allowance. The act of 1869, above cited, says these proceedings may be, “at any time,” reviewed by certiorari. "With this liberal statutory allowance, the time should be extended in cases like this to at least the period limited for an action of ejectment, otherwise the statute might, in effect, shorten the limitation of time for the recovery of possession of lands within the statutory period of twenty years. As the title cannot be disturbed collaterally by ejectment, the denial of this writ would abridge the prosecutrix’s remedy, which does not appear to be the purpose of the act. The certiorari is intended to be in aid of the ejectment, not to defeat it.
There is also legal excuse for the delay in prosecuting this writ, in the fact that the prosecutrix was under this disability of coverture when the sale was made, and her action for dower did not accrue until her husband’s death, which occurred some time after the deed had been delivered.
In 7 Vroom 288, the tax title under which the gas company claim by deed of conveyance, was declared to be invalid, because the notice to delinquent tax-payers to pay tax within twenty days from the date thereof, was dated August 10th, 1860, but was not advertised until August 11th, reducing the time to nineteen days. This was held to be insufficient under the charter, which required twenty days’ notice.
This statute being ineffectual to cure these defects, and the proceedings upon which the declaration of sale and conveyances are founded having been heretofore decided by this court to be invalid, they remain so, as to this prosecutrix, and will be set aside so far as they affect her dower right in the land sold, with costs.