190 N.Y. 406 | NY | 1907
In 1893 the forest commission, under provisions of law, advertised for sale, with other wild lands in the Adirondacks, a tract of 2,900 acres, for which the respondent bid the sum of $5.57 an acre. His bid being the highest was accepted. Before the sale was consummated it was discovered that the tract being within twenty miles of Clinton prison its sale was unauthorized, whereupon an act was passed by the legislature (Laws 1894, ch. 209) which confirmed the sale and directed the execution to respondent of the necessary deeds of transfer upon his payment of the purchase money. The respondent paid the proper sum and received from the state a patent executed by the governor whereby the people of the state granted, released and quitclaimed unto him the tract in question. The patent concluded with this provision: "And these presents shall in no wise operate as a warranty of title." The respondent entered into possession of the premises and shortly thereafter ejectment suits were brought against him by former owners of the land to recover parts of the tract so conveyed to him. He defended these suits but was unsuccessful and by the judgments recovered by the plaintiffs therein he was ejected from 320 acres. It appeared on the trial of those actions that the title of the state had been acquired by sales for unpaid taxes. The defect in the proceedings was this: The lands of the plaintiffs in those suits had been assessed together with other lands which belonged to the state as a single tract and a tax for a single amount levied upon the whole. At the sale, upon the theory that *409
the lands belonged to the state, the comptroller, claiming to act under the provisions of section 66 of chapter 427 of the Laws of 1855, declined to receive bids from parties attending the sale, but sold the land to the state for the amount of the tax. This was held to be an illegal appropriation of the lands of the plaintiffs and to confer no title thereto on the state. This illegality in the conduct of the sale did not appear on any records in the comptroller's office or elsewhere, but was proved by the testimony of witnesses who attended the sale. After the respondent had been thus ousted from the said 320 acres an act was passed by the legislature (Laws 1900, ch. 762) which conferred upon the Court of Claims power to hear, audit and determine the claim of the respondent against the state "in consequence of the cancellation, annulling and setting aside of the letters patent executed to him * * * and to make an award and render judgment therefor against the state and in favor of said claimant." Thereupon the respondent presented to that court a claim for the purchase price of the land from which he had been evicted, with interest, the costs recovered against him in the two ejectment suits and the expenses incurred by him in defending the same, and for $12.50 an acre for loss of profit. On the first hearing the Court of Claims rendered judgment for the state, holding that the respondent had no valid claim. This was reversed by the Appellate Division and a new trial awarded. (Wheeler v.State of New York,
The principal question in the case is the validity of the act of 1900. It is contended by the learned attorney-general that if the act is to be construed as giving the claimant a right of action where none existed before it violates section 19 of article III of the Constitution of the State, which provides that the legislature shall neither audit nor allow any private claim, and that if it was the intention of the legislature to deprive the state of the defense that there was no *410
covenant of warranty in the conveyance, the statute in effect appropriates money for a private purpose and is ineffective, not having received the assent of two-thirds of the members of each branch of the legislature, as required by section 20 of the same article. These constitutional provisions have recently been several times before this court. In Cole v. State of New York
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But while we thus uphold the validity of the statute and the claim of the respondent made thereunder, we think an error was committed on the trial for which the judgment must be reversed unless the respondent consents to a reduction. Over the objection and exception of the counsel for the state the respondent was allowed to prove the increased value of the lands at the time of the eviction. This ruling was erroneous, even if the action had been on a warranty, for in *413 such a case the damages are limited to the purchase money and interest. (Morris v. Phelps, 5 Johns. 49; Kinney v.Watts, 14 Wend. 38; Kelly v. Dutch Church of Schenectady, 2 Hill, 105; Rawle on Covenants, p. 235.) But in this case a warranty was expressly excepted and, therefore, the plaintiff's claim is limited to the amount fixed by the statute or that which would obtain in an action for money had and received, the two being in this case the same, to wit, the amount paid with interest.
The judgment appealed from should, therefore, be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event, unless the respondent, within twenty days, consents to reduce the judgment of the Court of Claims to the sum of $2,691.42, in which case the judgment as reduced is affirmed, without costs in this court to either party.
O'BRIEN, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, HAIGHT, VANN and HISCOCK, JJ., concur; CHASE, J., not sitting.
Judgment reversed, etc.