Board of Education of Central School District No. 1 v. Miles

18 A.D.2d 87, 238 N.Y.S.2d 766, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4153
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 14, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 A.D.2d 87 (Board of Education of Central School District No. 1 v. Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education of Central School District No. 1 v. Miles, 18 A.D.2d 87, 238 N.Y.S.2d 766, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4153 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinion

Bergan, P. J.

The problem presented by this submitted, controversy (Civ. Prac. Act, §§ 546-548) is whether section 345 of the Beal Property Law is constitutional in retroactive application. This section is one of several statutory amendments enacted in 1958 on recommendation of the Law Bevision Commission dealing with certain future and contingent interests in real property (L. 1958, ch. 865).

Our problem is confined entirely to section 345, which provides for the extinguishment of a condition subsequent or special limitation restricting the use of land and the resulting right of entry and the possibility of reverter unless a declaration of an intention to preserve it be recorded by the party possessed of the future interest.

. A reasonable period was allowed to those interested in preserving existing rights to record the required declaration. Section 345 requires that the declaration in respect of a condition subsequent or special limitation created before September 1, 1931 be recorded by September 1,1961. This is a period of three years after the effective date of the statute.

The controversy before us arises on these stipulated facts: A century ago, December 28, 1863, John Townsend and Sarah, his wife, conveyed the property in dispute in the Town of Walton, Delaware County, to the trustees of Walton Academy. The deed contained this clause: ‘ ‘ Provided nevertheless that the said lot and the building thereon shall be used for the purposes of an Academy and no other then this deed shall remain in full force [89]*89and effect otherwise it shall become void a,nd the premises herein conveyed shall revert to the said John Townsend party of the first part and to his heirs.”

The land thus conveyed passed from the trustees of Walton Academy to the trustees of Union Free School District of Walton and ultimately in 1949 to the plaintiff Board of Education of Central School District No. 1, as statutory successor to the trustees of the Union Free District.

Through all this period the property was used for school purposes ; but on April 1, 1962 plaintiff discontinued such use. On April 13,1962 defendants as the sole heirs at law of John Townsend recorded in the Delaware County Clerk’s office a declaration of intention to preserve restrictions on the use of land.

If section 345 of the Beal Property Law is a valid exercise of legislative power, their rights are extinguished, since the filing of the declaration was over six months after the expiration of the time for recording such an intention fixed by statute; but if the statute is invalid in its retroactive provisions the rights of defendants have not been extinguished. Defendants argue both that the statute deprives them of due process and that it impairs the obligation of a contract and a property right.

The language of the 1863 deed created either a fee simple subject to a condition subsequent, as the use of the words "provided that ’ ’ indicate; or a fee simple determinable called also a fee on special limitation, as the use of the words “ shall revert to ” indicate. These fees have been the subject of judicial difficulty in the courts of New York, e.g., Fausett v. Guisewhite (16 A D 2d 82) and elsewhere, Trustees of Schools v. Batdorf (6 Ill. 2d 486 [1955]).

It is not altogether clear that future interests of this kind are regarded in New York as property entitled to constitutional protection. They have been characterized as bare possibilities. (Nicoll v. New York and Erie R. R. Co., 12 N. Y. 121,132; Upington v. Corrigan, 151 N. Y. 143,151; First Reformed Dutch Chruch v. Croswell, 210 App. Div. 294, appeal dismissed 239 N. Y. 625.) While the last-cited case indicates there has been some doubt as to the transferability of these rights, it was held squarely in Nichols v. Haehn (8 A D 2d 405) that a possibility of reverter is alienable, and the Legislature has more recently settled the question of their descent and transfer by an amendment to section 59 of the Beal Property Law (L. 1962, ch. 146, eff. Sept. 1, 1962).

The alienability of these future or contingent interests is not necessarily conclusive upon the question of a right to their constitutional protection. It is interesting, however, to note [90]*90that Illinois, which does not regard a possibility of reverter as transferable (Pure Oil Co. v. Miller-McFarland Drilling Co., 376 Ill. 486 [1941]) also does not regard it as a right entitled to constitutional protection (Trustees of Schools v. Batdorf, supra).

The constitutional issue must be tested out on the rationality of need for public regulation of these future and contingent interests in the general welfare. No doubt the man possessed of a possibility of reverter in his favor has something tangible in legal theory and perhaps also something of market, value. That he can transfer this as a matter of legal right to somebody else does not change the basic nature of the legal thing he has; or the legal thing his transferee gets.

The right to regulate and to extinguish under certain reasonable conditions depends in the end upon the nature of the thing regulated and extinguished. We have concluded that the recording requirement of section 345 is a valid exercise of legislative power and that the failure to record extinguished defendant’s contingent interest in the subject land.

That defendants’ rights did not mature until the condition occurred, i.e., use for school purposes was discontinued on April 1, 1962, is not controlling. The right was created before September 1, 1931 and the recording was required to have been made by September 1,1961 (§ 345, subd. 4).

The Law Revision Commission and the draftsmen of the 1958 statute seem to have entertained some slight misgivings on the constitutionality of the recording requirements of section 345 in retroactive application. (N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1951, No. 65 [P], pp. 27-36; N. Y. Legis. Doc., 1958, No. 65 [B], pp. 102-107.)

These doubts stemmed in large part from a decision of the Court for the Correction of Errors in 1839 (Varick’s Executors v. Briggs, 22 Wend. 543) which held unconstitutional the recording act of 1813 in its adverse effect on a deed executed in 1802.

The opinion of the court by Senator Verplauck was based upon a supposed conflict with the provision of the United States Constitution protecting contracts from impairment. The Senator noted (p. 546): “I must place my conclusion as to the effect of these recording statutes distinctly and expressly upon the clause of the constitution of the United States prohibiting any state from passing any law impairing the obligation of contracts. * * * Now the effect of a subsequent statute enacting that such valid contracts shall be adjudged fraudulent and void as against certain persons unless a further legal sanction [recording] be added, must be in direct hostility to the very words of the constitutional inhibition. The contracts themselves are impaired by being adjudged void. ’ ’

[91]*91No notice seems to have been taken in the Court of Errors of the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States nine years earlier (1830) in Jackson ex dem. Hart v. Lamphire (3 Pet. [28 U.

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18 A.D.2d 87, 238 N.Y.S.2d 766, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-of-central-school-district-no-1-v-miles-nyappdiv-1963.