Boylston v. Wheeler
This text of 9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 622 (Boylston v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an action commenced under section 449 of the Code, to compel the determination of claims to real property. It is settled, as we understand it, that such an action is not a substitute for proceedings under the Revised Statutes, but that the right to institute those proceedings is left unimpaired and in full force, and that the remedy by action is another and additional or cumulative remedy, to be adopted by a party at his election.
“ Brooklyn, Oct. 17, 1872.
“ Please take notice that I hold certificate of sale for non-payment of regular water rates, for 1869, upon property on the south side of Flushing avenue, between Nostrand and Marcy avenues. Recorded in the office of the Nassau Water Department, in Register 8, Nos. 2502, 2504 and 2505.
“ You are required to redeem the same within the time allowed ' by law, or the sale will become absolute.
“A. S. WHEELER, Purchaser.
“ 377 Fulton street, directly opposite the City Hall, room No. 5. Office hours, 9 to 12 a. m.
“ To Mrs. A. J. Boylston.”
■ Waiving the question whether this notice, if shown to have been given by the defendant, would prove the fact that the defendant did claim thereby any estate in the premises described, or any part thereof, in fee, for life, or for a term not less than ten years, it seems to be clear that there was no sufficient evidence that the defendant ever gave such notice or had any knowledge of it. This paper, if it is to be the foundation and cause of an action against the defendant, especially to charge him with setting up an illegal and unjustifiable claim to the estate of another party, should be proved to have emanated from the defendant, by at least as strong evidence as would be sufficient to charge the defendant, if the paper in question was claimed to be the promissory note or other contract of the defendant. No such evidence was given. No attempt was made to prove the genuineness of the notice. All that the witness was enabled to testify on the subject was, that the papers appeared to be papers from the defendant’s place of business, and that he presumed that they came from the office of the defendant. This testimony, or its equivalent, might have been truth[625]*625fully given by any of the bystanders, who had never before seen or heard of the defendant, and upon a simple inspection of the paper. When we consider that this is not a proceeding under the Revised Statutes, where the defendant could not be barred of any title or claim, except it fell precisely within the statutory description of the estate, which it is necessary the defendant should claim, in order to authorize the proceedings, and where, as stated by Justice Woodruff in Burnham v. Onderdonk,
Present — Barnard, P. J., and Talcott, J.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide event.
Burnham v. Onderdonk, 41 N. Y., 435.
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9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boylston-v-wheeler-nysupct-1874.