Clason v. . Baldwin

46 N.E. 322, 152 N.Y. 204, 6 E.H. Smith 204, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 961
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 2, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 46 N.E. 322 (Clason v. . Baldwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clason v. . Baldwin, 46 N.E. 322, 152 N.Y. 204, 6 E.H. Smith 204, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 961 (N.Y. 1897).

Opinion

*207 O’Brien, J.

This action, brought to recover a parcel of real property situated at ¡No. 42 Sheriff street in the city of ¡New York, has been twice tried, and as often reviewed at the General Term, and once in this court. (Clason v. Baldwin, 129 N. Y. 183.) The present judgment avrarded the possession to the plaintiff, with damages or mesne profits in the sum of $5,337.

At the trial, upon the close of all the proofs, counsel for each party moved that a verdict be directed in his favor. The court refused to direct a verdict for the defendant, and directed a verdict for the plaintiff, to which direction and refusal the defendant excepted. By these requests both parties waived their right to have any questions of fact submitted to the jury, and virtually submitted to the judgment of the court all questions of fact and law. Had the defendant requested to have the case submitted to the jury, even after the motions for a direction, she would have been entitled to have the jury pass upon certain material facts in the case that rested entirely upon the interested testimony of the plaintff herself, and were hot clearly established. The material facts, so far as they depended upon evidence not conclusive or upon inferences to be drawn from circumstances, must now be deemed to have been found in favor of the plaintiff by the court. This point is a sufficient answer to all that is said upon the brief of the learned counsel for the defendant in which he contends that certain elements of the case should have been submitted to the jury.

The exception to the direction of a verdict for the plaintiff, and the refusal to direct one for the defendant, raise the question whether, upon the facts now disclosed by the record, it was the plaintiff or the defendant that was seized of the premises at the time of the commencement of the action. The premises are a part of a large tract of land formerly owned and possessed by James Delaney, who was attainted of treason in the year 1779 (Laws 1779, ch. 25) and his property declared forfeited to the state. By a subsequent statute provision was made for the sale of all such forfeited land by *208 commissioners. (Laws 1784, ch. 64.) On the 24th of January, 1786, the commissioners sold the land so forfeited by Delaney to John Quaclcenbos. This method of divesting the title of the owner of lands and transferring it to another does not conform to our present notions with respect to property rights.

There was no judgment of conviction and no judicial proceeding of any kind so far as appears. The title ivas changed, if at all, by an act of the legislature. The constitutional and legal safeguards for the protection of private property in our day did not exist then. There was no question made at the trial in regard to the validity of these proceedings and no question is made here. They were so remote in point of time that all questions growing out of them have ceased to be of any practical importance, and we will assume, for the purposes of this case, that the sale was operative to pass the legal title.

From Quackenbos the title passed through various mesne conveyances to William Jones Clason, who died on the 6th of August, 1824, leaving a will which was admitted to probate. By this will he devised the property in question to his three children, of whom the plaintiff was one, subject to an annuity to his widow. The two other children, brothers of the plaintiff, died, one in 1825 and the other in 1860, without issue and intestate. It is supposed that the plaintiff then came into possession of the entire estate as survivor, under the terms of the will, or under the Statute of Descents, from her deceased brothers. It is contended, however, by the learned counsel for the defendant, that the shares of the brothers would pass, under the statute, upon their death, not to the plaintiff, but to her mother, if then alive, for life, and so the plaintiff would not become entitled to the possession of the estate until her mother’s death, and that since there was no proof of her death prior to the commencement of the action, the plaintiff has not proved title. The learned counsel for the plaintiff seems to admit the force of this point and that there is a defect in this respect in the proof which, he says, *209 was a mere inadvertence, and as no specific point was raised in regard to it at the trial, it should be deemed waived. He further states, upon his brief, that, in fact, the mother died many years ago, and, in view of the fact that it was shown that she was born ninety-two years before the trial, this is quite probable.

We think that there are several answers to the contention of the defendant’s counsel. The plaintiff certainly took one-third of the estate in her own right under her father’s will, and she could maintain the action to recover that if no more. At most, the omission to prove the death of the mother was a defect in proof which could have been supplied if attention had been called to it at the trial, but the defense made no question and raised no point, whatever, in regard to it. On the former appeal we affirmed the title of the plaintiff to the property on substantially the same proof as to her chain of title. After three trials of the case, and as many appeals, with no specific objection on the part of the defendant to raise the question, or suggest to the court in any way that such a defect existed in the proof, and since there is no certificate attached to the case that it contains all the evidence, this court should now presume that the fact of the mother’s death was expressly or tacitly admitted at the trial, or that it was in some way established, if the fact was at all material.

The plaintiff gave some proof that, within twenty years prior to the commencement of the action, she was in possession of the premises, and exercised acts of ownership by the collection of rents from tenants or occupants, and it appeared that at least one of her predecessors in title, to wit, Delaney, was in possession before the attainder. So we think that the plaintiff proved, prima facie, her title to the premises in controversy.

The defendant’s title or claim of title rested upon a lease by the comptroller of the city of New York,'upon a sale for the payment of taxes assessed in the years 1869 arid 1870. The lease bears date March 13,1876, and the sale took place March 12, 1874. The lessee who bid at the sale assigned to the *210 defendant. The trial court held that this lease was void, and we think, correctly.

(1) The notice of sale and redemption described the premises as situated on the west side of Sheriff street instead of the east side, according to the fact. The statute requires “ a particular and detailed statement of the property to be sold.” (Cons. Act [L. 1882, ch. 410], § 926.)

(2) The notice of redemption was so indefinite that it was impossible to tell when the time to redeem expired. The notice was evidently framed with reference to various sales made of various lots on four different days in March, and it indicated four different dates on which redemption might be made, but did not indicate the last day for the redemption of the parcel in question. (Willis v.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.E. 322, 152 N.Y. 204, 6 E.H. Smith 204, 1897 N.Y. LEXIS 961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clason-v-baldwin-ny-1897.