Dodd v. Boenig

114 Misc. 144
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 Misc. 144 (Dodd v. Boenig) 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.

Bluebook
Dodd v. Boenig, 114 Misc. 144 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Squiers, J.

This is an action brought by the owner in possession of certain property situated in the village of Sea Cliff, town of Oyster Bay, county of Nassau, against the purchaser at a tax sale to set aside and cancel a tax deed given by the treasurer of Nassau county to the defendant.

On the 9th day of October, 1906, the property in question was conveyed to the plaintiff by the Salvation Army. The property covered by said deed, consisting of lots 407, 408, 409, 448, 449, 1687, house and lots 450 and 451, was assessed for the year 1907 [145]*145against M. M. Dodd (who was presumably the husband of the plaintiff), and the tax levied upon such assessment was paid on July 24, 1908. It appears . from the tax records offered in evidence on the trial that lot 451 for the year 1907 was also assessed against one Miss Stanley.

The property covered by the aforesaid deed to the plaintiff was also assessed for the year 1910 and the tax based on said assessment was paid. For'that year also an assessment was levied against lot 451 in the name of Miss Stanley and such tax does not appear from the records to have been paid. For the year 1911 an assessment was levied against the property covered by the deed running against M. M. Dodd, which tax was paid on March 9, 1912. A similar tax was levied against M. M. Dodd for the year 1912 affecting said property, which was paid on March 4, 1913. Again lot 451 was assessed for the year 1913 running against Miss Stanley. Subsequently, as shown by the sales blotter of the town of Oyster Bay, offered in evidence on the trial, lot 451 was sold for unpaid taxes assessed against Miss Stanley, the amount of the tax being one dollar and eighty-five cents, and was purchased by the defendant for the sum of three dollars and forty cents. Subsequently there was delivered to the defendant, the purcháser on said tax sale, a tax' deed dated December 20,1910, and executed by the treasurer of Nassau county, purporting to convey lot 451, being one of the lots covered by the deed to the plaintiff heretofore referred to. At a later date lot 451 was sold for the taxes for the years 1910, 1911, 1912 and was purchased at the sale by the defendant herein on the 24th day of December, 1915, for the sum of ten dollars and eighty-eight cents. The defendant recorded his first tax deed, and it is apparent that this is the deed upon which he relies to defeat [146]*146the plaintiff’s action. After the purchase of the property by the plaintiff in 1906, she caused to be erected upon lots 450 and 451 during the winter 1906 and 1907, a dwelling house, which ever since has been and still is on the lots in question. In the month of December, 1910, the house and lots in question were rented by the plaintiff to one Franklin B. Myrick, who entered into occupancy on the 29th day of April, 1910, and remained in occupancy as tenant continuously for a period of six years. It is clear from the evidence that through a clerical error in the tax office of Nassau county a duplicate double assessment was levied against lot 451, one running against the owner and one running against Miss Stanley, who is not identified by the evidence adduced at the trial.

In spite of the able, exhaustive brief presented by the attorney for the defendant, it is unthinkable that an owner of property should be ousted from his ownership through an error made by a clerk in the tax office. The assessment attempted to be levied against the property in the name of Miss Stanley was absolutely void, and, therefore, the tax sale and all proceedings prior thereto and subsequently, were void ab initio. The tax which was properly levied against the owner was paid. The case of Wallace v. International Paper Co., 53 App. Div. 41, holds that section 132 of the Tax Law refers to authorized sales and touching deeds given in pursuance thereof (at p. 43): “ Such authorized deeds are made conclusive evidence of title after the lapse of a given time; but no unauthorized deed based upon an unauthorized sale, a sale where there were no unpaid taxes to warrant it, was intended to be covered by this section of the Tax Law. # * * Section 132 reads, every such conveyance, ’ etc. That is, conveyance on a sale for unpaid taxes.”

[147]*147“A sale for two taxes when one has, in fact, been paid invalidates the sale.” Loomis v. Semper, 38 Misc. Rep. 570.

In Wallace v. McEchron, 176 N. Y. 424, the Court of Appeals construed and interpreted section 132 of the Tax Law. This was an action in partition affecting certain unimproved lands in Hamilton county. One of the defendants claimed an interest in the property in question by virtue of a tax deed from the comptroller of the state of New York bearing date December 29, 1886, and subsequently recorded. The trial court found among other facts that in November, 1886, the owner applied to the comptroller of the state for a statement of the unpaid taxes upon the property, and the comptroller rendered such statement to the owner who paid the taxes. Such statement did not contain a statement of a road tax for which tax the property was subsequently sold by the comptroller. The holder of the tax title, as here, contended that the failure of the plaintiffs to bring any action within the period of time limited by section 132 of the Tax Law barred and divested all the plaintiffs’ rights. At page 427 the court said:

“ It has been decided by this court that where the default of the taxpayer is caused by the failure of the public officer or his clerks to render a proper statement of the unpaid taxes, a sale made for unpaid taxes omitted from the statement cannot divest the owner of his title. * * *

“The sale of the lands to Curtis and Baker was, therefore, void as against the plaintiffs, and we are thus brought to.a consideration of the effect of the record of the comptroller’s deed under section 132 of the Tax Law. * * *

‘ Such statutes have been viewed by this court both as curative acts and as statutes of limitations. It is [148]*148to be observed, however, that none of them has been enacted in the ordinary form either of a curative act or of a statute of limitations. In terms they provide that after a certain lapse of time and in certain contingencies a comptroller’s deed shall be conclusive evidence of certain facts. It, therefore, becomes necessary when any case involving the construction and effect of one of these statutes is presented to closely scrutinize and carefully analyze the statute to see whether as to such case the statute applies, and if. applicable, whether its operation is that of a curative act or of a statute of limitations.”

At page 429: “ Where the proceedings are so fatally defective that no title passes, it cannot by a curative act transfer the title of one person to another.”

A fair interpretation of the law as laid down in this case would apply equally if the act is applied as a statute of limitation. The instant case is distinguishable from the case of Doud v. Huntington Hebrew Congregation, 178 App. Div. 748. In that case the purchaser at the tax sale was in possession. In the instant case the purchaser at the tax sale was never in possession. Mr. Justice Blackmar, writing the opinion, said at page 749:

“ No legislative fiat can validate the sale of the land of Emma Baker to satisfy the debt of Eunice Baker. (People ex rel. Boenig v. Hegeman, 220 N. Y. 118.)

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Bluebook (online)
114 Misc. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodd-v-boenig-nysupct-1921.