Lewis v. Petersen

149 N.E. 853, 241 N.Y. 268, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 548
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 24, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 N.E. 853 (Lewis v. Petersen) 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
Lewis v. Petersen, 149 N.E. 853, 241 N.Y. 268, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 548 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Crane, J.

This litigation arises out of the purchase of ten lots by the plaintiff at an auction sale held on September 2, 1922. The property offered for sale consisted of a large number of lots at Long Beach, auctioned by Joseph P. Day, Inc., under printed terms of sale. The plaintiff purchased lots Nos. 6 to 10, and 46 to 50 of block 38, for the sum of $13,750, and paid 10 per cent at the time, together with the auctioneer’s fees; and the second installment on October 9, 1922, of 10 per cent, making a total payment of $2,900, for the recovery of which this action is brought.

The terms of sale, or contract, under which the plaintiff’s purchase was made is apparently a very carefully prepared paper, as it contains many conditions, and takes up seventeen pages of the printed record. Only two paragraphs, however, concern this case. They read as follows:

“ Terms of Sale

The premises shown on the map distributed at the Auction Sale will be sold by various owners by lots as shown on said maps.

The sale will be governed by the following terms and conditions:

First. * * * Ten per cent on October 2nd, 1922, and the balance in payments of 2 per cent, monthly on the purchase price herein, said monthly payments to commence on November 1st, 1922, and to be paid on the -first day of each and every month thereafter until. *270 said principal sum, together with interest on the unpaid balances of the purchase price from the date hereof, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually on the first day of June and December, shall have been paid by the purchaser. The purchaser assumes payment of all taxes and assessments levied on said property from the date of the auction sale. * * *

“ Seventh. Policies of Title Insurance will be issued free to the purchasers by the Title Guarantee & Trust Company, free from incumbrances excepting the covenants and incumbrances hereinafter mentioned, and taxes and assessments levied and imposed on the property subsequent to the date of the auction sale.”

Twice, therefore, in this agreement, do we find the condition that the purchaser assumes the payment of “ all taxes and assessments levied on said property from the date of the auction sale.”

The date of the auction sale, as before stated, was September 2, 1922, which is a pivotal date in this case.

At the closing of the title it was found that there had been an assessment for local improvements levied on the property in the amount of $759.20, prior to September 2, 1922, which the plaintiff refused to pay. His contract required him to pay assessments levied after September second, and not those levied and assessed prior to that date. The vendors, however, through the title company, insisted that the plaintiff was obliged to meet the assessments, for the reason that although levied and assessed prior to September 2, 1922, they were not collectible until after that date. The title was not closed, both sides adhering firmly to the position taken. Thereupon the plaintiff commenced this action to recover his deposits, as above stated, and while he succeeded at the Special Term, his complaint has been dismissed by the Appellate Division.

What was meant by the words “ taxes and assessments levied? ” By paragraph 7, the title is to be “ free from *271 incumbrances excepting the covenants and incumbrances hereinafter mentioned. ” The assessment here in question was not an incumbrance thereafter mentioned in the agreement. Another exception, beside the incum- " brances hereinafter mentioned ” was contained in this clause. Taxes and assessments levied and imposed after September 2,1922, were also excepted. The reverse must, therefore, be true. The taxes levied and assessed before that date were not excepted. The title was to be free from these; that is, the owner, and not the purchaser, was to pay them. What, therefore, was meant by these words, “levied and assessed?” Did they mean taxes which had become an incumbrance and a hen, or did they mean assessments which had been levied and imposed, although not yet due and payable, or not yet a hen upon the property? We may expect from an agreement as carefully drawn as these terms of sale by such a well-known auctioneer, that legal terms were used with their precise and actual meaning.

This was the view taken by counsel on the trial. The court said: “ It is only a question when the assessments were levied.

“ Mr. Dammann (defendant’s counsel): That is all. * * * And that the only question for the Court to decide is whether the amount of assessment set forth in your complaint constituted a levy and an imposition under" the contract on the date of sale.

“ Mr. Wolbarst (plaintiff’s counsel): I except to levy and imposition; the only question being whether the assessments were levied and imposed following the language of the contract.

“ Mr. Dammann: I accept the substitution.”

The charter of the city of Long Beach is found in chapter 635 of the Laws of 1922, and contains the procedure for levying and collecting assessments. All legislative powers are vested in the city council, which is given authority by section 79 to borrow money and *272 to issue bonds for municipal purposes. All assessment bonds shall mature within ten years and shall be in anticipation of the collection of assessments levied or to be levied for local improvements.” The collection of an assessment is a different act from levying the assessment.

The charter further provides:

Sect. 81-a. Pavements; council may direct construction. The council may, by ordinance, direct and require any street or public ground in said city, or any part of either of them, to be graded, paved or macadamized, or to be regraded, repaved or resurfaced, or otherwise improved or repaired, at the cost and expense of the owners of the lots or parcels of land adjacent to the street, or public ground, or part thereof, so graded, paved, macadamized, repaved or resurfaced, improved or repaired and of the public at large, which cost and expense shall be apportioned, assessed and collected as hereinafter provided.

Sect. 81-b. Ordinance and notice to be published; hearing; action thereon. The council shall cause the proposed ordinance for an improvement specified in the last preceding section to be published once a week for at least two successive weeks in the official newspaper with a notice that at the time and place to be stated therein, which shall not be less than fifteen days from the first publication thereof, it will meet to consider such ordinance, and that at such meeting all parties interested may be heard. The council at the time and place stated in such notice, or at such other time and place as shall then be appointed for such purpose, shall hear all parties interested in the matter of such ordinance who shall desire to be heard, and by a majority of the members then present may adopt, modify or reject such proposed ordinance.”

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Bluebook (online)
149 N.E. 853, 241 N.Y. 268, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-petersen-ny-1925.