Mitchell v. Pychlau

148 A. 890, 105 N.J. Eq. 524
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 5, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 A. 890 (Mitchell v. Pychlau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Pychlau, 148 A. 890, 105 N.J. Eq. 524 (N.J. 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, J.

This action arises on a bill, under the statute (Jt¡. Comp. Stat. p. 5399) to quiet title to lands that were purchased by Francis W. Mitchell. The complainants are the children and heirs-at-law of Francis W. Mitchell.

Delia Pychlau, the original owner of the property, died in 1863. In 1890, there having been no matter of record affecting the title since the acquisition thereof by Delia Pychlau, the property was sold at tax sale to Henry A. Gaede, who received a certificate of sale and, after further proceedings, a deed from the city collector of Jersey City. Soon thereafter Henry W. Pychlau, widower of Delia Pychlau and tenant by the curtesy, executed and delivered a deed for the property to Henry A. Gaede. Still later the taxes were again in default and in 1896 the city collector of Jersey City, by tax sale, struck the property off to Francis W. Mitchell and delivered to him a certificate of tax sale. Subsequently, Francis W. Mitchell, as a result of proceedings instituted by him, received from the city collector of Jersey City a deed for the premises.

The defendants claim as heirs-at-law of Delia Pychlau. In their answer they deny that the complainants have title to the lands or any part thereof and set up title, seizure and possession of the defendants, at the same time charging Francis ~W. Mitchell with fraud and intentional misrepresentations in the proceedings incident to the delivery to him of the deed from the tax collector. By way of counterclaim defendants set up a fraudulent procurement by Mitchell of the deed from the city collector of Jersey City in a scheme to cheat and defraud the defendants of the said lands; make formal offer to redeem the lands from the lien of the tax *526 sale and to pay the amount necessary therefor; and pray that the deed from the city collector to Mitchell be set aside and be declared void and of no effect.

The learned vice-chancellor determined, in his opinion, that the tax deed from the collector to Mitchell was invalid because of fraud perpetrated by the latter and because no' notice to redeem had been served upon or given to the heirs and descendants of Delia Pychlau. The decree, however, neither finds nor mentions fraud. It determines that Delia Pychlau died intestate, the owner of and seized and possessed of the premises, leaving her surviving her husband, Henry W. Pychlau, and heirs-at-law; that the statutory notice to redeem from the tax sale of 1896 was not served upon or given to the widower and heirs-at-law of Delia Pychlau, and that because such notice had not been given, the defendants are now entitled to redeem upon complying with the statutory requisites to effect such redemption; it denies the complainants their relief, declares null and void the deed from the city collector to Mitchell, authorizes the redemption by the defendants upon payment of the money lawfully required for that purpose, names a special master to ascertain and report the amount so required, and authorizes further ancillary relief to the defendants. The decree also adjudges that Henrietta Gaede, wife of Henry A. Gaede and a defendant in the proceedings, against whom interlocutory judgment by default had been taken, had no right, title or interest in or to the lands and premises aforesaid.

The following is a chronological statement of the relevant record title:

1. Deed, John N. J. Ruete and wife to Delia Pychlau, dated May 21st, 1862, recorded June 18th, 1862.

2. Deed, Patrick H. O’Neill, city collector, to Henry A. Gaede, dated November 24th, 1891, recorded May 21st, 1892.

3. Deed, Henry W. Pychlau (widower), of the city of Milan, county of Curania, empire of Russia, to Henry A. Gaede, dated November 30th, 1891, recorded May 21st, 1892.

4. Deed, Robert Davis, city collector, to Francis W. Mitchell, dated March 22d, 1901, recorded April 16th, 1901.

*527 The charge of fraud, as presented by the answer, is that when Francis W. Mitchell, having bought the premises at tax sale, proceeded, under the statute, to obtain deed for the same from the city collector, he “represented that Robert Campbell, Mary A. Goodspeed, executrix; William Star Goodspeed, Arthur Baxter Goodspeed, Shepard Goodspeed and Aleñe Goodspeed were the only persons interested in or who had claims against said premises and were the owners of said premises, whereas in fact said above-mentioned persons had no interest in or claim to, or were the owners of said premises whatsoever,” and that the deed from the collector to Mitchell “was obtained by means of said fraudulent representations;” and that likewise Mitchell “fraudulently and with intent to deceive” made similar representations to the circuit court, which, relying thereon, ordered the delivery of deed.

Whether the said persons were or were not interested in, or the owners of, the premises and whether or not the heirs of Delia Pychlau were given notice to redeem from the tax sale to Mitchell is unimportant in the present proceeding, unless at the time of the said tax sale the heirs of Delia Pychlau had, themselves, such interest in the property as would entitle them to redeem. A vital fact of which the decree entered in the court of chancery makes no note is that between the acquisition of title by Delia Pychlau and the tax sale to Francis W. Mitchell there had been a tax sale to Henry A. Gaede and proceedings growing out of said tax sale whereby a collector’s deed was given to the said Gaede. If in the Gaede proceedings the Pychlaus were barred, they were not entitled to notice to redeem from the Mitchell tax sale. It, therefore, becomes necessary to consider in some detail the Gaede proceedings.

On October 10th, 1890, the city collector of Jersey City, at a tax sale, sold the premises in question to Henry A. Gaede under the provisions of P. L. 1886 ch. 112, known as the Martin act, for the sum of $1,112.45.

Section 6 of the Martin act then provided that any person having an estate in or mortgage upon any lands and premises- *528 sold in pursuance of the fourth section of the act, whose estate or lien appeared of record in the county, might at any time before the expiration of six months after notice given to him of such sale by the purchaser, or before a deed tof said premises had been delivered, redeem said lands and premises by paying the treasurer of the city, for the use of the purchaser, the sum paid by the latter with interest and certain costs; and in case such owner or mortgagee be a non-resident, or his residence could not, upon due inquiry, be ascertained, then the notice might be served by publishing the same in a newspaper printed and circulating in the city for a period of six weeks, at least once in each week, and depositing a copy of such notice, within twenty days after its first publication, in the post office of the city, enclosed in a wrapper, postpaid, directed to such owner or mortgagee at his or her last known post office address if the same can be ascertained.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Trenkamp v. Township of Burlington
406 A.2d 218 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 A. 890, 105 N.J. Eq. 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-pychlau-nj-1930.