Nehasane Park Assn. v. . Lloyd

60 N.E. 741, 167 N.Y. 431, 5 Bedell 431, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1089
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 60 N.E. 741 (Nehasane Park Assn. v. . Lloyd) 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
Nehasane Park Assn. v. . Lloyd, 60 N.E. 741, 167 N.Y. 431, 5 Bedell 431, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1089 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The subject-matter of this action is a tract of forest land containing two thousand two hundred and fifty acres, constituting the northwest angle of township forty-one, Totten and Crossfield’s purchase, in the county of Herkimer. The action was commenced in December, 1894, and its primary object, doubtless, was to determine whether the title to this land is in the plaintiff or the defendant. The action has taken the form of one in equity, in behalf of the plaintiff to set aside deeds given to the defendant upon a sale of the land for taxes. It is not, therefore, an action of ejectment, and the rule that the plaintiff must succeed upon the strength of his own title, and not upon the weakness of his adversary’s, has no application. The plaintiff alleged in the complaint that it had title and that it was in possession of a small part of the tract. The learned trial court has found all the facts in favor of the plaintiff’s title and right of possession and has found that the tax deeds under which the defendant claims are null and void. ■ We must, therefore, enter upon a review of the case, not only with a general finding by the trial court that the plaintiff has a good title to the land in controversy, but also with special findings of fact which support that conclusion. The particular facts which render the defendant’s deeds invalid have also been found and they are, in substance, that the taxes which resulted in the sales and conveyances under *434 which the defendant claims were not lawfully imposed and, virtually, that the sale of the land was without jurisdiction and utterly void.

Both parties claim under deeds given upon a sale of the land for taxes, although the plaintiff’s title does not rest entirely upon such deeds, but as to at least a portion of the land is derived through mesne conveyances from parties as to whose title there is no question. The validity of the tax deeds, on both sides, depends upon facts dehors the record, such as the acts and proceedings of town officers in assessing the property, hoards of supervisors in imposing the t&x, county officers in returning it unpaid and various other facts and proceedings resulting in the sale by the state for unpaid taxes. The findings of the trial court, therefore, in favor of the validity of the plaintiff’s title and against the validity of the defendant’s title, are mostly findings of fact, or, at least, findings where facts and law are so commingled as to render it impossible to separate the one from the other. These findings and the general conclusion by the trial judge in favor of the plaintiff have been unanimously affirmed at the Appellate Division, and, hence, many of the questions discussed at the bar are not open to review in this court.

The conflicting claims of each party to ownership of the property in question rest largely upon the acts and proceedings of school officers, town and county officers, special commissions to make local improvements and proceedings by the comptroller of the state for the sale of lands for taxes, and hence involve the determination of various facts which validate or invalidate the tax deeds, as the case may be. The findings having been approved by the learned court below, are not subject to review here, except in so far as they present pure questions of law. There are some questions of this character that appear upon the face of the record, and which this court has the power to review.

The two deeds under which the defendant claims, and which the plaintiff assails, and which the judgment has set aside, were both executed by the comptroller of the state *435 after a sale of the lands for unpaid taxes. The first deed was executed on the 17th of April, 1874, to a person then residing in the state of Wisconsin and who afterwards conveyed to the defendant, a resident of New Jersey. The basis of this deed was a local assessment, or assessments, for a local improvement ; that is, the construction of a highway through the forest lands authorized by a special act of the legislature, which is chapter 347 of the Laws of 1853. Under the provisions of that statute two commissioners were named and appointed to lay out and construct a public road from Port Leyden in the county of Lewis to a point in the county of Herkimer. These special commissioners were given all the powers in regard to construction and improvement of highways in the locality that had been previously conferred upon commissioners of highways in the various towns of the state. They were authorized to impose taxes for this purpose upon the lands particularly described, lying in whole or in part within three counties. There was no provision of this statute which, authorized any assessment upon the lands iii question, except the following: “ Also all of townships four, five, six, seven and forty-one of Totten and Crossfield purchase, in the county of Hamilton.” The lands in question were not, when assessed, nor are they now, within the boundaries of the county of Hamilton; but, as above remarked, they are in the northwest angle of lot forty-one in the county of Herkimer and just beyond the dividing line between that county and Hamilton. All of township or lot forty-one which was authorized to be assessed, except the tract in question, is in the county of Hamilton, but the line between the two counties passes through the northwest corner of the lot or township designated in the statute as forty-one of Totten and Crossfield patent and thus places a small portion of the township, including all the lands in question, in the county of Herkimer. The statute does not in terms authorize any assessment upon lands in the county of Herkimer, although such lands are included within the boundaries of township forty-one. ' The fair meaning and construction of *436 the statute is that only such lands embraced in township or lot forty-one as were situated in the county of Hamilton were assessable. The learned counsel for the defendant contends that it was the intention of the legislature to impose the assessments upon the whole of lot forty-one, and, therefore, upon the lands in question within the county of Herkimer. But the language of the statute is not at all ambiguous or open to construction. On the question of the jurisdiction to impose a local assessment upon a designated district specifically described in a statute courts are not authorized to resort to any refined construction in order to subject lands to special burdens not fairly within the words or general scope of the statute. The boundaries of a district specifically described in the statute to be taxed for a local improvement cannot be enlarged by construction. The power to levy an assessment for a local improvement exists only where it is clearly and distinctly conferred by legislative authority, and, if not so conferred, the assessment is void. If there is any necessity to resort to construction at all it must be in favor of the property owner rather than against him. (Sharp v. Speir, 4 Hill, 76 ; Matter of S. A. Methodist Episcopal Church, 66 N. Y. 395 ; Stebbins v. Kay, 123 N. Y. 31; Cooley on Taxation, 276, 277.)

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Bluebook (online)
60 N.E. 741, 167 N.Y. 431, 5 Bedell 431, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 1089, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nehasane-park-assn-v-lloyd-ny-1901.