Nichols v. Kellas

90 Misc. 432, 154 N.Y.S. 22
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 Misc. 432 (Nichols v. Kellas) 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
Nichols v. Kellas, 90 Misc. 432, 154 N.Y.S. 22 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1915).

Opinion

Borst, J.

This action was brought to cancel a tax deed given by the comptroller to certain land's of which the plaintiffs claim to be the owners.

In 1902, the plaintiffs’ testator acquired by purpurchase from the St. Eegis Paper Company, for a consideration stated in the deed of $1,150, the.title to the north four-fifths of lot six of Ward’s subdivision of township 14, containing about 140 acres of land, the title to which property is traced back from the paper company to the state which gave letters patent for these lands and others in 1850.

In 1896, plaintiffs’ testator purchased from the Everton Lumber Company for $2,000 three other parcels of land situate in townships 11, 12 and 15, Great Tract No. 1, Macomb’s purchase, Franklin county, and northerly of and adjoining the parcel first noted. These four parcels of land, subdivided into lots, form a parallelogram and comprise in all about 1,128 acres of land. At or soon after the plaintiffs’ testator acquired the property, he constructed a camp on the southerly half of lot 31 of said parcels, expending $5,000 or $6,000 in buildings, which consist of a main building with seven or eight rooms, another building with one bedroom and dressing-room and bath-room, a building known as the guide house that would accommodate three or four guides, a stable, to accommodate four horses, an ice-house, with a capacity for about forty tons of ice, and, as a part of the ice-house, there [434]*434was a cooler room and store-room; there was also a boat-honse with a capacity for three or four boats.

At the point where the buildings were located there were, at or shortly after the year 1903 and since, about five acres of cleared land, which extends down to the. St. Regis river which flows in a northerly and southerly direction through the property. This cleared land was used by plaintiffs’ testator for a lawn and garden, all being under cultivation, partly ploughed and partly seeded and potatoes and vegetables and hay were raised thereon.

■ About the time the plaintiffs ’ testator purchased the last parcels of property, he caused a survey to be made of the exterior lines of the entire property, had trees blazed to mark where these lines were located and caused notices to be posted and maintained every forty rods on these lines and also at points where the trails and roads crossed the lines. These notices were printed on cloth about eleven by sixteen inches in size, with large letters reading as follows:

Private Property
“ All persons are forbid Hunting, Fishing, Camping or Trespassing upon these premises.
“Albert J. Milbank,
Owner.”

In 1903, a description of the property was added to the notices as theretofore printed.

Three small docks were maintained on the property on the river .front, one near the camp, and one at the southwesterly corner of lot 41, where the river, which was some four to six rods in width, ran through or along that lot. Except for the cleared space of four or five acres around the plot the entire plot was covered with forests. The property was in charge of a superin[435]*435tendent, who stayed on the property, making his home-at the camp, from about the first of May in each year until the twenty-fifth or twenty-sixth of November, and then visited the camp each month from the latter part of November until the first of May, cutting ice in the winter to fill the ice-house. In the winter of 1895 and 1896, some lumbering was done upon lots 41 and 49 of the tract and in the year 1903, the superintendent, with a gang of men, fought fires on those lots.

During the months of July, August and September, the camp was usually occupied by eight or ten people, including attendants to assist in doing the work, in addition to the superintendent. The property was patrolled to keep off trespassers and poachers. The attendants in season planted the garden and crops, painted and repaired the buildings, acted as guides for those who might be at the camp. Trails were cut, walks cleared, roads opened and cleared of obstructions. Occasionally the camp was occupied by its owner as early as June and as late as October, and at times was used by its owner to hunt upon in November. During the season, boats were kept on the river for the use of the testator and his family and guests.' Wood was cut from the lands for needed fuel.

The testator’s residence during the period of his ownership of the property and up to the time of his death which occurred May 23, 1912, was in New York city. By his will, which has been duly admitted to probate, the plaintiffs are trustees and owners in fee of the property.

The defendant in 1905 purchased for thirteen dollars and seventy cents, at a tax sale held by the state comptroller under default in payment of taxes made against lot 41 in 1903, eighteen acres square in the southwest corner of lot 41, on which was located one of the boat [436]*436docks before referred to. This land was about one-quarter of a mile from the camp and connected with it by a trail or road. At the same tax sale, the defendant also purchased for twenty dollars and fifty-four cents fifty-four acres of the northwest one-half of lot 49, which lay immediately south of the eighteen acres. This sale was made for default in the payment of taxes assessed in 1903. Defendant took his deed to these parcels of land from the comptroller February 4, 1907, which he caused to be recorded in the clerk’s office of Franklin county, March 26, 1907.

At a tax sale held by the state comptroller in 1910, defendant purchased for forty-four dollars and fifty-eight cents the whole of the west half of lot 49, 230 acres, and of the southwest one-quarter of lot 41, 145 acres, on default in payment of taxes under assessments of 1904 and 1908, and took a deed from the comptroller of his purchases on April 24,1912, and recorded it in the county clerk’s office of Franklin county on the 7th day of May, 1912.

No question is made but that no notice to redeem has been served by the defendant pursuant to section 134 of the Tax Law. The defendant, however, contends that there was no such occupancy of the premises as to require such notice and calls atention to the language in that section which reads, “ The term ‘ occupant ’ shall be construed to mean a person who has lawfully entered upon the lands so occupied, and is in possession of the same to the exclusion of every other person. And the term ‘ occupancy ’ shall mean the actual lawful and exclusive possession of such lands and premises by such an occupant.”

. Within the holdings (Clark v. Kirkland, 133 App. Div. 826; affd., 202 N. Y. 573; People ex rel. Moynehan v. Gaus, 134 App. Div. 80; affd., 198 N. Y. 501; People [437]*437ex rel. Lake Placid Co. v. Williams, 145 App. Div. 34; dismissed, 205 N. Y. 597) the plaintiffs’ testator was an actual occupant in possession of the land within the meaning of the Tax Law and hence entitled to notice, and the deeds should not have been recorded until the expiration of the time mentioned in such notice. As was said in the Lake Placid Case, supra,

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Related

People v. Durey
126 Misc. 642 (New York Supreme Court, 1926)
Little v. Riley
120 Misc. 707 (New York Supreme Court, 1923)
Nichols v. Kellas
157 N.Y.S. 1137 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
90 Misc. 432, 154 N.Y.S. 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nichols-v-kellas-nysupct-1915.