Overing v. . Foote

43 N.Y. 290, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 6
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 24, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 43 N.Y. 290 (Overing v. . Foote) 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
Overing v. . Foote, 43 N.Y. 290, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 6 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

By the Court—Peckham, J.

Action in equity to remove an alleged cloud upon plaintiff’s title to rents upon certain lots in Delaware county, caused by the sale of such rents upon a warrant issued by the county treasurer for the nonpayment of taxes upon said rents. The defendant was the purchaser at the sale, and had received the sheriff’s certificate of sale. The purpose of the action was to declare that certificate void.

Various objections are made by plaintiff’s counsel to the validity of the tax upon the plaintiff’s rents; and it is’ insisted, that if the assessment be void for any reason, .then this action is sustained; because, it is insisted, that the certificate is prima facie evidence, “ that the proper preliminary proceedings were had,” and hence that the purchaser’s title is valid.

This is a mistake. The certificate of a sale like this is presumptive evidence only “of the facts théieín contained.” *293 (2 R. S., 379, § 44.) Such certificate can legally contain only the facts required by the statute, which are:

1. A particular description of the premises sold. 2. The price paid for each distinct lot or parcel. 3. The whole consideration money paid. 4. The time when such sale will become absolute, and the purchaser will be entitled to a conveyanee pursuant to law.” (2 R. S., 379, § 42.)

The certificate is not made evidence of any more or other facts than those above stated. The case at bar is wholly unlike Scott v. Onderdonk (14 N. Y., 9). There the deed, executed pursuant to the certificate, recites the prior proceedings, and, in proceedings to obtain possession of the land, is made “prima facie evidence of the facts therein recited and set forth.” (Sess. Laws, 1834, p. 108, § 45.)

We know of no statute, and are referred to none, which makes the deed to be executed pursuant to this tax sale certificate (which is the same as a certificate of sale on execution) evidence of the prior proceedings. Hence the purchaser must prove their existence or his purchase is of no avail. (Sharp v. Spier, 4 Hill, 76.)

If) therefore, the defect appear upon the face of the proceedings and they must necessarily be presented by the purchaser in any suit to assert his right, there can be no legal cloud upon the owner’s title. (Scott v. Onderdonk, supra, and cases there cited; Ward v. Dewey, 16 N. Y., 519.)

The sole point of a bill quia timet is to protect the owner against an illegal claim which may in time ripen into a right, and where the evidence of its illegality is easily lost. If lost, the owner’s title is also lost.

Hence if these tax proceedings are void upon their face, and the purchaser is bound to produce them to assert his claim, the plaintiff needs no protection.

It is insisted by the plaintiffs’ counsel that these rents upon durable leases are not vendible upon this tax warrant, and cases are cited to that effect. If that be the law, then this action does not lie, as the sale is void upon its face. So of the claim that the tax is so defectively assessed by tb" *294 assessors as to be void, the same answer applies, though we cannot agree to the proposition that they are so defectively assessed. Taking all the papers together, the statute is substantially complied with as to form.

It is insisted that the tax for the year 1864, the year prior to the assessment, was void, because the assessors had no power to reassess for this property, as it had been in fact assessed the prior year, but to a person not the owner of the rents, and also because it was not expressly put down as an assessment for 1864 for omitted assessment. As to the first ground of objection, the case of Bennett v. The City of Buffalo (17 N. Y., 383) is referred to. There the court held that the power to amend a description of land imperfectly described, and to make out a new tax roll, did not authorize the insertion of a different name as the owner of the land, and thus charge him personally with the tax. That was under the statute of 1848, p. 117, a close ease, and sustained by a bare majority of the court. It does not control the case at bar.

This reassessment is made under the act of 1865 (p. 818, §§ 1, 2), which we think is full authority therefor. Whether this act applies to an omission to tax a person for personal property generally, need not be decided. It would be difficult to comply with all of its provisions in reference to such an omission, especially if such omission had also occurred in the year prior to the last. Here the tax is for certain specific property, taxed as personal property; and the fact that it was assessed to a stranger, and not to the owner, the previous year, brings it within the plain purpose and spirit-of the law authorizing this assessment. Within the law, that was an omission in the assessment roll ” of 1864. The value of these money rents is fixed by law, and could not be changed by the assessors.

As to the other ground. Looking at the assessment in connection with the petitions to the assessors and to the board of supervisors, annexed to the assessment, and at the action of the board thereon, it does fully appear that this was an assessment for the year 1864 of a tax omitted in that year.

*295 It is further urged, that the omission to perfect the assessment against the plaintiff in 1865 until after notice had been given to the tax-payers that the roll was completed, and not until after the plaintiff’s agent, pursuant to such notice, had called and examined the roll and found no tax thereon against his principal, rendered the tax thereafter imposed void.

If this position be well taken, it sustains this bill, because this defect does not appear in the proceedings, and the purchaser would make out a prima facie title by this sale, if in other respects valid; and it would then devolve upon the landlord, in order to protect his title, to prove this defect, which, perhaps, after a brief lapse of time, it would be difficult, if not impossible to do.

This position does not apply to the tax imposed for the year 1864, as it plainly appears by the roll itself, in connection with the petition to the assessors, which petition bears date on the 15th of August, that this property for that year was not placed on the roll until on or after the 15th of August, 1865. If void for that cause, therefore, the defect is apparent.

But the statute of 1865 authorizes the assessors to enter such omitted property in the roll of the current year, “whenever it shall appear to them” that it has been so omitted, upon the application of any three tax-payers of the town, etc.; without any special limitation as to the time within which it should be done.

The statute did not intend that this should be done necessarily on or before the first day of August, when the roll is to be open to the inspection of tax-payers.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.Y. 290, 1871 N.Y. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overing-v-foote-ny-1871.