People v. Durey

126 Misc. 642
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 126 Misc. 642 (People v. Durey) 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
People v. Durey, 126 Misc. 642 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

Heffernan, J.

On the 10th day of November, 1794, letters patent were issued in the name of the People of the State of New York to Cornelius Glen, Barent Bleecker and Abram Lansing, embracing a tract of 89,297 acres of land in the county of Montgomery. The lands in question are a part of that grant. At that time Montgomery county embraced the territory now included in the county of Fulton. By chapter 332 of the Laws of 1838 Fulton county was erected and the lands which are the subject of controversy here are located within the bounds of that county.

The patentees subdivided the tract of land allotted to them into great lots, each great lot consisting of 1,000 acres. In turn, the great lots were again subdivided into 100-acre tracts. The defendant claims title to the lands in question by mesne conveyances extending to the original patentees.

On September 17, 1864, Jonathan W. Wheeler acquired title to subdivision 4 of Great Lot 61. By a deed acknowledged on September 17, 1866, and recorded in the Fulton county clerk’s office on [644]*644February 6,1867, Wheeler conveyed to William Claflin an undivided one-half interest in this lot, together with other lands. Thereafter and by an instrument acknowledged on July 23, 1869-, and recorded in said clerk’s office on October 19, 1869, Wheeler and wife conveyed to Claflin all their interest in said lot, together with other lands. Apparently Wheeler and Claflin were copartners,- and by what is known as a dissolution deed, dated June 18, 1872, and recorded in said clerk’s office on July 10, 1872, Wheeler and wife conveyed to Claflin all their interest in the real and personal property belonging to the partnership including the land in the town of Caroga in Fulton county. From 1865 to and including the year 1883 the assessment books of the town of Caroga showed that assessments were made either against Wheeler & Claflin, Claflin & Company, William Claflin, or their agents, on immense tracts of land located in the town which said lands were all portions of the patent in question. These assessment books disclose that for the year 1865 the assessment was made against Wheeler & Claflin oh the resident list for 7,109 acres in various items by lot and division numbers including subdivision 4 of Great Lot 61, the plot in question. For the year 1866 Wheeler & Claflin were assessed on the resident list for. 9,224 acres comprising various items by lot and division numbers excluding, however, the land in question. For that year the lands embraced in subdivision 4 of Great Lot 61 were assessed as non-resident. From 1867 to 1883, inclusive, assessments were made against either Wheéler & Claflin, Claflin & Company, Claflin, individually, or their agents for the identical lands in subdivision 4 of Great Lot 61 on the resident list. For all these years the taxes were paid. The lands described in subdivision 4 of Great Lot 61 were a contiguous and homogeneous part of one great tract of land in the patent to which reference has been made. It is quite significant that all taxes assessed against Wheeler & Claflin on the resident list for 1866 were paid. The assessment for 1866 against the premises in question was based on non-residence, amounted to twenty-four dollars and sixty-five cents and was unpaid. Because of the failure to pay this tax these premises were advertised by the Comptroller of the State to be sold for arrears of tax at the Capitol in the city of Albany, N. Y., commencing on October 9, 1877. The premises were actually sold on October 12, 1877, more than eleven years after the accrual of the tax, and the State became the purchaser. On April 5, 1880, the Comptroller made a tax deed of the premises to the People of the State. That conveyance, however, was not recorded in the Fulton county clerk’s office until June 7, 1882. By virtue of that deed the State claims title to the premises in this litigation. Commencing on the 11th day of December, 1894, and [645]*645ending on December twenty-fourth of the same year, the Comptroller caused to be published in two newspapers in the county of Fulton a notice to the effect that from and after three weeks from December 11, 1894, possession of the premises in question should be deemed to be in the Comptroller of the State pursuant to the provisions of section 13 of chapter 711 of the Laws of 1893.

It is the contention of the defendant that the tax sale and the deed based thereon were void on jurisdictional grounds because the lands sold were assessed as non-resident when in fact they were resident lands, and further because at the expiration of the equity of redemption the lands were actually occupied and no notice was given' to the occupant, and that proof of service of such notice was not recorded with the deed.

The answer of the State is that by reason of the operation of the Statute of Limitations set forth in section 132 of chapter 908 of the Laws of 1896, all defects, if any, in connection with the assessment and sale are now unavailing to the defendant and that there was no occupancy of the premises in question at the time of the expiration of the equity of redemption within the meaning of the provisions of the Tax Law.

At the time of the sale the statute (Laws of 1855, chap. 427, as amd. by Laws of 1860, chap. 209) provided (§ 68) that upon a sale of land for taxes and a conveyance thereof by the Comptroller, if in the actual occupancy of any person at the expiration of the two years given for redemption, “ the grantee to whom he same shall have been conveyed, or the person claiming under him, shall serve a written notice on the person occupying such land, within two years from the expiration of said time to redeem; stating in substance, the sale and conveyance, the person to whom made, and the amount of the consideration money mentioned in the conveyance, with the addition of thirty-seven and one-half per cent on such amount, and further addition of the sum paid for the deed; and stating, also, that unless such * * * shall be paid into the treasury for the benefit of such grantee, within six months after the time of filing in the comptroller’s office of the evidence of the service of the said notice, that the said conveyance will become absolute, and the occupant * * * barred from all right or title thereto. Any [and] no conveyance made in pursuance of this section shall be recorded, until the expiration of such notice, and the evidence of the service of such notice shall be recorded with such conveyance.”

Sections 72 and 73 of the same chapter are as follows:

§ 72. In every case of actual occupancy, the grantee, or the person claiming under him, in order to complete his title to the land con[646]*646veyed, shall within one month after the service of such notice, file with the comptroller a copy of the notice served, together with the affidavit of some person who shall be certified as credible, by the officer before whom such affidavit shall be taken, that such notice as is above required, was duly served, specifying the mode of service.

§ 73. If the comptroller shall be satisfied by such copy and affidavit that the proper notice has been duly served, and if the moneys required to be paid for the redemption of such lands shall not have been paid, as hereinbefore provided, he shall, under his hand and seal, certify such facts, and the conveyance before made shall thereupon become absolute;, and the occupant, and all others interested in said lands shall be forever barred of all right and title thereto.”

There was no material change in the Tax Law up to the time in question.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Misc. 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-durey-nysupct-1926.