Saranac Land and Timber Co. v. . Roberts

101 N.E. 898, 208 N.Y. 288, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1053
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 898 (Saranac Land and Timber Co. v. . Roberts) 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
Saranac Land and Timber Co. v. . Roberts, 101 N.E. 898, 208 N.Y. 288, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1053 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

*295 Miller, J.

These are two actions in ejectment, designated as Nos. 1 and 2, begun in 1895, involving the title respectively to the northwest quarter of township 24, Harrietstown, Franklin county, and to the west half of the northeast quarter of said township. A similar action, involving the title to the northwest quarter, was brought by the plaintiff in the United States Circuit Court for the Northern District of New York in 1895. Thataction was tried, a judgment was rendered for the defendant and was affirmed by the United States Supreme Court. (Saranac Land & Timber Company v. Roberts, 177 U. S. 318.) The plaintiff thereupon paid up the costs and took an order setting aside the judgment and granting a new trial. Thereafter action No. 2 in the state court was brought on for trial, and a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, which was affirmed by the Appellate Division and by this court. (125 App. Div. 335; 195 N. Y. 303.) The state thereupon paid up the costs and took a new trial pursuant to the statute then in force. Both actions, Nos. 1 and 2, were then tried together before a referee, and the judgments in favor of the plaintiff entered upon his decision have been unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division. *

The defendant now attacks the plaintiff’s title, but we shall assume that, but for the tax title of the state under the sale of 1811 for the aggregate highway, town, county and state taxes for the years 1866 to 1810 inclusive and the school taxes of 1869 and 1810, the plaintiff would have good title to the lands in controversy and shall confine our discussion to the objections raised to the state’s title. Those objections, with slight differences to be noticed later, are the same in both actions and depend for their validity upon substantially the same fundamental principles of law. To save repetition, I shall consider the two together.

The effect of our decision on the former appeal is first to be considered, because, while the judgment then ren *296 dered is not res adjudícala, the defendant being entitled as a matter of right to another trial, the rule of stare decisis applies with peculiar force to that decision. ' A single objection to the state’s title was considered on that appeal, i. e., the objection that the tax sale was in part for school taxes assessed by the trustees of school district No. 2 in the town of Harrietstown for the years 1869 and 1810 upon lands which were outside the school district. Of course such an assessment was void. The fact is found, as it was before, that land so assessed was outside the district, and the question which survives the unanimous affirmance of the Appellate Division is presented by the exception to the admission of the evidence upon which that finding was based. We are of the opinion that there has been a substantial change in the record which presents that question in an entirely different light.

The evidence upon the former trial to establish the boundaries of said school district consisted of pages 101 and 108 of a book of town records. Those two pages were offered in evidence and were printed in the record on appeal as a single document and, as thus offered and printed, they purported to constitute the record made by the town clerk on the 29th of April, 1862, of a single order made and signed by the school commissioner, defining the boundaries of districts Nos. 2 and 3 of said town of Harrietstown. While the defendant objected to the admission of the document in evidence, it did not argue the .exception to the ruling in this court, but, on the contrary, conceded that there was some evidence, and that the book of records indicated, that about the year 1862 an attempt was made by the official upon whom the duty devolved to make the limits of the district coincide with a “ three mile circle,” which, as is conceded, would have excluded most of the land assessed. The argument of the attorney-general was that, although the boundaries of the district had thus been defined in 1862, there *297 was a presumption from the fact of the levying of the taxes by the school trustees in 1869 and 1870 that an order had been made by the school commissioner, subsequent to the order of 1862, changing the boundaries of the district so as to include the land assessed. Judge Cray, writing for this court, effectually disposed of that argument by observing that “In the absence of such a record, or of competent proof aliunde, establishing the making of such a change, it will not do to indulge in presumptions that such a change had been ordered, to make available the permissive terms of the amending statute.” (Saranac L. & T. Co. v. Roberts, 195 N. Y. 303, 310.) The important question, argued by the state, related to the construction and effect of chapter 448 of the Laws of 1885, and the point finally determined by this court was that the short limitation period prescribed by that act was not set running as to actions by a landowner to dispossess the state of lands acquired through tax sales until the comptroller was deemed to be in possession thereof by reason of the advertisement of such lands pursuant to chapter 453 of the Laws of 1885. Judge Cray pointed out that the decision of the United States Supreme Court hereinbefore referred to was based on an erroneous assumption as to the construction and effect of the six months’ limitation clause of said chapter 448 and was not stare decisis. The decision of this court on the former appeal should not be regarded as stare decisis, if it was based on the erroneous assumption of fact that an order was made by the school commissioner in 1862, defining the bounds of said school district so as not to include a part of thé land assessed. The state should not be prejudiced on a new trial, to which it was entitled as a matter of right, or be deprived of its land, by the fact that evidence was admitted on the former trial and printed in the record on appeal in such a way as not fairly to present the question involved.

Even on this trial, the learned counsel for the respond *298 ent offered pages 107 and 108 of the town record as one document, and insisted that they constituted the record of a single order made by the school commissioner. The two pages, however, were received as separate documents.. Facsimiles of them are printed in the record, and the original hook was submitted for our inspection. Page 108 purports to be the record of an order made April 29th, 1862, by the school commissioner, defining the bounds of school district No. 3, Harrietstown. It is entitled: “In the Matter of defining and describing the bounds of School District No. 3, of the town of Harrietstown in the county of Franklin,” and then proceeds: “It is ordered by the undersigned school commissioner,” etc. The-record is attested by Van B. Miller, town clerk. The writing on the preceding page 107 is entitled: “In the matter of defining and describing the bounds of School District No. 2, in the town of Harrietstown in the County of Franklin.” But it does not purport to be the record of the whole or any part of an order made by the school commissioner.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 898, 208 N.Y. 288, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1053, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saranac-land-and-timber-co-v-roberts-ny-1913.