Seafire Inc. v. Ackerson

193 Misc. 965, 76 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3640
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 Misc. 965 (Seafire Inc. v. Ackerson) 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
Seafire Inc. v. Ackerson, 193 Misc. 965, 76 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3640 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Swezey, J.

This action is brought to set aside two tax deeds affecting premises owned by the plaintiff on Fire Island Beach, Suffolk County, New York. One deed is the result of the tax sale held for the unpaid taxes of 1935-36, and the other is the result of the tax sale held for unpaid taxes for the last half of 1940-41.

The sale for the unpaid taxes of 1935-36 will first be considered. Plaintiff claims that this tax sale is defective for several reasons, one of which is as follows: ‘ That the 1935-1936 assessment roll, the notice of sale, the certificate and the tax deed described and indexed plaintiff’s property under the amended Map of Atlantique, of which it was not a part. The failure to accurately describe the premises renders the tax and the sale thereunder void, and does not divest the owner’s title.”

In the deed to plaintiff’s predecessor in title the premises are described as follows: ‘1 ALL that plot or tract of land known as lot number Eight (8)' upon a map filed in the office of the Clerk of Suffolk County in the State of New York, by the Commissioners in partition appointed by order of the Supreme Court in an action between Samuel W. Green and others plaintiffs and David S. Sammis and others defendants said parcel being bounded and described as follows, All that certain parcel of land situate in the town of Islip County of Suffolk and State of New York, on what is now known as Fire Island Beach, Beginning at the Southwest corner thereof adjoining the Atlantic Ocean and Southeast corner of plot number Seven (7) laid out to William S. Biggs; thence running by said plot Number Seven (7) North Eleven degrees, twenty five minutes (11°25') West and a line of stakes to the Great South Bay; thence Eastwardly along and by said Bay to plot number Nine (9) laid out [968]*968to George Benson and distant from the Easterly line of said plot number Seven (7) Nine hundred (900) feet, measured on a line drawn at right angles therefrom, thence by said plot number Nine (9) South Eleven degrees, twenty five minutes (11°25') East and a line of stakes to the aforesaid Ocean; thence Westwardly by said Ocean, to the place of beginning. Being the same premises known as Lot No. 8 on Fire Island Beach in the town of Islip Suffolk County New York shown on Map entitled ‘ Map of Partition of the Great South Beach in the towns of Brookhaven and Islip L. I. 1878 made by Jonathan Sammis Surveyor ’ filed in the office of Clerk of Suffolk County under file No. 310.”

On January 27, 1939, application was made to the County Treasurer for £ the amount of unpaid taxes outstanding against Lots 8 and 9 containing 21 acres on Fire Island; known as Atlantique, owned by Seafire Incorporated, previously assessed to South Beach Development Co. (recently consolidated with Seafire Incorporated). We believe the property is located in School District #14.” Under date of February 9, 1939, the County Treasurer replied as follows: <£ Enclosed please find 1937-38, 1938-39 bills and 1936-37 redemption statement recovering 21 acres at Fire Island assessed to Eugene Y. Brewster, bounded North by Bay, East by Atlantique, South by Ocean, West by Raven, showing the amounts necessary to redeem same from Suffolk County. We are unable to locate this property under the name given prior to 1936-37.”

The 1935-36 tax roll is no longer in existence, it having been destroyed under the provisions of section 3 of chapter 105 of the Laws of 1920. However, the original copy used by the assessor as his working copy for the subsequent year was admitted into evidence. There the property is described as follows:

££ Name of Tract — Amended Map of Atlantique. Map 241 Filed October 12, 1915. School District #14. Name of Locality Beach — Gt. So. Beach Co.
££ This property is bounded on the north by Gt. So. Bay, on the east by Sands, on the south by Atlantic Ocean, on the west by Loneleyville — Lots 8, Map of Gt. So. Beach Development Co. Atlantique consists of about 21 acres and is assessed to Eugene Y. Brewster, 175 Duffield St., Brooklyn, except that portion assessed to individual owners.”

In the certificate on sale of land for taxes of the year 1935-36, the premises are described as follows:

££ The following lots in the subdivided tract called Amended Map of Atlantique as per map 241 filed in the office of the clerk of Suffolk County.
[969]*969Land, "bounded north by Great South Bay, east by Sands, south by Atlantic Ocean, west by Loneleyville, Lot 8, Map of Great South Beach Dev. Co., except that portion Assessed to individual Owners 21 Acres.”

The tax sale notice and the notice to redeem are substantially the same. The description in the tax deed is somewhat different in that the boundaries and acreage are first given and then follow the words: ‘ in the subdivided tract designated as Amended Map of Atlantique, Map #231.”

The question here is: Is this description such that the property is capable of being identified and located as being owned by the plaintiff! Section 1 of the Suffolk County Tax Act (L. 1920, ch. 311) provides in part as follows: “ The assessment rolls to be prepared by the boards of assessors of the towns of Suffolk county shall provide for the separate description of each distinct parcel of land * * *.” This seems to be the only requirement relative to description on assessment rolls in Suffolk County.

Here we have a large parcel of land consisting of twenty-one acres, assessed since 1935-36 in the described portion of the assessment roll, where it properly belongs. For the year in question, 1935-36, it was assessed in the subdivided portion of the assessment roll. Hot only is it thus assessed in the wrong portion of the assessment roll, but when so assessed, it is described as a part of Amended Map of Atlantique, of which it does not form a part. The County Treasurer upon application for taxes unpaid against this property was unable to locate it prior to 1936-37.

This case is not unlike the case of Tallman v. White (2 N. Y. 66). There the property instead of being placed under the appropriate head of Syracuse Village, was placed under the head of the Village of Lodi. The court said in part (pp. 71-72): A landowner exercising ordinary diligence in searching the volume of advertisements to ascertain whether his lands are to be sold for taxes or are to be redeemed after sale, looks under the appropriate head, that is to say, under the name of the tract or place where his lands lie, and not elsewhere. He might, therefore, be misled and deceived by such a mistake as was made in this case; because for land lying in the village of Syracuse he would look under that head and not under the head of Lodi Village. If instead of looking at the advertisements, the owner in the present case had addressed a note to the comptroller’s office enquiring whether block Ho. 29, in the village of Syracuse was returned for unpaid taxes and liable to be sold, he would [970]*970undoubtedly have received an answer in the negative, because the lot in question would not be found returned and entered in its proper place. ’ ’

•The same reasoning may be applied here. The owner in looking over the tax sale notice would naturally look in the described portion thereof and not in the subdivided portion. In the cited case attention is called to what might have happened if application had been made for tax bill. Here it actually did happen.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Misc. 965, 76 N.Y.S.2d 805, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3640, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seafire-inc-v-ackerson-nysupct-1947.