Swidler v. Knocklong Corp.

114 N.E.2d 25, 305 N.Y. 527
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 1953
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 N.E.2d 25 (Swidler v. Knocklong Corp.) 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
Swidler v. Knocklong Corp., 114 N.E.2d 25, 305 N.Y. 527 (N.Y. 1953).

Opinion

Desmond, J.

Plaintiffs Swidler and Miller, on the one hand, and defendant Gresa Realty Co. on the other, make conflicting claims to the ownership of vacant land in Nassau County. Swidler and Miller claim under a deed to their predecessors from the heirs of Katherine Laffey, a former owner who died in 1920. Defendant Gresa claims through predecessors who purchased a tax title resulting from a Laffey default in paying, and from the sale of, a school tax installment. Most simply stated, the situation is this: in December, 1948, defendant Gresa’s predecessor took a tax deed which purported to wipe out the ownership of Katherine Laffey; that tax deed grantee, however, failed, after the tax sale, to give an appropriate notice to redeem, since the notice to redeem which was sent by that predecessor, was directed to Katherine Laffey, who was long since dead; that tax deed grantee (defendant Gresa-*s predecessor) then started a partition action, hereinafter referred to, naming the Laffey heirs as defendants and asking that their interests if any be cut off, in which action a lis pendens was filed on January 20, 1949. However, the heirs of Katherine Laffey, who apparently did not know of, or who had ignored, the previous tax sale and deed, sold the property, by deed recorded January 28, 1949, eight days after the lis pendens, to predecessors of plaintiffs, for value. In March, 1949, defendant Gresa’s [532]*532predecessor, as plaintiff in the partition action above referred to, obtained an order for publication, as against the Laffey heirs; they were served by publication, and eventually a judgment was entered against them, wiping out, or purporting to wipe out, the Laffey interest.

The present action was brought under article 15 of the Beal Property Law to get an adjudication that the tax title to which defendant Gresa succeeded is void for two alleged reasons: first, because the notice to redeem was never served on the Laffey heirs, but was attempted to be served on Katherine Laffey who was dead; and, second, because, as plaintiffs claim, the order and service by publication above referred to in the partition action was “ void ”, since it was based on an affidavit that the Laffey heirs could not be found, whereas, if a more complete search of certain Nassau County records had been made, there would have been discovered the deed from the Laffey heirs recorded a few days after the lis pendens, and which deed contained the addresses of the Laffey heirs.

This present action was tried on undisputed basic facts, and resulted in a judgment in favor of defendánts, with a brief opinion in which the Trial Justice said that the only issue was whether there had been a constructive fraud on the court, in the earlier (partition) action, in that the order of publication therein was obtained on affidavits which said that the Laffey heirs could not be located, whereas in fact the search of Nassau County records for clues as to their whereabouts had been made only up to the time of filing the lis pendens, and a later search of the records would have shown the later deed from the Laffey heirs to the predecessors of plaintiffs. The trial court held that the attorney who brought that suit, in obtaining the order of publication, had not actually deceived the court, and that there was no constructive fraud, so that the judgment in that earlier action was good, and wiped out the interest of the Laffey heirs and their successors in title, (plaintiffs). No opinions were written on the affirmance in the Appellate Division.

We will attempt to clarify all this, and summarize the undisputed proof, in this chronological table:

February 9,1920 — Katherine Laffey, record owner (no mortgage on property) died intestate, leaving the “ Laffey heirs ”.

[533]*533December 11,1946 — the County Treasurer of Nassau County sold these premises for unpaid second half 1946 school taxes of $51, to defendants here, Connolly and Knocklong; it seems undisputed in the record that the property was worth several thousand dollars and was afterwards sold to plaintiffs l'or $10,000 and to defendant Cresa for $6,000; it is undisputed, too, that defendant Connolly, one of the tax purchasers, was a sister of the special tax counsel for the County Treasurer of Nassau County, that defendant Knocklong was a corporation which had its office in the tax counsel’s office, and that the lawyer who afterwards acted in the partition suit for Knocklong was a sister and office associate of the special tax counsel.

September 8, 1948 — the tax purchasers attempted to serve, by mail, a three months ’ notice to redeem on Katherine Laffey, but, since she was dead, the notice was never delivered but was returned to the senders.

December 13,1948 — the Nassau County Treasurer gave a tax deed to Connolly and Knocklong, which was recorded January 17, 1949.

January 20, 1949 — Knocklong filed the lis pendens and summons and complaint, in an action in County Court, Nassau County, against Connolly and the Laffey heirs, for a partition of this property (and a number of other non-Laffey parcels) between Knocklong and Connolly, asking, also, for a judgment that the Laffey heirs had no right, title or interest; it was in this County Court action that the now contested order of publication against the Laffey heirs Avas obtained (see below).

January 28,1949 — deed dated January 21, 1949, recorded in Nassau County, from all the Laffey heirs to Leighton, predecessor of plaintiffs, a mortgage being given back by Leighton to the Laffeys; this deed contained the residence address of the Laffey heirs, but this transaction was closed Avithout the parties knowing of the tax sale and deed, or that there was already on file the County Court lis pendens and complaint above referred to, although the parties to the Laffey-Leighton sale Avere represented by attorneys, later tax bills received by the Laffeys showed “arrears”, and a search was made of the records; actually a title searcher had found the lis pendens but the abstract company, it seems, paid no attention to it.

[534]*534February 21,1949 — deed from Leighton to plaintiffs recorded.

March 28, 1949 — affidavit filed by the attorney for plaintiff Knocklong, in the County Court suit above referred to, also an affidavit by one Keyes, both of which affidavits described elab orate efforts to locate the Laffeys, the lawyer’s affidavit stating, among other things, that she had caused the Nassau County records to be searched and had found no record of any conveyance or instrument affecting the title or made by any defendant since acquisition of title; technically speaking, the lawyer’s affidavit was perhaps incomplete or even, possibly, misleading, since no search had been made of the public office records after the filing of the lis pendens; the Keyes affidavit, however, described efforts to serve the papers, without giving dates, but necessarily those were efforts made after the lis pendens had been filed; on these affidavits there was made an order of publication with mailing dispensed with, against the Laffeys, and there is no dispute that service by publication against them was made, as prescribed by the order.

June 22, 1949 • — • judgment was entered in favor of Knocklong in the partition action above referred to, which judgment barred the Laffey heirs and their successors and decreed Knocklong and Connolly, the tax purchasers, to be tenants in common of the property; Knocklong afterwards conveyed its interest to Connolly.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 N.E.2d 25, 305 N.Y. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swidler-v-knocklong-corp-ny-1953.