Thorn v. Mayer

33 N.Y.S. 664, 12 Misc. 487
CourtThe Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo
DecidedMay 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 N.Y.S. 664 (Thorn v. Mayer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thorn v. Mayer, 33 N.Y.S. 664, 12 Misc. 487 (superctny 1895).

Opinion

HATCH, J.

The plaintiff heretofore entered into an agreement in writing Avith the defendants, whereby he agreed to sell and convey, and they to purchase, a certain piece of real estate situate in the city of Buffalo, which was in said agreement particularly described by metes and bounds. On the execution of the agreement, defendants paid the sum of $2,500, and agreed to pay the remainder of the purchase price, and secure the same to be paid by their bond and mortgage, payable in five years from date, with semiannual interest. Plaintiff agreed that the title to the premises should be good and clear in every respect. An abstract of title was thereafter furnished, which showed that the title had been transferred from the state of New York, through various mesne conveyances, by a chain of title perfectly well established in Buffalo, as a good and marketable title, and the same became vested in fee simple absolute in Augustus S. Porter about February 24, 1854. On or about March 10, 1854, there appears, by the records of the county clerk’s office of Erie county, to have been executed a deed by said Porter and Sarah G., his wife, to Jane S. Townsend. This deed purports to be dated March 10, 1854; was acknowledged the same day before Charles H. Symond, justice of the peace; conveys the premises set out in the agreement; and is spread upon the records in said clerk’s office in Liber 145 of Deeds, at page 400. The record there made shows that the deed was made and executed in all respects as required by law. It purports to have been executed in Niagara county, Avhere it states the grantor resided, and the records of Niagara county show that Symond was a justice of the peace, duly commissioned and acting on the 10th day of March, 1854. Attached to this deed, as recorded, and immediately following the [666]*666signature of said justice to the acknowledgment, is a certificate in these words:

“State of New York, Niagara County Clerk’s Office—ss.: I certify that-, before whom the annexed instrument in writing was proved or acknowledged, was at the time of taking the same a - in and for said county, duly authorized to take the same; and I am well acquainted with his handwriting, and verily believe the signature to said certificate is genuine, and that the annexed instrument is executed and acknowledged according to the laws of this' state. In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand and affixed my official seal, at Lockport, in said county, this-day of-, 185-.
“L. S. Payne, Clerk of Niagara County.”

L. S. Payne was clerk of ¡Niagara county during the year 1854. The record of the deed in the clerk’s office of Erie county does not show that any seal was attached to this certificate by the clerk of ¡Niagara county beyond what the recital of the certificate shows, and such record is not dated, and is not signed by the clerk of Erie county. The original of said deed is lost, and cannot now be produced. ; . The further chain of title shows that Daniel J. and Jane S. Townsend, his wife, executed and delivered to James G. Garner a mortgage conveying the premises described in the deed. The same was duly recorded, and was subsequently assigned by James Garner to Daniel B. Mangam, Leonard M. Thorn, and Thomas Garner, who caused the same to be foreclosed, and the premises were sold by the sheriff to Daniel B. Mangam, who received the sheriff’s deed, and thereafter said premises, by various mesne conveyances, became vested in Thomas Garner, all of which duly appears of record; that said Garner, his heirs or devisees, have paid taxes upon the same since March 17, 1864; that the premises have been divided by streets cut through them in various directions; and that whatever fences existed in 1864 inclosing said premises have been destroyed by the cutting through of these streets. During said time, said Garner, his heirs and devisees, have rented some portion for a part of the time and paid taxes, but the premises have not been usually cultivated, and have not been claimed by any person adversely to said persons. This is the state of the title as appears from the abstract. Prior to this submission, plaintiff duly tendered a deed of said premises to defendants, and demanded a fulfillment of the contract upon their part. Defendants refused to accept said deed, or comply with said agreement, upon the ground that said deed did not convey a good and marketable title, for the reason that the certificate of the clerk of ¡Niagara county to the deed before mentioned from Porter and wife to Jane S. Townsend, was and is so defective as to make it not entitled to be recorded in the clerk’s office of Erie county, and for the reason that the said record of said deed is so defective as not to entitle the same, or a certified copy thereof, to be used as evidence of the transfer of said premises from Porter and wife to Jane S. Townsend. These objections present the questions to be decided upon this submission.

The certificate attached to the deed omits the name of the justice and his official character, but, when it is read in connection with the certificate of acknowledgment, it becomes clear that the person intended was none other than the magistrate whose name is there [667]*667signed. That they may be so read together is supported by authority. Lynch v. Livingston, 6 N. Y. 433.

The reasons for a construction which will give force and effect to this certificate in this respect are very clearly stated by Judge Finch in Smith v. Boyd, 101 N. Y. 472, 5 N. E. 319, and are conclusive in support of the certificate upon this question. With the name and official character of the magistrate supplied, the certificate, so far as its matter is concerned, is in exact compliance with the recording act. 4 Rev. St. (8th Ed.) p. 2472, § 18. There is nothing m this section which requires the certificate to be dated, and no reason is suggested why the absence of a date should vitiate it. The date would simply identify the time when it was made, but it would add nothing to the fact that the officer taking the acknowledgment was such officer, and authorized to act when he assumed to act, and has in fact acted according to law, which are the essential things. The record does not show that the clerk attached to such certificate his official seal. But it contains a recital that he had affixed such seal, and nothing contained in the record affirmatively shows that such recital is not true. The question thus presented has been the subject of much debate both in this and other states. It is concluded, however, that the question in this state is practically settled by authority.

In Williams v. Sheldon, 10 Wend. 654, record of letters patent did not show that the seal of the state or the signature of the governor was attached thereto when issued. The point raised was stated by the court in these words:

“The question, then, is not whether a patent is valid, and will pass the title to land, if issued without a seal; but whether the fact that in the record of the patent the words TS.’ do not appear to designate the place of the seal is to be regarded as evidence that the original was not sealed.”

The court held that in so solemn a grant as an original patent to land it would not be presumed that a seal was omitted, but that the presumption was that the officers had done their duty and affixed it. It does not appear in, the report of the case that the record showed any recital that the original patent was under seal.

In Todd v. Institution, 118 N. Y. 337, 29 N. E.

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Bluebook (online)
33 N.Y.S. 664, 12 Misc. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thorn-v-mayer-superctny-1895.