Turner v. Walker

40 Misc. 379, 82 N.Y.S. 340
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 Misc. 379 (Turner v. Walker) 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
Turner v. Walker, 40 Misc. 379, 82 N.Y.S. 340 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Houghton, J.

The plaintiff brings this action against the defendant to compel the specific performance of a contract to purchase a large tract of forest land.

The contract is embraced in letters containing offers and acceptances. Waiving the question as to whether the contract was sufficient to satisfy the Statute of Frauds, and whether it was sufficiently definite as to the quantity of land to permit a decree of specific performance, I think the plaintiff’s complaint must be dismissed on the ground that the plaintiff did not proffer a title free from incumbrances.

[380]*380A fair interpretation of the correspondence between the parties shows that the plaintiff expected to furnish, and the defendant expected to receive, a good title free from incumbrances or reservations. Correspondence passed between the parties proposing certain reservations.' The plaintiff refused to buy the land with any reservations at any price. The final letter of the plaintiff was to the effect that he would sell the land at ten dollars per acre, making no reservations whatever.

In an executory contract for the sale of lands, in the absence of any language to the contrary, there is always implied, by law, the right to receive a good title clear of defects and incumbrances. Moore v. Williams, 115 N. Y. 592. Such a title I think the plaintiff failed to tender to the defendant.

The source of plaintiff’s original title was from the Adirondack Railway Company through one Osborne. By the deed from the railway company to Osborne, the company reserved to itself, its successors and assigns, so much of the land conveyed as it or its successors at any time might require for a right of way to build a railroad, for its tracks, turnouts, sidings, stations, etc., and to do all by way of cutting timber and removing earth for the necessary construction thereof. It also reserved all minerals contained upon or in said land with the right to take and mine the same. In addition to these rights, the privilege of constructing dams and docks for the purpose of floating and driving logs from other lands belonging to the company, through and to the lands conveyed; and to use so much timber and stone from the lands conveyed as might be necessary and convenient in constructing and keeping the dams, docks and such improvements in repair, with the right to the grantee to use said improvements upon paying a proportional part. At the time of the giving of the deed by the railway company, the land was evidently deemed more valuable for lumbering than for other purposes. Since that time it has become more valuable as a private forest preserve, and such was its intended use by the defendant. The tract contained streams and a considerable body of water, and one of the contentions upon the trial was as to whether or not the defendant should pay for a considerable number of acres covered by a lake.

Aside from the legal aspect of this reservation, it is manifest that the right of way and right of entry reserved to the original grantor would be very harmful to the use of the land as a private [381]*381park. In. the deed from Osborne to the plaintiff these rights of the railway company were excepted. They were easements or servitudes running with the land. As such they constituted in law an incumbrance. Wetmore v. Bruce, 118 N. Y. 319; Forster v. Scott, 136 id. 582.

The plaintiff contends, however, that the rights of the railway company were cut off by a tax title which he obtained between the making of the contract with the defendant and the tender of a deed to him.

'The tax deed executed by the Comptroller of the State to the plaintiff is dated January 24, 1901, and. recites that the plaintiff purchased in the month of December, 1895, the premises in question, which were sold for the payment of taxes levied prior to the year 1893. At the time of such purchase, the plaintiff was the owner of the premises under his deed from Osborne, which is dated January 26, 1892. The deed from the railway company to Osborne provided that the grantee should pay all taxes imposed upon said land then due or to become due. There were deducted from the purchase price in the deed from Osborne to Turner all taxes against said lands due at the date of the conveyance. It does not appear from the evidence for what years prior to 1893 the tax sale of 1895 was had. The usual course pursued in the Comptroller’s office, which I think the court can take judicial notice of, is not to sell lands every year for unpaid taxes, but to advertise for sale only at stated periods, and then sell for the unpaid taxes of whatever years default has been made in. There was an implied agreement, I think, on the part of plaintiff, he having deducted from the purchase price all taxes due prior to January, 1892, to pay those taxes, and I think it cannot be presumed, in the absence of any proof, that the sale of 1895 was only for the taxes of 1892. If it was material to show for what years of unpaid taxes the sale was had, there being a prima facie incumbrance upon the property, the burden was upon the plaintiff to show that the sale was not had for any year prior to 1892. But I can see no reason why the agreement to pay taxes thereafter levied upon the property, on the part of Osborne, was not a covenant running with the land, and, therefore, a binding obligation on the plaintiff, as well as Osborne, to prevent the land being sold for taxes.

The railway company, in its conveyance to Osborne, reserved [382]*382a very broad, and possibly a very valuable, easement to itself and its successors. It was interested in the preservation of the property so that it might ultimately enjoy the rights reserved to itself. Osborne did not acquire the whole absolute title to the property. He held the larger estate, but it was. subservient to the easements and servitudes remaining in the company. He could do nothing to the land which would prevent the enjoyment of those servitudes. H it was. practical for him to build some structure or do some act that interfered with the right of way, or the right to take minerals, or the right to build dams and docks, reserved to the railway company, which prevented the exercise of those rights, he could have been enjoined from so doing, or compelled to remove them. Osborne, therefore, and this plaintiff, as his grantee, were in a sense joint owners with the railway company, of the land, and it was the duty of the owner of the greater - interest, who had possession, to keep the property in such condition as would allow the railway company to enjoy its rights reserved to it when it saw fit to exercise them. One of those duties was to pay the taxes so that the rights of the railway company would not be destroyed by a tax sale. A covenant by a tenant to pay taxes during his term is a covenant running with the land and binds him and his assignees. Post v. Kearney, 2 N. Y. 394. He cannot allow the premises to be sold at tax sale and acquire title as against his landlord. It being his duty to pay the taxes, whatever title he obtained is for the benefit of the real owner. Burgett v. Taliaferro, 118 Ill. 514. This is upon the familiar principle that where a duty rests upon a party in respect to the property of another, the violation or omission of which will result in a sale of the property, and where a sale is made because of such breach of duty, the person owing it "is disqualified from becoming a purchaser at the sale for his own account. Bennett v. Austin, 81 N. Y. 308. A mortgagor, whose duty it is to pay the taxes, cannot allow the property to go to a tax sale, and by its purchase cut off the mortgage. Powell v. Jenkins, 14 Misc. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Misc. 379, 82 N.Y.S. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-v-walker-nysupct-1903.