Zink v. McManus

3 N.Y.S. 487, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 583, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 630
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 N.Y.S. 487 (Zink v. McManus) 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
Zink v. McManus, 3 N.Y.S. 487, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 583, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 630 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

At the time the assessment was made of the lands in dispute, upon which the defendants rely in support of their tax title, the plaintiff was a resident of the city of Buffalo, and in the possession of the premises by his tenant, Nathan Vosseler, claiming to be the owner in fee; and the deed from his grantor described the lands in dispute. The trial court held that the plaintiff, on producing that deed and showing his possession under the same, established a good and perfect title as against the defendant, and was entitled to a verdict in his favor, unless the tax proceedings were regular and valid, so as to uphold the comptroller’s deed, upon which the defendants rely as constituting a statutory transfer of the plaintiff’s title to the defendant Anna McManus. This ruling was correct. The defendants did not show any connection with the title, except as the same is based on the comptroller’s deed. A conveyance of lands to a person who enters possession thereunder, creates a legal presumption of a good title in the grantee and occupant as against all intruders and claimants who are unable to show a better title. Therefore the claim of the defendants, that the plaintiff failed to make out a prima facie case, is not well founded.

The defendants also make the point that in the deed under which the plaintiff claims title the lands are not described so that the same can be located, and for that reason the plaintiff failed to show title to the lands in question, and should have been nonsuited. That deed described a parcel of land by metes and bounds so that the same can be ascertained and located, and the parol proof shows that they are the lands described in the complaint. Eol[488]*488lowing the description thus given, tiiere is this statement: “Being the same premises conveyed” to the plaintiff’s grantor, and giving her name, and referring to that deed by its date and time of record in the Erie county clerk’s office. The description of the land, as given in the last-named deed, does not embrace the land in dispute. The respondents claim that the reference to this deed is controlling, and that the lands conveyed to the plaintiff are the lands therein described, and none other. As the premises intended by the parties to be conveyed to the plaintiff were fully described, the reference made to the deed of his grantor by the plaintiff’s grantor will not frustrate the conveyance under which he claims title, and the same may be rejected as surplusage; and, as the deed referred to contains the description of another distinct parcel of land from the one in controversy, the reference thereto may be treated as made by mistake. Mason v. White, 11 Barb. 173.

The order directing a verdict in the defendant’s favor cannot be sustained, unless it is made to appear by competent evidence produced on the trial that the assessment and the levying of the tax on the plaintiff’s lands, and the'sale of the same for non-payment, were regular and in substantial compliance with the statute authorizing and regulating the same. Hilton v. Bender, 69 N. Y. 75; Van Rensselaer v. Witbeck, 7 N. Y. 517. By the city charter, assessors are to be appointed for the several wards into which the city is divided, and they possess the powers, and are charged with the duties, of town assessors; and they are required to prepare an assessment roll for each ward, which shall contain an assessment of the taxable land therein, substantially in the form in which town assessors are required to make such, rolls, except that no distinction shall be made between the land of non-residents and residents, but those of both shall be assessed in the same form as resident lands. Title 2, §§ 41, 42. The General Statutes of the state, to which reference is made, regulating the mode and manner of making an assessment of lands in direct and positive terms, require the assessors to make an assessment roll divided into four separate columns. In the first they shall give the names of the taxable inhabitants; in the second, the quantity of land; in the third, the value of the same; and, in the fourth, the entries required to be made relating wholly to personal property; and, under the city charter, that class of property is to be assessed in a separate and distinct part of the assessment roll. 1 Rev. St. pt. 1, tit. 2, c. 13, §§ 9, 12. When the same is completed, the roll is to be delivered to the said comptroller, who is authorized to apportion on the property assessed the taxgs authorized to be levied by the common council. Title 5, § 10. In the case of non-payment of the taxes levied on lands within the time prescribed by the charter, the comptroller is authorized to sell the same in pursuance of the provisions of chapter 275 of the Laws of 1880, which was passed subsequent to the enactment of the provision of. the chapter referred to. The lands in question were sold in April, 1884, for the tax levied thereon in the year 1883, and were bid in by the comptroller for and on behalf of the city, which he was authorized to do, for the want of a bid from other parties equal to the amount of the tax levied. Thereafter the comptroller assigned the certificate of sale to the defendant McManus, and, the plaintiff having failed to redeem the lands from the sale within the time fixed by the statute, a deed prepared in the usual form of tax deeds was executed and delivered by the comptroller to the assignee of the certificate.

The plaintiff interposes several objections to the validity of the tax proceedings, upon which he relies to defeat the tax deed. He first claims that the lands were not assessed to the plaintiff nor his tenant, but to 'other persons, who made no claim of title to the premises; and, secondly, that in all the proceedings, including the assessment, there was an imperfect description of the lands, so that the same cannot be located thereby with certainty. The defendants did not produce any evidence of the tax proceedings except the comptroller’s deed, and that the prior proceedings were in conformity to the [489]*489requirements of the statute. They rely upon the provisions found in the eighth section of the act of 1880, which declares that when lands have been sold for non-payment of taxes, and have not been redeemed, the comptroller shall execute to the purchaser or his assigns a deed of conveyance of the real estate so sold, which conveyance shall vest in the grantee an absolute estate in fee; and that sucli deed “shall be conclusive evidence that the sale was regular, and also presumptive evidence that all previous-proceedings were regular, according to law and the provisions of the act.” As the deed was in due form, and executed and acknowledged in compliance with the several provisions of the said act, upon its production the defendants made out a prima facie case of regularity in procedure upon which the defendants might rely in support of the validity of the tax deed, unless the plaintiff, by competent proof, made it appear as a matter of fact that some of the essential provisions of the statute were not observed and performed. “

At the time the assessment was made, the plaintiff was a resident of the city of Buffalo, and the lands were in the actual possession of his tenant, and they were assessed to Joseph and Peter Zimmerman, who, as the proof shows, made no claim of title to the lands. The requirement of the statute that lands should be 'assessed in the name of the owner of occupant, was disregarded. The provisions are: “Section 1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y.S. 487, 56 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 583, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zink-v-mcmanus-nysupct-1888.