Judges: McLaughlin
Filed Date: 12/15/1896
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The defendant contests the right of the plaintiffs to maintain this action at all: (1) Because it is to vacate and
The first objection is a novel one, to say the least; that the state can, without any authority, issue to B. letters-patent of land owned by A. and that A. cannot contest the validity of the same because they were issued by the state, is a proposition which it could hardly be expected would receive the sanction of any court. The Constitution of the state guarantees that one shall - not be deprived of his property except by “ due process of .law,” and if his property be taken from him in any other manner than that sanctioned by the laws of the state, the courts heretofore have acted, and doubtless will continue to act, whether it be taken by the state or by an individual. If the people are necessary parties to the action, and the defendant desired to raise that question, he should have done so by demurrer or answer. (Code Civ. Pro., §§ 484, 494); and, not having thus raised it, it is ivaived.
The plaintiffs allege that they are “ the owners in fee simple,and this is. a sufficient allegation of possession. Gage v. Kaufman, 139 U. S. 474. Possession is presumed to follow the legal titleand, where the land is unoccupied, an allegation that the plaintiffs have the legal title is a sufficient allegation of their possession to enable them to maintain an action to remove a cloud from their title. Beach on Modern Equity Jurisprudence, § 559. The cases cited by the defendant to the effect that one must be in the actual possession are not applicable. The decisions in these cases were all rendered under section 1638 and prior to the amendment of 1891. Before this amendment actual possession was required.
This leads to the consideration of the main and more difficult question involved, and that is, whether Albert Andrus ever acquired the legal title to the lot in question, and, if so, whether it was thereafter forfeited to and acquired by the state.
It is conceded that the comptroller conveyed to Albert Andrus the premises in question by the two deeds bearing date December 17, 1868, and February 2, 1874, respectively, but it is strenuously urged- that both deeds were insufficient to and did not by. reason of certain fatal irregularities in the tax sales, in pursuance of which they were given, vest in him any title whatever. The irregularities pointed-out are: That in the 1866 sale the east half,
But in any view the sales of 1866 and 1871 were valid and sufficient to and did vest legal title in Albert Andrus as to all persons except the then owners of the parcels sold, or some person deriving his title from or connecting it in some way with the then ownei-s. The then owners of the different parcels, as we have already seen, either do not object to or waived the irregularities complained of. An owner of property may waive ■ the protection which the Constitution gives to him in reference to it, and. if he does waive it, no one can be thereafter heard to say that
It follows, therefore, that the legal title to the premises in question was acquired by plaintiff’s testator. Has that title since been forfeited to or acquired by the state? I think not. In each and all of the tax sales made since plaintiff’s testator acquired his title, and through which the state acquired its alleged title, Occur jurisdictional defects of such a nature as to malee the sales void. Turner v. Boyce, 11 Misc. Rep. 502. In view of the learned opinion in the case just cited, in which the illegalities of the sales referred to are clearly pointed out, an extended discussion here is unnecessary. . At the 1881 sale, the state, upon the assumption that it then owned all of Lot 87, rejected all bids there for and the whole lot was bid off by the comptroller for the state.' The state did not then own the east half of Lot 87 — it did, however, own the west half, and it was the duty of the comptroller under the statutes then in force to reject all bids on that portion of the lot, but as to the east half he could not legally reject bids, neither could the state become a purchaser except by entering into competition with other bidders, and, not having done this, the sale of the east half to the state constitutes a serious jurisdictional defect, and which is not cured by the' statutes of 1885 or 1893. Joslyn v. Rockwell, 128 N. Y. 334. The invalidity of the deed given to the state, in pursuance of the 1881 sale was not cured by-the subsequent sales of 1885 or 1890, when the comptroller again went through the form of bidding in the whole lot for' the state, rejecting all other bids. That, these sales were illegal and insufficient- to pass any title whatever is very clearly stated by the-learned justice writing the opinion in Turner v. Boyce, supra. He says:
' “ But these two deeds are also valueless as grants of any right or title to the land in them described, for the reason, that no sale in fact was made by the comptroller to the state of these lands
The plaintiffs are entitled to judgment.
Judgment for plaintiffs.