Saranac Land Timber Company v. Roberts

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Saranac Land Timber Company v. Roberts
by Joseph McKenna
Syllabus
829591Saranac Land Timber Company v. Roberts — SyllabusJoseph McKenna
Court Documents

United States Supreme Court

177 U.S. 318

Saranac Land Timber Company  v.  Roberts

 Argued: December 21, 22, 1899. --- Decided: April 9, 1900

This is an action of ejectment brought to recover a tract of 7,500 acres of forest land, known as the northwest quarter of township 24, Great Tract One, Macomb's Purchase, situated in Franklin county, in the northern district of the state of New York.

The plaintiff deraigned title by various mesne conveyances from one Daniel McCormick, who became the grantee of the state of New York in 1798. The defendant claims through deeds executed to the state of New York in pursuance of sales for taxes.

The defendant also set up as a defense a six months' statute of limitations contained in chapter 448 of a law enacted in 1885, certain statutes against champerty, the illegal organization of the plaintiff in error, and a former adjudication made on an application to cancel one of the tax sales under which the state claimed title.

The first sale upon which the title of the state is based was made in 1877 for unpaid taxes of 1866 to 1877, inclusive. A certificate was issued dated October 18, 1877, showing a sale to the state of the whole of the northwest quarter for the sum of $2,756.40, and subsequently a deed in the usual form, and dated June 9, 1881, which was recorded in Franklin county clerk's office June 8, 1882.

The subsequent sales were made respectively in 1881 for the unpaid taxes of 1871 to 1876; in 1885 for those of 1877 to 1879; in 1890 for those of 1881 to 1885. At all of the sales except the first one the property was treated as already state property, and struck off to the state without giving opportunity for bids. Certificates and deeds were duly issued to the state in pursuance of the sale of 1881 and 1885 in due form, and duly recorded in the clerk's office of the proper county. A certificate alone was issued in pursuance of the sale of 1890.

The taxes for the years 1866 and 1867 were assessed against the whole quarter as one parcel. In the years 1868, 1869, and 1870 the whole quarter was not assessed, and so much of it as was assessed was placed upon the rolls in two parcels, and described as follows:

'Township 24, Great Tract One, Macomb's Purchase; N. W. 1/4, excepting 1,000 acres, lying in N. W. corner; also 1,215 acres which is water, leaving 5,285 acres.

'Macomb's Purchase, Great Tract One, township 24, 1,000 acres, lying in the northwest corner of northwest quarter.'

There was evidence tending to show that on the tract in controversy there were bodies of water, but no part of them was within the parcel of 1,000 arces laid out in a square form in the northwest corner.

In December, 1894, the defendant caused a notice to be published once a week for three successive weeks in a newspaper published in Franklin county, of which the following is a copy:

To whom it may concern:

Notice is hereby given that the following is the list of wild, vacant forest lands located in the county of Franklin to which the state holds title, and that from and after three weeks from the 22d day of December, 1894, possession thereof will be deemed to be in the comptroller of this state, pursuant to the provisions of section 13 of chapter 711, Laws of 1893.

William J. Morgan,

Deputy Comptroller.

The list attached to this notice contained the land in question.

When the testimony in the case was closed the counsel for each of the respective parties, with the approval of the court, admitted that there was no question of fact in the case to be submitted to the jury; that the issues depended upon the construction that the court should give to the law; and thereupon the jury was discharged, and a written stipulation waiving a jury trial was signed by the attorneys of record for the respective parties, and filed with the clerk.

The plaintiff requested the court to rule on certain propositions of law which were based on the assumption of the sale of the tract in one parcel for the aggregate unpaid taxes for several years, and claiming the following as jurisdictional defects in the sale, and not cured or validated by chapter 448 of the Laws of 1885, or chapter 711 of the Laws of 1893: The sale of the whole tract for taxes which were assessed against separate and distinct parcels of it; such sale when during one or more of the years a part of the tract was not assessed; such sale when some of the taxes were assessed against the whole tract and others against a part only; insufficiency of the description to identify and distinguish the parcel sold; that at the sale of 1881 the comptroller treated the property as that of the state, and struck it off to the state without giving opportunity for other bids; and that chapter 448 of the Laws of 1885 was unconstitutional and void, and repugnant to the [[Additional amendments to the United States Constitution#Amendment XIV|Fourteenth Amendment]] of the Constitution of the United States.

These propositions of law the court refused to affirm, and the court's action is assigned as error.

It is also urged that it was error to admit in evidence, over the objection of plaintiff, the deed from the state made on the sale of 1881 conveying to the state two parcels of land in the northwest quarter of township 24 by the following description:

'Macomb's Purchase, Great Tract One, township 24, northwest quarter, 5,285 acres, more or less, being all that remains of the said northwest quarter after excepting therefrom 1,000 acres in the northwest corner thereof, and 1,215 acres covered by water; 1,000 acres in the northwest corner of the northwest quarter.' Also in receiving in evidence the certificate of sale issued on the sale of 1890, because it was not in evidence of a legal title.

The assignments of error may, as is said in the brief of plaintiff in error, be reduced in a general way to two—

'First. Is chapter 448 of the Laws of New York of 1885 a valid and constitutional law when set up by the state in its own favor?

'Second. Were the defects shown to exist in the tax sales, or either of them, of such nature as to be beyond the reach of that law if valid, accepting the construction which has been put upon it by the New York court?'

The act referred to is inserted in the margin. The circuit court found in favor of the state, basing its decision upon the constitutionality of chapter 448, following Turner v. New York, 168 U.S. 90, 42 L. ed. 392, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 38, and holding also the law to be curative of the defects urged against the validity of the tax sales. 83 Fed. Rep. 436. The complaint was filed January 25, 1895. The plaintiff sued out this writ of error.

Messrs. Frank E. Smith and Thomas F. Conway for plaintiff in error.

Messrs. Theodore E. Hancock and John C. Davies for defendant in error.

Mr. Justice McKenna delivered the opinion of the court:

Notes[edit]

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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