
    The Tax Lien Company of New York, Appellant, v. Catherine E. Schultze and Others, Defendants, Impleaded with Wesley E. Barker, Purchaser, Respondent.
    First Department,
    April 3, 1914.
    Tax — foreclosure of tax lien, city of New York— easements of adjoining owners made parties defendant extinguished by judgment - • when title marketable.
    Where in a suit to foreclose a tax lien, brought under the provisions of the charter of the city of New York, all .adjacent owners who may have any easements in light, air or access have been served and made parties defendant, their easements, if any, are out off by a final judgment of foreclosure, even though they neither appeared nor defended the action. Hence, a purchaser on the foreclosure sale cannot refuse to complete his purchase upon the ground that said easements may be a cloud upon the title.
    Scott, J., dissented, with opinion.
    Appeal by the plaintiff, The Tax Lien Company of New York, from an order of the Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 1st day of December, 1913, granting a motion by a purchaser to be relieved of his bid on a sale in foreclosure.
    
      August Weymann, for the appellant.
    
      Edward Miehling, for the respondent.
   Hotchkiss, J.:

The action was to foreclose a tax lien. The respondent was the purchaser at the sale. Having refused to take title, he made a motion to be relieved of his bid and plaintiff moved for an order directing him to complete. The respondent’s motion to be relieved was granted, and plaintiff’s cross motion was denied.

The premises in question consist of what would be the northerly half of the bed of East One Hundred and Thirty- second street were the same widened and extended between Willis avenue and Brown place. The title was rejected on the ground that the premises were affected by easements of light, air and access which were not cut off by the foreclosure. -On the motion, an affidavit was read in behalf of the purchaser in which it was stated: “Upon the said examination of title, it appeared that there might he easements of light, air and access, and rights of way over said tax lot in favor of the owners and encumbrancers of the various parcels of land abutting upon the said tax lot and upon the neighboring streets and avenues. The following is a list of the various owners and encumbrancers of land fronting on East 132nd street and Willis Avenue, together with their sources of title.” The record shows that each owner or incumbrancer enumerated in the list as stated in the affidavit was a party to the action and either defaulted or appeared but did not defend. It is clear that the mere suggestion that there may be a possibility of outstanding interests unaffected by the judgment is insufficient to show a cloud on the title. (Goodwin v. Crooks, 58 App. Div. 464.) Jackson v. Smith (153 App. Div. 724) is not in point. In that case it was held that the easements of certain defendants were not affected by the sale because they had not been subjected to the assessments on which the tax in question had been laid. No such question is in this , case which involves one of parties only. Every owner of an easement which the record discloses as having an interest was made a party, and, hence, was bound by the judgment and whatever estate or interest they had in the property affected thereby will, by the conveyance to be made thereunder, be vested in the purchaser. (Greater N. Y. Charter [Laws of 1901, chap. 466], § 1039, as added by Laws of 1908, chap. 490.)

The order relieving the purchaser of his bid should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the order denying the motion of the plaintiff directing the purchaser to complete his purchase should likewise be reversed, and an order entered directing the purchaser so to complete.

Ingraham, P. J. (concurring):

I concur with my brother Hotchkiss. The question here presented is whether the deed of the referee in pursuance of a judgment of foreclosure of this lien will convey a marketable title to the property sold under the direction of a judgment of this court. .

This action was brought under the provisions of the charter of the city of New York (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, §§ 1035-1039, added by Laws of 1908, chap. 490, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 65). The lien foreclosed in this action was a lien upon the specific real property described in the complaint and in the notice of sale which the purchaser executed. There is no question but that a valid lien was created by the tax which was imposed upon the property, and that the plaintiff acquired that lien by virtue of a transfer from the municipal authorities as provided for by the sections of the charter correlated to the sections herein mentioned. (See § 1029 et seq., as amd. and added by Laws of 1908, chap. 490.) The action to foreclose that lien was commenced and prosecuted as provided for in these sections of the charter, and the judgment was in all respects a valid judgment foreclosing the lien. Under that judgment the referee proceeded to sell the property described in the complaint which was subject to the lien. The objection of the purchaser to the title is that the property may be subject to an easement, but so far as appears from the record, every person owning or claiming an easement in the property was a party to the action, and was either served or appeared. Undoubtedly if either of these defendants had appeared in the action and claimed that the property upon which the lien existed was subject to an easement in favor of the defendant thus appearing, and the court had by judgment attempted to sell the property free and clear of those liens, that judgment would have been erroneous, and would have been reversed on appeal. That was our decision in the case of Jackson v. Smith (153 App. Div. 724), relied upon by my brother Scott in his opinion. That case did not decide or attempt to decide what would be the effect of a sale under the judgment in that case, and the very fact that we modified the judgment by directing that the sale be subject to the easements would show that if there had been a sale •under that" judgment without such modification the defendants would have been barred from claiming any easement upon the property conveyed by the referee. But in this case neither of the defendants whom it is claimed now might have an easement appeared or defended the action, or made any claim to any interest in the property. The judgment was entered in an action to which all these owners of these so-called easements were parties, and a conveyance by the referee will convey to the purchaser all the interest of all the parties to the action whether by easement, or as owners of the fee or any other right or title to the property under the express provisions of section 1039 of the charter (as added by Laws of 1908, chap. 490). That section provides that every conveyance upon a sale pursuant to a final judgment in an action to foreclose a tax lien shall transfer to and vest in the purchaser all the right, title, interest and estate in and claim upon the real property affected by such judgment, of the plaintiff, each defendant upon whom the summons is served, each person claiming from, through or under such a defendant by title accruing after the filing of notice of pendency of the action. ” It seems to me that under this express provision of the charter the question whether any of these defendants had or had not an easement in the property or any right to it which would be affected by the conveyance they were bound to assert in the foreclosure action so that the sale could be made subject to any right or easement therein; and having failed to assert their claim in that action a deed by the referee in pursuance of a judgment would vest in the purchaser full title to the property free and clear of any lien or interest of any of the defendants.

I, therefore, concur in the reversal of the order appealed from, and the motion requiring the purchaser to complete his purchase should be granted.

Clarke and Dowling, JJ., concurred; Scott, J., dissented.

Scott, J. (dissenting):

The property affected by the tax, the lien for which is the subject of this foreclosure action, was described in the terms of sale as Borough of the Bronx * * "x" Section 9, block 2277, lot 50. Location, East 132d Street, between Willis Avenue and Brown Place.” It was not stated to be subject to any lien or incumbrance except certain taxes. Attached to the terms of the sale was a diagram showing a plot of land 820 feet in length and 30 feet in width, bounded on the west by Willis avenue, on the east by Brown place and on the south by East One Hundred and Thirty-second street. There was nothing whatever to indicate, what upon examination proved to be the fact, that the plot thus described was in fact a part of the bed of One Hundred and Thirty-second street. The purchaser, upon discovering this fact, refused to complete the sale, and now seeks to be relieved of his bid upon the ground that the premises upon which he bid are incumbered with private easements, of light, air and access in favor of the property abutting upon One Hundred and Thirty-second street which were not covered by the tax lien, and consequently were not cut off by the foreclosure of that lien. That the purchaser has good ground for his objection does not seem to be an open question in this court. In Jackson v. Smith (153 App. Div. 724) it was distinctly and unanimously held that the foreclosure of a tax lien and the sale of premises, pursuant to section 1035 et seq. of the Greater New York charter (Laws of 1901, chap. 466, added by Laws of 1908, chap. 490, as amd. by Laws of 1911, chap. 65) does not extinguish private easements of light, air and access of adjoining owners over the land sold, because the easements appurtenant to the adjoining property are not covered by or included in the assessment of the bed of the street, and are, therefore, not subjected to the tax lien. Hence, to sell or extinguish them under a foreclosure of the tax lien would be to take the property of the abutting owner without due process of law. Not only is this decision the latest word of this court upon the subject, but its reasoning is so satisfactory that it commands our respect.

It is not, as I consider, an answer to the purchaser’s objection to the title that some, and perhaps all, of the owners of property possessing these private easements were made parties to the action. Even so, their easements will not be cut off unless they were subject to the tax. (Jackson v. Smith, supra; Blenis v. Utica Knitting Co., 73 Misc. Rep. 61; 149 App. Div. 936.) As was said by the Court of Appeals in Smith v. Mayor (68 N. Y. 552, 557): “One who purchases land at a tax sale must take all the easements and incidents attached or pertaining to the land.” It is quite certain that nothing more can pass under a tax sale than what was included in the assessment and subjected to the lien, and the rule is perfectly well settled that the assessment of the servient estate must exclude the easements and the assessment of the dominant estate must include them. (Jackson v. Smith, supra, and cases cited.) Consequently the assessment of the street did not cover the easements appurtenant to the adjoining property; they were not subject to the lien of the tax, and they were not extinguished by the foreclosure of that lien. By the failure to properly describe the property in the terms of sale the purchaser was led to bid a very substantial sum for property of only apparently nominal value. ° It would be highly unjust to hold him to Ms purchase or to decide summarily upon an application of this character that the property is free from cloud.

The order should he affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and plaintiff’s motion to require the purchaser to complete purchase granted, with ten dollars costs.  