The 15th section of the Act of the Legislature of New York
approved June 6, 1885, provides that no action or special
proceeding shall thereafter be maintained against the City of
Brooklyn, or the Registrar of Arrears of that city, to compel the
execution or delivery of a lease upon any sale for taxes,
assessments, or water rates made more than eight years prior to the
above date unless commenced within six months after that date, and
notice thereof filed in the office of the Registrar of Arrears;
also that that officer shall, upon the expiration of such six
months, cancel in his office all sales made more than eight years
before the passage of the act upon which no lease had been given
and no action commenced and
Page 137 U. S. 246
notice thereof filed within the period limited as aforesaid, and
that thereupon the lien of all such certificates of purchase should
cease and determine.
Held:
(1) That this section is not repugnant to the clause of the
Constitution of the United States forbidding a state to pass any
law impairing the obligation of contracts or to the clause
declaring that no state shall deprive any person of property
without due process of law.
(2) That, consistently with those clauses, the legislature may
prescribe a limitation for the bringing of suits where none
previously existed, as well as shorten the time within which suits
to enforce existing causes of action may be commenced, provided in
each case a reasonable time, taking all the circumstances into
consideration, be given by the new law for the commencement of suit
before the bar takes effect.
This action was brought in the supreme court of the State of New
York by the plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, against the
defendant in error, Registrar of Arrears of the City of Brooklyn,
to restrain him from canceling in his office a number of sales of
lots of land for nonpayment of taxes, which lots had been purchased
by the plaintiff.
One part of the sales was alleged to have been made for
nonpayment of taxes, assessments and water rates, pursuant to the
provisions of c. 384 of the laws of New York of 1854, and the acts
amendatory thereof. These statutes are stated in full in the
opinion,
infra.
Another part was alleged to have been made for unpaid taxes,
assessments, and water rates pursuant to the provisions of c. 863
of the laws of New York of 1873 and the acts amendatory thereof.
These also will be found in the opinion.
By c. 405, § 15 of the laws of New York of 1885, which will
also be found in the opinion, provision was made for the
cancellation of such sales made more than eight years prior to the
passage of that act, upon which no leases should have been given
and no action commenced. The plaintiff alleged that this statute,
so far as it affected his rights under the several purchases, was
"wholly unconstitutional and void."
The defendant demurred to the complaint. The demurrer was
sustained and the complaint dismissed. This judgment was affirmed
by the supreme court in general term, and by the Court of Appeals,
105 N.Y. 681. The plaintiff sued out this writ of error.
Page 137 U. S. 250
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question upon this writ of error is, whether certain
provisions of a statute of New York passed in 1885, and relating to
sales of land in the City of Brooklyn for taxes, assessments, and
water rates, are repugnant to the Constitution of the United
States. It arose upon a demurrer to the complaint filed by Wheeler
against Jackson, as registrar of arrears of that city. The demurrer
was sustained by the supreme court of the state, and the complaint
dismissed. That judgment was affirmed in general term, and the
latter judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals of New York.
105 N.Y. 681.
Upon examining the legislation of New York prior to passage of
the act of 1885, we find that the charter of Brooklyn, passed in
1854, provided that if any tax or assessment remained unpaid on the
day specified in the published notice given by the collector of
taxes, that officer should sell at public auction the property on
which the tax or assessment was imposed "for the lowest term of
years for which any person will take the same, and pay the amount
of such tax or assessment with the interest and expenses," the
purchaser to receive a certificate of sale, which should be noted
on the original tax or assessment rolls, as well as on the
abstracts kept in the collector's office. The statute directed this
certificate to be recorded in the collector's office, and declared
that it should constitute "a lien upon the lands and premises
therein described after the same shall have been so recorded," and
that no assignment of a certificate should have any effect until
the notice of the same, with the name and residence of the
assignee, was filed in the office of the collector of the district
in which the lands were situated. The owner, mortgagee, occupant,
or other person interested in the land, was given the right to
redeem "at any time within two years after the sale for either tax
or assessment" by paying to the collector for the use of the
purchaser
"the said purchase money, together with any other tax or
assessment which the said purchaser may have paid, chargeable on
said land, and which he is hereby
Page 137 U. S. 251
authorized to do, provided a notice thereof has been filed in
the office of such collector, with fifteen percent per annum in
addition thereto, and the certificate of such collector, stating
the payment, and showing what land such payment is intended to
redeem, shall be evidence of such redemption."
Upon receipt of the moneys, it became the duty of the collector
to cause them to be refunded to the purchaser, his legal
representatives, or assigns, and all proceedings in relation to the
sale were to cease. If the moneys were not paid according to the
exigency of the notice, the collector was required to execute a
conveyance of the property so sold. The statute contained this
further provision:
"§ 33. The collector of the district where the land sold
for any tax or assessment shall not have been redeemed, as by this
act provided, shall execute to the purchaser or his assigns,
pursuant to the terms of sale, a proper conveyance of the lands so
sold by him, which shall contain a brief statement of the
proceedings had for the sale of said lands and shall be evidence
that such sale and other proceedings were regularly made and had
according to the provisions of this act. He shall also forthwith
note the same on the assessment rolls and abstract kept in his
office. The grantee shall be entitled as against all persons
whomsoever to the possession of said premises, and to the rents,
issues, and profits thereof, pursuant to the terms of his
conveyance, and shall be entitled to obtain possession of his lands
by summary proceedings, in the same manner as is provided by law
for the removal of persons who hold over or continue in possession
of real estate sold by virtue of an execution against them."
Laws of N.Y. 1854, pp. 874, 878-881, c. 384, §§ 24,
26, 29, 30, 33, Title V, Of the Collection of Taxes and
Assessments.
An amended charter of Brooklyn, passed June 28, 1873, repealed
all former acts inconsistent with its provisions, and created for
that city the department of arrears, with a chief officer, named
the registrar of arrears, upon whom were imposed all the duties
theretofore required to be performed by any city officer of
department in relation to advertising, selling, and leasing
property for assessments, taxes, and water rates, and for the
redemption of property sold therefor. Laws
Page 137 U. S. 252
of New York, 1873, pp. 1318, c. 863, Title VIII, § 1.
Sections 24, 26, 29, 30, and 33 of the act of 1854 were
substantially reenacted in sections 1, 3, 5, 6, 8, and 10 of that
of 1873. The differences between the two acts do not affect the
present controversy.
An Act of June 6, 1885, amended that of 1873. The
constitutionality of the fifteenth section of the former act is
questioned in this case. That section is as follows:
"§ 15. None of the provisions of this act hereinbefore
contained shall affect any sale for taxes, assessments, or water
rates heretofore made in said city, or the rights of the parties or
the proceedings thereunder, but the same shall remain the same as
though this act had not been passed, provided, however, that no
action or special proceeding shall hereafter be brought or
maintained against the City of Brooklyn or the registrar of arrears
of said city to compel the execution or delivery of a lease upon
any sale for taxes, assessments, or water rates made more than
eight years prior to the passage of this act unless such action or
special proceeding is commenced within six months after the passage
of this act and notice thereof filed in the office of registrar of
arrears, but this provision shall not operate to extend any statute
of limitations now applicable in such cases. And after the
expiration of six months from the passage of this act, it shall be
the duty of the registrar of arrears to cancel in his office all
such sales made more than eight years prior to the passage of this
act upon which no lease shall have been given and no action
commenced and notice thereof filed as aforesaid within the period
hereinbefore limited therefor, and thereupon the lien of all such
certificates of sale shall cease and determine."
Laws of New York, 1885, c. 405, § 15, p. 702.
The complaint shows that at divers times between September 22,
1856, and May 25, 1873, inclusive, at public auction held by the
proper officer of Brooklyn pursuant to the above act of 1854 and
the acts amendatory thereof, the plaintiff Wheeler purchased, each
for a term of years 1,253 different lots that were sold for the
nonpayment of taxes, assessments, and water rates, and paid for
each the amount set opposite its
Page 137 U. S. 253
number, as specified in a schedule filed with the complaint,
receiving from the collector a certificate of sale of each lot.
Each certificate declared that he was entitled, after the
expiration of two years from its date, to a lease of the lot
mentioned for a named term of years unless the premises were sooner
redeemed. The total amount of those purchases was $28,516.69.
The complaint also shows that at divers times from September 29,
1874, to February 23, 1875, inclusive, at public auction held by
the registrar of arrears of Brooklyn for like purposes pursuant to
the act of 1873 and the acts amendatory thereof, the plaintiff
purchased, each for a term of years, 61 different lots sold for the
nonpayment of taxes, assessments, and water rates, paying for each
the sum specified in a schedule filed with the complaint, and
receiving from the registrar similar certificates of sale. Each
certificate was recorded in the defendant's office. The total
amount of the purchases named in that schedule was $3,611.17.
None of the lots purchased by Wheeler was redeemed from sale. He
is still the legal owner and holder of the certificates.
Nevertheless the defendant was about to cancel the sales pursuant
to the fifteenth section of the act of 1885, whereby, the complaint
alleges, "all public notice of the rights and lien of the plaintiff
will be wholly destroyed," and he will sustain irreparable injury
and damage. Alleging that such section is unconstitutional and
void, the plaintiff prays that the defendant, his successors,
agents, clerks, and servants, be perpetually enjoined from
canceling the sales or the record thereof. Such is the case made by
the complaint.
Is the above section of the act of 1885 repugnant to the clause
of the Constitution protecting the obligation of contracts against
impairment by state legislation? On behalf of the plaintiff, it is
insisted that under the statutes of 1854 and 1873, the purchaser,
in consideration of his advancing the amount of the unpaid taxes
and interest, together with the expenses of sale, became entitled
to something more than a conveyance or lease for a stated number of
years, with the right to maintain ejectment or summary proceedings
to obtain
Page 137 U. S. 254
possession of the land purchased. He acquired, it is contended,
the further right
"to bide his time, not to take out a lease and engage in
litigation to secure the land itself, but, as the easier course, to
wait and rely on securing, through the operation of the record of
sale in the office of the registrar, the very profitable return on
his money provided by the percentage of fifteen percent, which,
along with the amount of the purchase money, the owner of the land
is, by the statutes, compelled to pay, on redeeming the property,
in order to clear his title."
The latter right, we are informed by the plaintiff, is the one
usually exercised by purchasers at tax sales in Brooklyn. Any
interference with it, he contends, impairs the obligation of his
contract with the city.
We cannot assent to this view. The plaintiff was entitled by the
contract to a return of the amount paid by him, together with any
other tax or assessment chargeable on the land and paid by him,
with fifteen percent per annum in addition thereto, and if such
amounts were not paid to the collector for him within two years
after the sale, he could demand a conveyance according to the terms
of his purchase, and obtain possession by summary proceedings. As
none of the lots purchased was redeemed, the plaintiff became
entitled, when the time for redemption passed, to a lease of each
lot for the term of years specified in the respective certificates
of sale. Now the right to such leases was not taken away by the act
of 1885. Nothing in that act prevented the plaintiff from obtaining
them on the day after its passage. But, as we have seen, it did
provide that no action or special proceeding should be brought or
maintained to compel the execution of conveyances or leases in
respect to any sale for taxes, assessments, or water rates made
more than eight years prior to June 6, 1885, unless instituted
within six months after that date, and notice thereof filed in the
office of the registrar of arrears.
Whatever was the period prescribed by the laws of New York prior
to June 6, 1885, for such actions or special proceedings -- and it
is not disputed that there was a limitation under the local law for
suits of that character -- the time was reduced by the act of that
date. Can this enactment be
Page 137 U. S. 255
assailed simply upon the ground that it prescribes a shorter
time for the bringing of actions to compel the execution of such
conveyances than was given when the contracts therefor was made?
Clearly not. It is the settled doctrine of this Court that the
legislature may prescribe a limitation for the bringing of suits
where none previously existed, as well as shorten the time within
which suits to enforce existing causes of action may be commenced,
provided in each case a reasonable time, taking all the
circumstances into consideration, be given by the new law for the
commencement of suit before the bar takes effect.
Terry v.
Anderson, 95 U. S. 628,
95 U. S. 632;
Koshkonong v. Burton, 104 U. S. 668,
104 U. S. 675;
Mitchell v. Clark, 110 U. S. 633,
110 U. S. 643.
The latest case upon the subject in this Court is
McGahey v.
Virginia (In re Brown), 135 U. S. 662,
135 U. S. 701,
135 U. S.
705-706, in which the above principle is affirmed, the
court saying:
"No one rule as to the length of time which will be deemed
reasonable can be laid down for the government of all cases alike.
Different circumstances will often require a different rule. What
would be reasonable in one class of cases would be entirely
unreasonable in another."
We cannot say that the limitation prescribed by the act of 1885
is unreasonable when applied to those who neglected, for eight
years prior to its passage, to demand the conveyances or leases to
which they were entitled. On the contrary, considerations of public
policy required that the records of the sale of real property in
Brooklyn for taxes, assessments, and water rates, should no longer
remain in the condition to which they had been brought in 1885 by
reason of purchasers' having forborne, for an unreasonably long
period, to obtain leases that they might realize interest upon
their investments in tax titles at the rate of fifteen percent per
annum. By not taking a lease, when entitled to it, the purchaser
put the taxpayer in a position where the latter would be compelled,
if he desired to sell or mortgage the property to another, to pay
not only the amount advanced by the former, but interest at the
above rate for the whole time subsequent to the sale. The
legislature did not intend, by the acts of 1854 and 1873, to
establish any such relations between the taxpayer and the
purchaser, or to put
Page 137 U. S. 256
the former at the mercy of the latter for an indefinite period,
for both acts contemplated the execution by the collector of a
lease immediately upon the expiration of the time for redemption --
giving the purchaser, in that way, precisely what he brought. But
whatever may have been the reasons that induced the enactment of
the statute of 1885, the period within which actions must be
brought was a matter resting primarily with the legislative
department of the state government, and as statutes of limitation
have for their object, and are deemed necessary to, the repose and
security of society, the determination of that department should
not be interfered with by the courts, unless the time allowed to
bring suits upon existing causes of action is, in view of all the
circumstances, so short as not to give parties affected by it a
reasonable opportunity to protect their rights under the new
law.
It is further contended that even if the statute is sufficient
to bar an action to compel the execution of a conveyance to the
purchaser unless brought within the time prescribed, it is
unconstitutional in that it requires the registrar -- after the
expiration of six months from its passage, without any such action
being commenced, and notice thereof given within that period -- to
cancel in his office all sales made more than eight years prior to
June 6, 1885, and provides that "thereupon the lien of all such
certificates of sale shall cease and determine." That provision, it
is said, destroys the security upon which the purchaser relied when
he advanced his money, namely, the lien of the record after sale.
This position is untenable. The substantial rights acquired by the
purchaser was a return of his money, with interest,
or,
after a certain time, a lease of the premises for the term named in
the certificate of sale. The lien created by the certificate of
sale protected him during the period within which the owner of the
property was permitted to redeem, and if the latter redeemed, he
could only do so, of strict right, within a given time, and then
only by reimbursing the purchaser all he had paid, with the
addition of fifteen percent per annum. If there was no redemption,
the purchaser was entitled to a lease that would give him all for
which he bargained. The lien consequently would cease
Page 137 U. S. 257
upon the execution and delivery to the purchaser of a lease. If
the lien was of such character that the purchaser, not having
received a conveyance, could enforce it by suit or special
proceeding commenced for that specific purpose, the power of the
legislature to prescribe a period within which such a suit or
proceeding must be commenced, or the lien be lost, is as clear as
its power to fix the time within which the purchaser must sue to
compel the execution of a conveyance or lease. If, on the other
hand, the lien was given only to protect the purchaser in respect
to his outlay, with interest, until he was entitled to demand a
conveyance or until a conveyance was actually made, the power of
the legislature to require the record of sale to be cancelled and
the lien to cease when the purchaser, by not suing within the
prescribed time, had lost his right to a conveyance or lease cannot
be questioned. The limitation prescribed by the statute applies
equally to a suit to compel a conveyance and to a proceeding (if a
separate suit for the purpose could be maintained) to enforce the
alleged lien. It declares in effect that the right to the lien and
the right to a conveyance shall, in the cases specified, depend
upon a suit being brought within a certain time to compel the
execution of a conveyance in accordance with the terms of sale. In
other words, that the record of a sale, including the certificate
of sale, shall not remain a cloud upon the title after the
purchaser has failed, for six months after the passage of the act,
to obtain or to demand by suit -- the time for redemption having
passed -- what, in view of the statute, must be regarded as the
principal object of his purchase, namely a conveyance or lease,
with the right, by means of summary proceedings, to obtain
possession of the premises sold to him for a term of years. We are
of opinion that such legislation did not impair the obligation of
the plaintiff's contract.
What has been said is sufficient to dispose of the additional
suggestion to the effect that the cancellation of the record of
sales at which the plaintiff purchased deprived him of his property
without due process of law, in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment. He asserts a proprietary right in such record for what
it was worth. But if the observations made
Page 137 U. S. 258
by us in respect to the first point be sound, he had no such
right after permitting the period to elapse within which he could
bring suit to compel the execution of a conveyance or lease. A
statute of limitation cannot be said to impair the obligation of a
contract or to deprive one of property without due process of law
unless, in its application to an existing right of action, it
unreasonably limits the opportunity to enforce that right by
suit.
Judgment affirmed.