Plaintiff sues for a breach of provision in each of a number of policies of title insurance issued in September, 1929. After service of answer, defendant title company had summary judgment dismissing the complaint under rule 113 of the Rules of Civil Practice.
Taking the text of the policies in provision most favorable to plaintiff, they insured against "defects in, incumbrances upon or liens or charges against the title of the mortgagors or grantors to premises described in the mortgage or trust deed" existing at or prior to the date of the policy "and not excepted under Schedule `B.'" This form of policy was suggested by plaintiff and the assessments hereafter referred to were not excepted. It is not claimed that these assessments were statutory liens at the time of the issuance of the policies but it is contended that they were charges and incumbrances within the meaning of those terms as used in the policies. The typical complaint alleges in paragraph Twelfth that the certificate and policy of insurance of defendant title company "did not state or mention that future assessments would be made against the said real estate on account of improvements already made which when made would become prior liens" to the mortgage purchased by plaintiff and that it was defendant's duty under its contract to do so.
The assessments came into being because of local improvements such as sewers, pavements and sidewalks, which had been constructed, under applicable statutes, in suburban property in certain towns in Monroe county outside the city of Rochester. The improvements had been completed one or two years prior to the issuance of the policies and paid for through bond issues of the several towns. The bonds were to be paid by annual assessments to be levied upon the individual properties benefited. The parties in their briefs have selected chapter 549 of the Laws of 1926 as the statute principally involved. The other statutes are substantially similar.
Taking as an example the town of Brighton, the minutes of the Town Board showed that on June 9, 1928, there was *Page 37 considered the question of the apportionment of the cost of certain street improvements which had theretofore been made; that a proposed assessment roll, apportioning the expenses of the improvements upon the property benefited, having been prepared and submitted, was approved, and a date for the hearing of objections to the said roll was set and the Town Clerk ordered to give the notices required by law; that on June 25, 1928, the Board met for the purpose of hearing objections to said roll, and none having been made the roll and the apportionment therein made on the several lots was finally approved and adopted and the tax therein provided assessed.
Under chapter 549 of the Laws of 1926 the only power to levy assessments is found in section 11. It reads: "The town board shall thereafter in each year, and before the annual meeting for that year of the board of supervisors of the county in which such town is situated, report to said board of supervisors, the amount of such bonds, which will mature within the ensuing year; and the amount of interest payable within said ensuing year; and a statement of the lots or parcels of land liable to pay the same, and the amount chargeable to each. The board of supervisors shall levy such amounts against the property liable, and shall state the amount of the assessment in a separate column, in the annual tax roll, under the name `street improvement;' and such assessment when collected shall be paid to the supervisor, and be by him applied in payment of the principal and interest of said bonds. The amount annually apportioned by the town board, as provided in this section, on any lot or parcel, and included inthe annual tax roll by said board of supervisors, shall be a lien prior and superior to any lien or claim except the lien of an existing tax or local assessment."
The power of apportionment and assessment was conferred on the Town Board by section 9 of chapter 549 and permission granted a property owner to pay in full based upon such assessment, but there could be no levy and no lien until there was annual report by the Town Board of the *Page 38 amount of bonds maturing during the ensuing year, with the amount of interest payable for the same period, followed by annual apportionment by the Town Board upon the lots and parcels liable therefor and inclusion in the annual tax roll by the Board of Supervisors of the county.
It is clear that there was no lien at the time of the issuance of the policies. The question remains, was there a charge or incumbrance? If we consider the insurance contract as analogous to a covenant against incumbrances, it is evident that in this State the word charges is used synonymously with liens and incumbrances. It has no larger meaning. In the Real Property Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 50, § 253) it is provided:
"3. Freedom from incumbrances. A covenant `that the said premises are free from incumbrances,' must be construed as meaning that such premises are free, clear, discharged and unincumbered of and from all former and other gifts, grants, titles, charges, estates, judgments, taxes, assessments, liens and incumbrances, of what nature or kind soever."
In Doonan v. Killilea (222 N.Y. 399, 401) it was said that section 253 of the Real Property Law had reference "not to inchoate assessments or other charges, but to legal liens fully matured. The covenant against incumbrances operates inpraesenti and is broken the instant it is made if an incumbrance exists, but unless the assessment is then an actual lien, the covenant is not broken."
The case of Mayers v. Van Schaick (268 N.Y. 320) is controlling here. It is stronger against plaintiff than is the instant case, since the word used there was "requirements." There Judge LOUGHRAN said: "Title insurance operates to protect a purchaser or a mortgagee against defects in or incumbrances on a title existing at the date of such insurance. It is not prospective in its operation and has no relation to liens or requirements arising thereafter. (Trenton Potteries Co. v.Title Guarantee Trust Co., (176 N.Y. 65, 72.) * * * It follows, we think, that Lawyers Title and Guarantee Company no more agreed with plaintiff *Page 39 to protect him against liability for the unpaid assessment in question than it undertook to indemnify him for taxes to be levied against the premises after delivery of its certificate of title insurance" (pp. 323, 324.)
Plaintiff relies in good part in support of its contention onDePeyster v. Murphy (66 N.Y. 622). In view of the decisions in Real Estate Corp. v. Harper (174 N.Y. 123, 130); Doonan v. Killilea (supra), and Mayers v. Van Schaick (supra) it must be considered that DePeyster v. Murphy (supra) has been overruled.
The case of Getman v. Niferopulos (276 N.Y. 161) is not in conflict with the decision here. There the city of Johnstown was granted the power to impose and levy taxes by its charter. Here the power to levy taxes and assessments was not granted to the town but to the board of supervisors of the county. (Laws of 1926, ch. 549, § 11. See, also, generally, Town Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 62], § 116.)
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
LEHMAN, Ch. J., LOUGHRAN, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur; SEARS and LEWIS, JJ., taking no part.
Judgment affirmed.