87 Cal. 329 | Cal. | 1891
Lead Opinion
In this case there are two appeals presented by defendant Brickell. The first, 12992, from the judgment on the judgment roll, and the second, 13574, from the order denying Briclcell’s motion for a new trial. They are to be considered together.
The action is brought to establish a trust against defendant Brickell. The lands in controversy are portions of what is known as outside lands of the city and county of San .Francisco, and not within that portion affected by the Van Ness ordinance. John' H. Baker went into possession of the land in suit, called Baker tract, or Golden Gate ranch, on July 9, 1860. He purchased this and other lands within his possession from one James C. Garner. He was then a married man, and at the time above stated went into possession with' his wife, 'Maria Baker (who is defendant Maria Baker Batchelder), and their children. John H. Baker died in March, 1863, leaving his wife surviving, with six chil
At the time of the passage of this act, the legal title to this land was in the United States. The land granted by the act was within the corporate limits of the city of San Francisco, and the right and title of the United States was by it relinquished and granted to the city of San Francisco and its successors, subject to certain reservations designated therein, upon the following trusts, viz.: That all the said land not heretofore granted to said city should be disposed of and conveyed by said city to parties in bo7ia fide actual possession thereof by themselves or tenants on the passage of this act, in such quantities and upon such terms and conditions as "the legislature of the state of California may prescribe, except such parcels thereof as may be reserved and set apart by ordinance of said city for public, use. A proviso follows the above, which has no bearing on the case, and need not be further adverted to.
It may be remarked here that no part of the land in suit was ever reserved or set apart by ordinance or otherwise for public use.
Some observations are here appropriate as to the nature of the title of the city successor tb the former pueblo of San Francisco. The character of this title has been the subject of discussion in similar cases, both in the supreme court of the United States and in this court, and it may be regarded as settled'law that the title of the pueblo, as well as that of the city, was not an indefeasible estate. Ownership of such lands cannot be strictly affirmed of either pueblo or
The legal title to this land passed to the United States from Mexico on Us acquisition of California, and passed to the city by the act of March 8, 1866, upon the trusts above set forth, for the benefit of such of its inhabitants as were in the bona fids actual possession of the same at the date of the passage of the act which is above referred to, viz., on the eighth day of March, 1866.
Now, who was in the bona fide actual possession of the land on the 8th of March, 1866? For whose benefit and behalf was the grant by Congress made? Obviously, Maria Baker. She was then, and before that date,an inhabitant of the city of San Francisco, and residing on the lands with her children. That the grant was made to the head of the family there can be no question, and Maria Baker was then head of her family. We consider this determined in Labish v. Hardy, 77 Cal. 327, where a similar question was determined on similar language in the grant made by act. of Congress to the corporate authority of the town of Santa Cruz.
Here there was no contract, either expressed or implied, from which the tenancy could be inferred, nor is there any reason to hold that Mrs. Baker became the tenant, in any sense, of her husband, on his,decease.
To carry the act of the 8th of March, 1866, into execution, the board of supervisors passed an ordinance known as order 800, which was ratified and affirmed by the act of the legislature passed March 27, 1868. Order 800 was passed by the board of supervisors on the 14th of January, 1868. (See Stats. 1867-68, pp. 379 et seq.)
Subsequently, in 1870, another act of the legislature was passed to expedite the settlement of the land tilles in the city and county of San Francisco, etc., forming order 866 of the board of supervisors of the city. (See Stats. 1869-70, p. 353.) This enactment was made to enable the parties entitled to procure conveyances of the title to. these lauds from the city and county of San Francisco.
Of the act of Congress, and of the ordinance of the city and county of San Francisco, and of the acts of the legislature, it may be remarked that nowhere in them is the title of any other person recognized or allowed, save those who were in actual bona fide possession on the 8th of March,
By the order 800, ratified as above, it was provided that a map or plan of these outside lands should be made and adopted by the board of supervisors above mentioned; that upon the completion of the map it should be deposited for public inspection in the office of the clerk of the board of supervisors, there to remain for a period of thirty days, notice whereof should be given by publication in three of the daily papers of the city during the time that the map should so remain in the clerk’s office.
The occupant of any tract of land was required by order 800, ratified as above, to present a diagram of his land, and have it delineated on the map made by. the supervisors. This delineation of a tract, however, could not be made on the map, unless all the taxes on it should have been paid for five fiscal years preceding the year beginning July 1, 1866. The claimant was also, before the title could be procured, required to surrender all claim to any streets and highways. By act of 1870 (Stats. 1869-70, p. 353), passed March 14th of that year, the claimant was empowered to file a petition for a grant from the city of the tract of land of which he was in possession as above mentioned. By the provisions of this act, the petitioner was to set forth in such petition, verified as required by the act, a claim that he or his tenants, or the persons through whom he claims or derives possession, had been, from and including the eighth day of March, 1866, and still was, in possession of a portion of such outside land, and that he, or the person through whom he claims or derives possession, has paid to the tax collector of the city and county of San Francisco the amount assessed by the outside land commission upon the land described in the
The third section of the act provides for the execution of a deed of conveyance signed by the mayor of the said city and county, and acknowledged and delivered by him to the applicant of the tract of land awarded to him, to which shall be attached the corporate seal of the city and county above named, provided the petitioner, before
By the third section it is provided that the conveyance executed under the provisions of this act shall operate as an acknowledgment, on the part of the city and county aforesaid, that the title to the land described in it has passed under and by virtue of order 800 and ordinance 822, and of the several acts of Congress, and of the legislature ratifying said order and ordinance, under .the authority of which the same have been passed. The said conveyance shall likewise operate to grant, convey, remise, and release to the party, his heirs and assigns, named therein, the lands in such conveyance described, and all the estate and interest, present and future, of the city and county of San Francisco, in and to such lands.
On the tenth day of January, 1873, Maria Baker, after due and regular proceedings had under order 800, and the acts of the legislature of 1868 and 1870, was granted a conveyance, in the usual form, of all the lands described in the complaint as being part of the Baker ranch, which convej’ance was executed to her by the authorities of the city and county, as required by the act of 1870, above referred to, and in the mode therein set forth, conveying to her the title of the city and county of San Francisco, as declared in the fifth section of the act of 1870, the provisions of which have been fully stated above. When the conveyance was made to her it does not appear that any suit in regard to the land was pending against her. Not appearing, this court must regard it as not existing.
Maria Baker intermarried with one David F. Batch-
It further appears, from the finding herein, that, on the 23d of September, 1862, Maria Baker and her husband, John H. Baker, executed a declaration of homestead, in. due form of law, embracing the land involved in tins litigation.
This homestead estate, under the provision of the act of 1862, under which the declaration xvas made and recorded, on the death of either spouse vested absolutely in the survivor. Such is the effect of the fourth section of the act of 1862 (see Herrold v. Reen, 58 Cal. 445-447), where the point is considered and decided. (See also cases cited in the opinion in that ease.) It xvas not necessary that this homestead estate should be set apart by the probate court to the surviving spouse. It vested in the survivor by descent. (Herrold v. Reen, 58 Cal. 445-447.) So on the death of John H. Baker, in March 1863, the homestead estate x'ested in his surviving xvife, Maria Baker. Under such circumstances, the contention cannot be upheld that the possession of Maria Baker was not, on the 8th of March, 1866, bona fide. She xvas not only in actual possession, but she was there having title to the xvhole land, its against any heir of John II. Baker, by the legal devolution to "her of the xvhole land as homestead. In such a state and condition, the
This conclusion disposes of this case; for in no event would any trust arise here in favor of any of the children, issue of the marriage of Maria Baker and her husband, John H. Baker. The plaintiff could have no claim to any portion of the land. There is nothing on which to build a trust. A trust arises from contract, or from circumstances which affect the conscience of a party, and charge him with the rights of another. Here there was no contract between Maria and John H. Baker constituting a trust, and no circumstances affecting the conscience of Maria Baker, charging her with any duty to her children in regard to the lands in suit.
John H. Baker bad no title to this land. His settlement and possession on it were merely permissive. He acquired no right to it by such possession. ,The title ■was then in the United States, to give it to whom it thought best, and when it did make a donation, in March, 1866, he could not be the recipient of a grant. He had then departed this life, and could take nothing by the act of Congress passed on the day above mentioned. The possession on that day was that of his wife, the then head of the family, Maria Baker.
She owed no duty to her children, save support, maintenance, and education, — none in regard to this land. Independent of the homestead which had arisen under the act of 1862, which, as we have seen, passed to her on the death of her husband, we think she was, on the 8th of March, 1866, in the actual bona fide possession of the land; but when the homestead right is taken into account, there can, in our judgment, be no question or doubt as to the bonafides of her actual possession.
She was therefore the grantee, under the act of Congress, of the land in question. The grant to Maria Baker was a pure donation, and liow any trust in favor of any other person could arise out of it, we cannot surmise.
The appellant claimed that the rights and equities acquired by her parents, through occupancy and possession of the premises, constituted community property, one half of which belonged to her mother, and at her death, by the law then existing, descended to and vested in her children. The mother of appellant died in 1:856, ten years prior to the passage of the act of Congress in J uly, 1866.
The court, per Sharpstein, J., said: "The beneficiaries under the act of Congress were clearly those in the bona fide occupancy of the land in the town of Santa Cruz at the date of the passage of said act, which was ten years after the death of appellant’s mother. An occupancy which terminated ten years before the passage of the act svould not be a bona fide occupancy at the time of its passage. We are unaware of any law under which a bare occupancy of any public land of the United States wests in the occupant any right or equities in or to the land so occupied. We think no property was acquired in the premises in controversy, by either of the parents of appellant, prior to the passage of the act of July 22, 1866.”
This judgment was concurred in by five of the justices
The other circumstances, viz., the fact that Maria Baker qualified and was appointed as administratrix of John H. Baker, and put the land in suit in the inventory returned by her to the probate court as assets of her intestate's estate, and entered on the administration of the estate, are entirely immaterial. We are aware of no law by which a person appointed administrator loses his land by so acting.
There is no estoppel on Maria Baker to claim her own property, under such circumstances. She no doubt acted in this matter through ignorance of her rights, inops eonsiliif or if advised at all, from having been improperly counseled. It is useless to dwell on the points adverted to, in relation to the administration, which are totally immaterial, and cannot, in any proper view of them, affect the decision of this-ease.
The judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial, in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
So ordered.
McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J.a concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Dissenting Opinion
Respondent's petition for a rehearing of this cause having been denied by the court, I cannot allow the occasion to pass without expressing my dissent from the conclusion of the Department upon the point principally considered in the opinion of Justice Thornton.
If the decision of the court had. been rested upon the proposition that under the homestead laws of California Mrs. Baker, on the death of her husband, became by right of survivorship the sole and exclusive owner, as against her children, of the entire estate in the lands
But the judgment and order of the superior court are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial, to be had in accordance with the views expressed in the opinion, which thereby become, and must remain, the law of the case.
Amongst the views so expressed is one from which I feel constrained to express my dissent.
It is held — as I understand the opinion — that Mrs. Baker, by mere force of the act of Congress of 1866 granting to the cit}'' of San Francisco the outside lands, and independent of any right accruing to her under our homestead laws, became entitled to a conveyance from the city of all the lands left in her possession by the death of her husband, to be held by her in her own right, to the exclusion of her. children. This conclusion is based upon a narrow and literal construction of the clause of the act requiring the city to convey the lands granted to the parties in bona fide actual possession thereof by themselves or tenants at the date of the passage of the act. It assumes either that the person lawfully in possession, by himself or tenant, at the date of the passage of the act, was the sole object of the bounty of the government, without regard to the character or capacity in which he had obtained or held the possession; or it assumes that when John H. Baker died, in 1863, leaving his widow and minor children in possession of the land in controversy, he had no estate in the land to which they could succeed, and that the possession so devolved upon her as head of the family was held by her absolutely in her own right, and not in any representative capacity.
If this is true, — if the children of John H. Baker inherited no interest in this land from him when he died, — it must be equally true that if their mother also had