189 P. 1044 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1920
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment rendered against her in an action to quiet title to real property in Kern County. The defenses relied upon by defendants were that title had been acquired, first, by tax deed to L. Cohn in August, 1904; and, second, by adverse possession under color of title. On the trial it was stipulated that plaintiff was the owner and in possession of the property at the time of the tax sale, and that she had not divested herself of her interest or title therein by any conveyance executed since that date. The trial court found that the tax deed under which defendants claimed title was void for the reason that the property was sold to the state and thereafter by the state to L. Cohn for a less amount in each instance than provided by law. The judgment quieting title in C. Cohn was based upon the second defense, which is the only one to be considered upon this appeal.
On August 13, 1904, the tax collector of Kern County executed a deed of the property involved in this action to defendant L. Cohn. In May, 1914, L. Cohn, by quitclaim deed, conveyed to defendant C. Cohn. The affairs of L. Cohn with relation to the purchase and occupation of this land were conducted by C. Cohn, the latter claiming to have acted as agent for the former.
Appellant contends that the judgment based upon the conclusion of the trial court that title to the land in question is vested in C. Cohn by reason of adverse possession is erroneous because: First, the evidence does not sustain the finding that the possession of C. Cohn was hostile, exclusive, continuous, and uninterrupted; and, second, there is no showing that the acts of C. Cohn claimed to have been done by him as the agent of L. Cohn, and so relied upon as constituting adverse possession by L. Cohn, were done with the knowledge or consent of L. Cohn or under any authority to perform those acts.
All taxes were paid by C. Cohn from the date of the tax deed to L. Cohn to the commencement of this action on October 5, 1917. The land was not personally occupied by either of the Cohns, but was rented to other parties by C. Cohn on behalf of L. Cohn prior to the conveyance of 1914 and thereafter by C. Cohn in his own behalf. C. Cohn testified that prior to 1907 or 1908 he rented the land to one John Maio, who did not himself occupy it, he being in the *21 business of re-renting to others for sheep-grazing purposes. There is no evidence to indicate the date it was so rented to him, the length of the lease, or the use to which it was put during that period. Maio's tenancy need be given no further consideration, as there can be no doubt that the evidence offered with regard to it failed to meet the requirements for adverse possession. In 1908 C. Cohn rented the land to J. B. Raymond. From that time until the trial, to which time his tenancy continued, the adverse possession of the land by defendants is founded solely upon its occupancy by Raymond. Occupation of the land by Raymond consisted in its use for sheep-grazing purposes only. The land was uninclosed and formed part of a large open tract. Raymond testified that he rented the land from C. Cohn and went there the first of January, 1908, remaining until April; that some years he took sheep there in the summer for dry feed which he had stored upon the land — "maybe a couple of times every five or six years" — but in the ordinary years he pastured his sheep upon the land as soon as the fall rains started the green feed, and used all the feed that grew on the land (pasturing one thousand five hundred or two thousand sheep there for two or three months each year), and that he then took his sheep and left the place entirely. He also testified that he had five or six sections of land, including the half section involved herein, upon which his sheep grazed; that they were not impounded by a fence or in any other way; and that two or three months covered the time spent upon the entire tract and not the time spent upon the Cohn half section alone. The evidence shows that each year he had a sheep corral on this particular half section, sometimes a tent for the herders, and that on some occasions he left a man on it to guard the dry feed when he took his sheep to other pastures. Raymond knew the boundaries of the land in question and testified that during the time he was on the land each year no other sheep grazed on it and it was not used by anyone else for any purpose. The witness Reynolds was produced by respondents and testified that, so far as he was aware, no one else used the land during Raymond's absence. His testimony developed the fact that he lived with his family on a tract of land adjoining the half section from 1910 to the date of the trial, and that, though he was away from that vicinity during a portion of *22 the period referred to, he returned to his home two or three times each week and often remained for two weeks at a time.
The foregoing are the facts relied upon by respondents for the purpose of showing adverse possession. [1] The exclusive use of uninclosed land for grazing during the grazing season may constitute adverse possession. (Webber v. Clarke,
[2] In this respect respondents were required to prove a negative. No evidence of any character was offered by appellant even suggesting possession or user during any portion of the period of twenty years she had failed to pay any taxes upon the property. The witness Raymond did testify that during the period of his lease, 1908-18, no one else used or occupied the land during the pasturing season except his sublessee during the season of 1917. The witness Reynolds testified that, with the exception of the same sublessee, the land had not been occupied or used by anyone other than respondents' lessee for any other purpose since 1910. This witness lived on the land adjoining that in controversy and was, apparently, the one having the best knowledge of the occupancy of the land.
The evidence of adverse possession differs materially from that considered in Cory v. Hotchkiss, supra, and Saecker v.Cohn, supra, and brings the case squarely within the rule ofWebber v. Clarke, supra. The evidence, though meager, is sufficient to support the finding of the trial court that respondent had maintained an exclusive and open possession for the statutory period.
[3] Appellant also argues that the evidence is insufficient to support the conclusion that C. Cohn was authorized to represent his brother to the extent that adverse possession might be acquired through such agency. But the evidence is that the land was purchased by C. Cohn in the name and on behalf of his brother; that C. Cohn was a general agent to transact all kinds of business for his brother in Kern County; that as such agent he rented this property for his *23 brother and paid all taxes on it for him since 1904 and until 1914, when the brother by deed conveyed the property to him. This testimony was received in evidence without objection and, taken with the ratification contained in the deed of the principal and the inferences which could properly be drawn from the entire evidence, was sufficient to support the finding.
The judgment is affirmed.
Langdon, P. J., and Brittain, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on June 3, 1920.
Angellotti, C. J., Shaw, J., Lawlor, J., Wilbur, J., Olney, J., and Sloane, J., concurred.