74 Cal. 301 | Cal. | 1887
— This is an action to reform a deed. Judgment went for plaintiff in the court below; and from the judgment and order denying a new trial defendants appeal.
The following are the material facts: On and before December 18, 1867, Patrick Breen and James Dunne
As a matter of fact, the said line run by said Smith was not correct. It left in the northeast part deeded to said Dunne 1,110.64 acres more land than was in the southeast part deeded to said Breen. This mistake was not discovered until about June, 1880. Its discovery came about in this way: The state constitution adopted in 1879, and statutes passed under it, required large tracts of land to be sectionized, where the same had not been done by the United States government, for purposes of assessment and taxation; and plaintiff, for the purpose of complying with ’this requirement, employed a surveyor to sectionize his land, who for the first time discovered and made known the said mistake made by said Smith. Upon the discovery of the mistake, plaintiff requested defendants to rectify it; and they refused to do so.
This case has been argued by counsel for appellants upon the theory that there should be applied to it the rule that where coterminous owners of land establish a boundary line between them, and acquiesce in its correctness during the period of statutory limitation, such line cannot afterward be disturbed. Such is certainly the general rule in actions of ejectment to quiet title, etc., although it is, perhaps, not definitely settled to be the rule, even in those cases, when there has been a mutual mistake. (See Sheils v. Haley, 61 Cal. 157, and Smith v. Robarts, 8 West Coast Rep. 503.) But this is an action to reform a deed, — to correct a mistake in a written instrument and make it conform to the real intent of the parties. That a court of equity has power to correct such a mistake, in a proper case, is, of course, beyond doubt, and that the facts here make a proper case is equally clear. It is established beyond doubt that the two tenants in common intended to convey by deed to
But we think that the action was commenced in time. Section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure enumerates the kinds of actions which must be commenced within three years; and subdivision 4 of said section is as follows: -—
“An action for relief on the ground of fraud or mistake. The cause of action in such case not to be deemed to have accrued until the discovery, by the aggrieved: party, of the facts constituting the fraud or mistake.”
In the case at bar, the discovery of the mistake was, not made until 1880, at which time the cause of action, “is deemed to have accrued.” The action was com-, meneed in less than two years afterward. It was therefore commenced in time, unless the circumstances were such that plaintiff ought to have known the mistake,, and therefore should be held in law to have had knowledge of it before the time of its actual discovery. But we think that there were no circumstances from which, he should be charged with such knowledge. After the-partition line had been run by a surveyor believed to be competent and honest, and who had been specially employed for that purpose, there was-nothing to excite the suspicion of either party that such line did not divide the rancho into two equal parts. Looking at, or walking or riding over, or using for grazing purposes, a tract of land containing over twenty-four thousand acres, would
The court below did not err in holding that, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, the boundaries of the rancho established by the final survey of the United States surveyor-general, made under the direction of and approved by the United States government, which was incorporated into the patent, and followed by said Smith in fixing said partition line, may be taken to be correct.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Thornton, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.