39 Cal. 24 | Cal. | 1870
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Since a rehearing was granted in this case, Ave have been furnished with able and elaborate briefs by the respective counsel, and have carefully reviewed the propositions of law presented on the appeal.
The notice of motion for a new trial, specifies, as one of the grounds, the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and, as a separate ground, that the verdict is against law. The statement, in support of the motion, fails to specify the particulars wherein the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict as required by Section 195 of the Practice Act, which provides “that, if no such specification be made, the statement shall be disregarded.” But the statement purports to contain all the evidence given on the trial; and the counsel for the appellants insists, with much earnestness, I that if it clearly appears, from all the evidence, that the verdict ought to have been for the defendants, then the ver-¡ diet is against law and ought to be set aside on that ground, notwithstanding the omission to specify in the statement the ¡ particulars wherein the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict. But the argument in support of this proposi-"' tion, hoAvever plausible, is based on a misconception of the true intent of this provision of the Practice Act. Prior to the adoption of this provision, it was sufficient for the moving party to allege, in general terms, in his notice of motion, that the evidence Avas insufficient to justify the verdict, without specifying any particulars wherein it was insufficient. The practical result was, that the adverse party had no notice of the particular ground on which the verdict was to be assailed in this respect. He came to the argument of the motion in utter ignorance of the points on which his
It is not enough to aver that the verdict is against law, and then offer to support the averment by showing that the verdict is not supported by the evidence, and is, for that reason, “ against law.” • If such a course of proceeding was tolerated, all the other specific grounds for new trial, enumerated in the statute, might, for the same reason, be condensed into the one general ground, that “the verdict is against law;” for, in that general sense, it would be “against law, ” if there was any valid reason whatsoever for a new trial. But the statute, in authorizing a new trial on the ground that the verdict “is against law,” evidently does not intend to include in that phrase all or any of the other several distinct and separate grounds of the motion, which are specified in the Act. Whatever may be the class of cases to which that phrase was intended to apply, it is clear that it has no application to cases falling within either of the other subdivisions, into which the grounds for a'new trial are divided by the statute.
For these reasons, this Court has no power to review the evidence in this cause, in order to ascertain whether it supports the verdict. In this respect, the appellants are concluded by the verdict.
On the trial, John Treat, a witness for the defendants, testified, on his examination in chief, in a somewhat rambling and disjointed manner, that in the year 1850 he took possession of the Potrero, by repairing the stone wall across the peninsula; that George Treat paid for the whole or the greater part of the labor and material used in making the repairs, but then had no interest in. the scheme for getting possession of the Potrero; but it was understood between them, that George was subsequently to become interested; that he subsequently entered into an agreement with the administrator of De Haro to pay rent for the land, and paid some rent under the agreement; that whilst he was so occupying the land, he allowed some persons to go there to make bricks; that he leased a brick-yard to one Weir. He then proceeds as follows : “My impression is they paid rent; am
On the cross-examination of the same witness, he was asked by the plaintiff: ‘ Did you not turn over all the right you had to that property to George Treat, finally?” He, answers: “I did,- with the exception of the lease that was' spoken of already—the piece of land that was rented to| Weir, on the Potrero. There were certain portions that were not turned over to him; a piece that there was a brickyard on. I turned over all, except those who held under a lease from me—that is, he would have the same rights that I was to have. I turned over all to him, except those to whom I had leased the same rights that I had. I think that arrangement was consummated in the latter part of 1851. I am not positive whether the transfer was made then to George Treat or Dyson.”
On re-examination, by the defendants, he testified: “ I turned over such rights as I had?—the^iglj); to pasture cattle there; and, also, I had certain rights to use the soil.” The defendants proceed as follows : “ You said that you turned over the possession to George Treat, and that he was to have the same rights that you had ? ” The witness answers : “I do not know, positively, whether I turned it over to Treat or Dyson; they were both acting; Dyson, I think, was acting for Treat. ”
The Court, in our opinion, was fully justified in excluding the question, on the ground that it had already been fully answered, and no good could result from a repetition of the previous testimony. The Nisi Prius Court must necessarily exercise a sound discretion in respect to the latitude to be allowed in sifting the testimony of a witness, by a rigid and often prolix examination.
In the cross-examination of an adverse witness, who betrays an evident bias for the party calling him, or, on the examination in chief, of a reluctant witness, called by the party himself, the Court should exercise a sound discretion in properly relaxing the rule, so as to promote the ends of justice; but, in this instance, we see no reason to believe that the Court abused its discretion in refusing to permit the witness, on re-examination by the defendants, to be further interrogated on a point concerning which he had already fully testified.
The only points remaining for discussion, which I deem it necessary to notice, relate to the instructions to the jury.
The defendants asked for three instructions, the first of which was given, with a qualification added by the Court, and the two last were properly refused. They do not correctly define the presumptions arising from prior possession, as against a mere intruder without title, or color of title.
At the instance of the plaintiff, the Court gave twelve instructions to the jury, the second of which is in the following words;
‘ ‘ If the jury are satisfied from the evidence given in tliis cause, that George Treat entered upon and inclosed the Potrero in the year 1850, and are further satisfied that he then made a complete inclosure of the same, and that such inclosure was sufficient to turn and protect stock, and that he actually used such inclosure for that purpose up to the*39 time of the alleged conveyance to Dyson, and that he deeded the same to Dyson, and that the land was nsed by Dyson subsequent thereto, for the purpose of pasturage, and that the land was suitable for pasturage; and that the defendants, or either of them who have answered, or those under whom they claim, entered adversely and subsequent to the completion of said inclosure, and while the said land was being so used by said Treat prior, and, by said Dyson, after said conveyance, you will find for the plaintiff against such defendant, or defendants, provided such defendant, or defendants, was occupying the premises at the time of the commencement of this suit.”
This instruction is objected to by the defendants as wholly unauthorized by the testimony, and calculated to mislead the jury.
There is no contrariety in the evidence as to the natural features of the Potrero, nor as to the acts performed by Treat or Dyson, which, it is claimed, amounted, in law, to an inclosure and to the actual possession of the land. The testimony shows the Potrero to be a peninsula, containing about one thousand acres; bounded on the north by Mission creek and bay, on the east by the bay of San Francisco, on the south by the same bay and Precita creek, and on the west by a stone wall and ditch, running from Mission creek on the north to Precita creek on the south, across the neck of the peninsula. It further appears that the wall and ditch were ancient works, probably built by the priests of the adjoining Mission of Dolores at an early day; and that in 1850, they had become considerably dilapitated, so as no longer to prevent the ingress and egress of cattle; that John^ Treat, or George Treat, or the two jointly, in the summer or autumn of 1850, repaired the wall and ditch, so as that, thereafter, it was sufficient to turn cattle; that they erected a gate in the wall, through which admission was had to the Potrero, and a small corral, for herding cattle, inside the wall, together with a shanty, in which the gate-keeper resided ; that, immediately after the wall was repaired and the gate erected, they commenced to receive horses for pasturage and used the Potrero for that purpose—having, at times, several hundred head of horses pasturing there for hire;
If the fact does not sufficiently appear in proof, the Court will take judicial notice, that the Potrero, in the year 1850, was separated from the City of San Francisco, as it then was, only by Mission creek and bay, and that it is now a portion of the city, divided into lots, blocks and streets. Courts take judicial notice of the geographical divisions of counties and incorporated cities, and of current events of general notoriety, and of the ports and waters of the State in which the tide ebbs and flows. (People v. Smith, 1 Cal. 9; United States v. La Vengeance, 3 Dall. 297; Peyroux v. Howard, 7 Pet. 341.)
In United States v. La Vengeance, the Court took judicial notice of the geographical position of Sandy Hook. In the case of The Apollon (9 Wheat. 374), the Court held that it was bound to take judicial notice of public facts and geographical positions; and, in Peyroux v. Howard, that it would take judicial notice of the position of the City of New Orleans, and whether the tide ebbed and flowed there. “In fine, Courts will generally take notice of whatever ought to be generally known within the limits of their jurisdiction.” (1 Greenl. Ev. Sec. 6.)
It would be an absurdity to hold that the Courts of this State will not take judicial notice of the position of the City of San Francisco and of Mission bay, the northern boundary of the Potrero, or of Mission creek, which is declared by law to be a navigable stream, and in which the tide ebbs and flows. Nor can the Court assume to be ignorant of the fact that the Potrero is divided into lots, blocks and streets,
These being the facts of the case, do they establish, or tend to establish, in George Treat or Dyson such an actual possession of the whole Potrero, as to have justified the Court in giving the instruction above quoted ?
For the plaintiff, the argument is, that the two creeks, the bay and the wall and ditch formed a perfect inclosure, capable of turning and protecting cattle, and that it would be an absurdity to hold that a fence, along the margin of the bay and creek, was necessary, in order to establish their possession, when those natural barriers formed a more perfect defense than any artificial structure could have done; that, by repairing the wall and erecting the gate, Treat and Dyson held the only means of access to the property, and that it was more suitable for pasturage than for any other pur-z pose, in its then condition, and they used it in that way; that, by these means, they subjected the property to their exclusive dominion and control, and had the actual possession, the possessio peclis, until they were intruded upon by the defendants, who were trespassers without title.
On the other hand, the defendants claim that where so large a body of land is surrounded—except across a narrow neck of it—by tide waters, having a beach on which the public has a right to land and to use for any lawful purpose, a fence across the neck does not, of itself, give'possession of or dominion over the whole peninsula; that a beach on tide waters is a public highway, and is no more effective, as an inclosure, than a public road would be; that, though a precipitous bluff or cliff may be sufficient to form a part of an inclosure, whether it front on navigable waters or not, there is no proof in this case of any such bluff or cliff, nor of any barrier along the beach, except the water; that there having been no sufficient inclosure to constitute possession of itself, the mere temporary use of the land for pasturage, and par] ticularly unaccompanied by a bona fide claim of title, is not, under the former decisions of this Court, such a possessio
When the instruction refers to a “complete inclosure” of the Potrero by George Treat, we must construe this phrase in reference to the proofs. There was not the slightest evidence of any “inclosure” of the Potrero by Treat, except such as resulted from repairing the wall and ditch. We cannot, therefore, infer that this instruction was founded on the hypothesis that there was the least evidence tending to prove that Treat erected a fence, ditch or wall around the entire Potrero,
The Court evidently intended to say to the jury, that if ¡Treat repaired the wall and ditch in such a manner, that, together with the other natural barriers, it formed a complete inclosure, sufficient to turn cattle, and if the land was ¡suitable for pasturage, and was used by Treat, and after-wards by Dyson for that purpose, up to the time of the entry by the defendants, then, that there had been estabished in Dyson such possessio pedis as entitled the plaintiff |to recover. We think the jury could not have failed to understand the instruction in this light, and could not, therefore, have been misled by it in this respect; and particularly when considered* in connection with the fourth instruction, which refers more definitely to the inclosure by means of the wall and ditch, and by the creeks and waters of the bay.
We have carefully considered the able and ingenious argument of the defendants’ counsel, to the effect that the tide waters of the bay, with a beach in front of them, on which the public was free to land, and to use for any legitimate purpose, would not constitute a sufficient barrier on that
Nor is there any force in the argument that the verdict should be set aside because the complaint states the land to be in part bounded on one side by a marsh. It is evident that a marsh may not only be so sharply defined, where it| meets the upland, as to accurately mark a boundary, but iti may be also utterly impenetrable by man or beast. We need’ no definition by lexicographers to satisfy us that marshes are often of this character. If it be claimed that the proof fails ( to show that this particular marsh was of that character, and that this was a material fact to be proved by the plaintiff to support the verdict, the answer is two-fold : First—That all, the presumptions are in support of the judgment; and, Second-—-That the defendants, in their statement on the motion for new trial, failed to specify wherein the evidence was insufficient, and it is too late to raise the point for the first time in this Court.
This brings us to the consideration of what we deem to bej the most important and difficult point in the case. Wti assume that the Court, in the instruction on which we havd been commenting, clearly intended to say to the jury—andj that the jury so understood it—that if Treat repaired the wall and ditch, and if these, together with the creeks and waters of the bay, formed a sufficient inclosure to turn cattle, and if the land was suitable for pasturage, and was used by Treat and afterwards by Dyson for that purpose, up to the; time of the entry by the defendants, without title, that, in'; that event, it resulted, as a conclusion of law, that there had been established in Dyson such a possessio pedis as entitled I the plaintiff to recover. For the reasons already stated, w
But we need not multiply authorities on a point concerning which there can be little or no difference of opinion. The only difficulty lies in the application of these principles to the case at bar. It is clearly established, both by reason and authority, that the acts of ownership and dominion over
The same principle might be illustrated by numerous examples. Acts of dominion over a town lot, which would be sufficient to establish an actual possession, might be wholly inadequate to that end, as applied to a tract of one thousand acres; and, on the other hand, the herding of cattle, for a
In this case the Court held, as a conclusion of law, that ¡by repairing the wall and ditch, and using the land for pasturage, if it was suitable for that purpose, and, if the inclospre.was sufficient to turn cattle, Dyson did all that was {necessary to notify the public of his claim, and to establish Ian actual possession in law.
If Treat had inclosed the Potrero by a fence or ditch ¡entirely around it, and sufficient to turn cattle, it would not admit of discussion, that, by the inclosure alone, and without other acts of dominion, he would have established an ¡actual possession of the land. An inclosure of that character, is, in itself, sufficient proof of an actual' possession. ¡But it is so, only, because of the erection of the artificial ‘barrier is an open, notorious act of" dominion, proclaiming in unmistakable terms to the public that the land is appropriated and set apart from the adjoining lands for the exclusive use of the person who erected the barrier. A mere intention to occupy land, however openly proclaimed, is not possession. The intention must be carried into actual execution by such open, unequivocal and notorious acts of dominion, as plainly indicate to .the public that the person who performs them has appropriated the land and claims
If the rule we are discussing was of universal application, a fence from Redwood City to the sea shore, including the entire peninsula, would establish an actual possession—a possessio pedis of the whole of it; and if the rule were uni
To avoid misconception on this point, we will illustrate the proposition by an example : It is a well known fact that the island of Santa Catalina, lying off the coast of this State, contains about fifty thousand acres, and is surrounded by the waters of the Pacific Ocean, which, of course, form a complete barrier against cattle. In other words, it is completely inclosed by impregnable, natural barriers. If one should desire to acquire the actual possession, the possessio pedis, of this whole island, it would not be necessary to erect artificial obstructions around it, for nature has already inclosed it more securely than man could do. He might adopt these natural obstructions as his inclosure, and they; would doubtless form an important link in the chain of facts' tending to establish a possessio pedis; but he must perform^ other and sufficient acts of ownership to render his claim of| exclusive dominion, apparent and notorious. If he should go upon the island and erect a hut in the center of it, and proclaim, in words, that he claimed the whole island, would this, of itself, establish in him the actual possession of the whole ? No respectable Court would uphold so preposterous a claim. Nor would it materially strengthen his claim of exclusive dominion, if it should appear that he pastured a few cattle or cultivated a patch of land on the island, for the obvious reason that these trivial acts of ownership are not the usual and natural means by which exclusive dominion is acquired or exercised over so large a body of land, similarly situated, and would tend, in a very small degree, to give notoriety to his claim, and to inform the public that the whole island was appropriated for his exclusive use. On the contrary, if he should settle upon the island with the intention to acquire the possession of it, should pasture large herds of cattle upon it, allowing them to roam all over it, or cultivate extensive fields on various portions of it, should prevent others from landing on it, should cut timber
For these reasons, the judgment should be reversed and v a new trial ordered.
Mr. Justice Wallace expressed no opinion.