30 Cal. 630 | Cal. | 1866
Lead Opinion
This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of a tract of land situated within the charter lines of 1851 of the City of San Francisco. The verdict and judgment having been rendered for the plaintiffs, and the motion for a new trial filed by defendant Perley having been denied, he appeals from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.
The plaintiffs directed their efforts to the establishment of two principal propositions: First—That their grantors had prior possession of the premises; and, Second—That they had such an actual possession of the premises as entitled them to the benefit of the Van Ness Ordinance; and for that purpose they introduced evidence to prove several facts which tended to support those propositions, among which were that their grantors erected and for a time maintained a fence along the westerly charter line of the city, and another fence extending
Judgment in forcible entry and detainer not evidence in ejectment.
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The defendant assigns as error the exclusion of the record in Zimmerman v. Perley, which was an action of forcible entry and detainer. He offered, the record in evidence “ for the purpose of showing title, actual possession as between Perley and the tenants of the parties in this suit, Davis and Sharp.” Neither the record nor a statement of the substance of it is before us. It is claimed that Zimmerman was the tenant of the' plaintiffs in this action, that they prosecuted the action, and that, therefore, the judgment is evidence, against them. The objection that the parties in the two actions are not the same is obvious, and that objection is not cured by the proof that the plaintiffs in this action, conducted the action for the forcible entry and paid the expenses. In an action of ejectment, where the landlord appears for the tenant, and conducts the proceedings to judgment in the tenant’s name, there is but little difficulty in holding as a general proposition that the judgment may be set up as a bar or admitted as conclusive evidence against the landlord, with the same effect as against the tenant, for the point in issue is the title or right of posses
Payment of taxes not evidence in ejectment.
The defendant, while testifying as a witness in his own behalf, was asked : “ Who paid taxes upon the property since 1860 ?”—the intention being to show that the defendant had paid the taxes. The Court excluded the testimony upon the plaintiffs’ objection. It is claimed that this was competent evidence, going to show both possession and claim of title on the part of the defendant, and that the non-payment by the plaintiffs tended to show abandonment and disclaimer on their part. If the title vested in either party or their grantees, by virtue of the Van Hess Ordinance, the payment of taxes strengthened neither the title nor the right to the possession ; and on the other hand the non-payment would not impair the
Abandonment of land.
The Court correctly stated to the jury the law upon the question of abandonment, as it has been declared by this Court in many cases, among which may be mentioned: Keene v. Cannovan, 21 Cal. 293; Richardson v. McNulty, 24 Cal. 339; St. John v. Kidd, 26 Cal. 271. The first portion of the eighth instruction asked for by the defendant that “ abandonment is not necessarily a question of intention,” is opposed' to the doctrine of the cases just cited. In one of the instructions the Court says: “ In examining the question of abandonment the jury are entitled to consider any act of the parties aban
Van Ness Ordinance.
The defendant insists with great earnestness that the amount of land, the title to which passed under the Van Ness Ordinance to the person in actual possession, was limited to a single block; and says that this is apparent from the fact that the land is within the charter lines of the city, that all the lands within such limits were intended for and devoted to the erection of buildings, and that by the establishment of the charter line of 1851, the existing scheme of division into blocks was continued to that line. These considerations, it would seem, were sufficient to have induced the authorities of the city to put some restriction upon the amount, that should inure to the benefit of each of the grantees. But the point is decided against the defendant in The City and County of San Francisco v. Beideman, 17 Cal. 462, in which it is said:
Constructive possession gives no title under Van Ness Ordinance.
The defendant requested the Court to instruct the jury that “The mere fact that the plaintiffs hold under deeds describing the tract in controversy, does not in any degree extend their actual possessionbut the instruction was refused. •
The instruction has relation to the claim of title, by the plaintiff under the Van Ness Ordinance, and the kind of possession required on the part of the person seeking to avail himself of the benefit of its provisions. It is agreed on all hands that actual possession, as defined in Wolf v. Baldwin, is necessary ; and the object of the instruction was to state, that the constructive possession which a person acquires of one portion of a tract of land described in a deed, by virtue of his
The doctrine announced in Ellicott v. Pearl, 10 Peters, 443, and Hicks v. Coleman, 25 Cal. 122, and kindred cases, is that one who enters into the actual possession of a portion of a tract of land, claiming the whole, under a deed describing the entire tract by metes and bounds, is not limited in his possession to that portion of which he takes the actual possession, but is deemed to have the constructive possession of the remainder of the tract, if not in the adverse possession of another at the time of the entry. The two kinds of possession that he acquires of the respective portions of the entire tract, by virtue of such entry, differ as widely in their nature, character and incidents, as does that of actual possession from constructive possession acquired by any other means. None of those cases hold that the constructive possession of one portion amounts to the same thing, for all purposes—though it may for certain purposes—as actual possession; nor that the effect of the entry under the deed extends the actual possession, by construction of law, beyond its real limits. To hold that the entry under color of title by deed, extends the actual possession to the limits of the entire tract, would be to assign to him a better position, in some respects, as the claimant of lands, of which he has in fact no title than the owner in fee has, who is deemed to be in constructive possession, because of his title.
In this case, conceding that there'was no question as to the sufficiency of the actual possession by the plaintiffs or their grantors of that portion of the general tract, lying east of the “middle fence,” to entitle them to the benefit of the Van Ness Ordinance, it became material to inquire whether.they also had the actual possession of the portion situated west of the “ middle fence”—the portion really in controversy—and if the principle is admitted, that such actual possession of the eastern portion was by operation of law extended over the western portion, then title could inure to them to that portion
Statute of Limitations.
The Court refused to give the following instruction requested by the defendant: “ The defendants have properly pleaded the five years Statute of Limitations. In this' case, therefore, the plaintiffs (leaving out of view the question of constructive possession, as to which you have' been already charged) cannot recover unless it appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs or their grantors were seized or possessed of the premises in question within five years next before the commencement of this action. That is, within five years next previous to the 29th November, 1862.” The only portion of the premises really in controversy was the portion lying between the “ middle fence” and the charter line, and as to that portion the defendant Perley—but not the other defendants—pleaded the Statute of Limitations. The insertion of the word “defendants” instead of the" “ defendant Perley” was a mere clerical error. The Statute of Limitations was properly pleaded by the defendant Perley as to that portion of the premises just mentioned, and the charge of the Court— very full and clear, and, in all respects except one, quite accurate—was sufficient to cure whatever error there was in the refusal to give the charge requested, were it not for the defect alluded to.
The Court, after having charged the jury that if they found that the actual possession was in the plaintiffs or their grantors on the 1st day of January, 1855, and continuously thereafter until the 20th of June, 1855, but that such possession
The rule is uniform, that title draws the possession to the true owner—that he who holds the title is deemed in law to have the possession of the whole tract, to which his title extends. The source of the title makes no difference in the application of the rule. If the plaintiffs or their grantors acquired the title under the Van Ness Ordinance they must have been in the actual possession, as prescribed in the ordinance, of all the premises granted to them ; that is, they must have had the actual possession on or before the 1st day of January, 1855, and continued in such possession to the 20th of June, 1855, unless “ interrupted by an intruder.” It matters not how they acquired such possession, whether by entry under a deed or in any other manner in which possession may lawfully be obtained. When the title passed to them under the ordinance their rights and liabilities were the same in all
The proposition advanced in the instruction is, that the defendant could not rely on the Statute of Limitations, if the plaintiffs or their grantors, before the passage of the title to them under the ordinance, entered into actual possession of a part of the premises under a deed, claiming the whole, and continued in such possession to a period within five years before suit was brought. The proposition cannot be maintained, unless there is something in the nature of constructive possession acquired and held by the means and in the manner mentioned, differing from that of constructive possession procured in another manner, and which will preserve the premises from intrusion, or prevent the running of the statute in favor of the person who has entered into the adverse possession. We know of no ground for such a distinction, and to hold that it does exist, would place the person acquiring the constructive possession by his entry under color of title, in a stronger and better position to resist the adverse possessor than the one entering into the actual possession of the whole, under a deed conveying the true title—which would be contrary to both principle and authority.
Possession required by the Van Ness Ordinance.
A large portion of the defendant’s argument is devoted to the support of the ground that the evidence is insufficient to
Whether the facts establish possession under Van Ness Ordinance a question of law.
It is proper to add that the facts going to show the actual possession according to the requirements of the ordinance being given or proven, it becomes a question of law, whether those facts establish the requisite actual possession to entitle the claimant to the benefits of the ordinance; and it is the right of the Court to instruct the jury on that question. It was in this view that this Court examined and passed upon matters of fact in Wolf v. Baldwin and the City and County of San Francisco v. Beideman, and held in the one case that the facts did not, and in the other that they did, show the actual possession demanded by the ordinance.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment and in the opinion, except as to that part relating to the admissibility of defendant’s evidence that the taxes on the premises were paid by him.
Concurrence Opinion
I think the record in the forcible entry suit of Zimmerman v. Perley properly rejected.
The Court refused the ninth instruction asked by the defendant, Perley, but gave it substantially in its general charge, with a further explanation which, if I comprehend its import, was in my judgment clearly erroneous. The explanation referred to is set out in full in the leading opinion and need not be repeated here. The explanation in effect informed the jury, that if the plaintiff acquired title under the Van Hess Ordinance by virtue of an actual possession for the period of time prescribed, from January 1st, 1855, to June 20th, following, and after such title vested if he was in possession of any part of the premises to which he had thus acquired title, claiming the whole, within five years before the commencement of the suit, the bar of the Statute of Limitations did not attach to any portion. Or, in other words, that if a party has a good title to a tract of land, and is in possession of any part, claiming title to the whole, such possession of a part will protect him against the Statute of Limitations as to the whole. That is to say, that there can be no such thing as acquiring an adverse possession which would set the Statute of Limitations in motion, of one half of a tract of land, while the owner is in the possession of the other half claiming title to the whole —no such thing as disseizing an owner of a part of a tract of land without disseizing him of the whole. If the Court had' qualified its charge on this point by saying that if the plaintiff had at any time within five years before the commencement of the suit been in possession of a part, claiming the whole, no other party being at the time in the adverse possession of any portion, the bar of the statute would not attach, it would have been unobjectionable. But there is no such, and no equivalent qualification, and the effect of the charge as it -stands is substantially as stated.
For this error I think the judgment should be reversed and a new trial had.