74 Cal. 468 | Cal. | 1887
This case seems very plainly to be within the rule laid down in Crosby v. Dowd, 61 Cal. 557.
A tract of 909 acres is described by metes and bounds, “excepting, however, those portions of the above-described tract which are described in those certain conveyances executed by the party of the first part hereto, which are recorded respectively in book 22 of deeds, page 477, book 32 of deeds, page 113, book 36 of deeds, page 446, and book 48 of deeds, page 466, records of Los Angeles County, to which deeds and the records thereof reference is hereby made for further description; the remainder of the tract which is hereby conveyed containing about 719 acres.”
This description is in the mortgage, complaint on foreclosure, the decree, sheriff's certificate, and deed, and nowhere except by the above reference is there any description given of any of the excepted tracts.
The record of the foreclosure therefore contains no description from which it can be ascertained without such reference, no matter how familiar one might be with all the descriptive calls given as to any specific portion of the described land, whether or not it was conveyed by the mortgage deed, or whether the decree is operative upon it. Nor could he tell whether any portion of the metes and bounds of the nine-hundred-acre tract remains as any portion of the metes and bounds of the seven-hundred-acre tract.
This case is attempted to be differentiated from Crosby
A mere statement of this contention would seem to go a long way toward answering it. There is evidently the same indeterminateness in regard to this description as in the other, and the sheriff would be no better able to find the land or to determine what lands he should put a purchaser in possession of. And there is the same possibility that when the deeds were examined they would be required to be construed by a court to determine what lands were included.
Nor can it be construed as to the intent of the mortgagor in the larger tract better than in Crosby v. Dowd, which was described as a portion of the Santa Itita rancho.
By express statement she did not mortgage her interest in the entire tract, and the judgment does not profess to operate upon her interest in the entire tract. The judgment record, therefore, is not complete, but other documents not in the record must be referred to to ascertain what is the subject-matter upon which the decree operates.
But I am of the opinion that Crosby v. Dowd ought not to be allowed to stand. I think I have examined all the cases cited in support of the decision by counsel or by the court, and I fail to find any authority for holding the judgment void upon a collateral attack. It may be admitted that such a decree is erroneous, and will be cor
Such an amendment would be in the interests of justice, and for the interest of both parties: for the mortgagor, that the property sold with a good description may bring a better price, and his debt be paid; for the mortgagee similarly, that he may collect his money. For these reasons, as -well as that the writ may contain specific directions to the officer, who is required at his peril to execute it, the record of the foreclosure should contain a perfect description of the property. If, when a writ is issued, it is found that it fails to describe any property, the sheriff may refuse to execute it, or the court, upon application, may quash it, and restore the party, if he has been dispossessed.
.But for what reason is the judgment void? Certainly not for lack of jurisdiction, either as to the subject-matter or the person. What nullity known and recognized by established rules of law is found in this judgment? If any, it must be because it is a proceeding to establish a lien, and there is no description of the thing to which the lien attaches. But by established rules of evidence such a reference is not meaningless, and .does furnish a description of the thing. It is admitted that it is sufficient, and does amply describe the thing in the mortgage. But it is said that a deed is evidentiary, and may be helped out by other evidence, while a decree is final and determinative. The distinction is illusory; but admitting the difference, it has no bearing upon this question.
The judgment is held .void simply because it is meaningless. This distinction admits that it is not meaningless, but declares that it is not sufficiently explicit for the convenience of the court or its officer.
Plainly the judgment is not void for the want of a description which identified the subject upon which the judgment is to operate. But the rule is unsafe, and the distinction illusory.
The trouble is said to be that the sheriff may not know with certainty what land he is to place the purchaser in possession of. The same uncertainty may, and generally will, exist where metes and bounds are given. The court says, assuming that the records can be found, the descriptive calls may be found indefinite, so as to render it impossible to locate them. So, too, any landmarks called for may, for aught the court can ordinarily know, be impossible of location. The call for a pile of rocks on the bank of a creek may be very uncertain, while the reference to the deed may be definite and clear.
But in a very large class of cases where metes and bounds are given, it still becomes necessary to refer to deeds and to records to locate the boundaries. What is the practical difference between the case at bar and one in which a description giving metes and bounds describes the boundary as beginning at a stake at the northeast corner of the land conveyed to Smith by Brown by deed executed so and so, or a line running north to the southern boundary of Brown’s land?
Or what is the difference between this and a description as lot 2, in section 2, etc., according to the United States land surveys ? The lot could not be found without referring to the plat in the land-office. The same is true of a description of a quarter-section of land according to the system of United States land surveys. We take judicial notice of the system, but not of the actual surveys, and we know that in many places there are wide departures from the general system. The plat
I cannot see how a judgment can be pronounced a nullity for uncertainty of description, unless the court can see that nothing is described. But here the description is not even uncertain or doubtful. It simply does not come up to some ideal standard laid down by the courts as more convenient for them and their officers. The true rule would seem to be that the judgment is not void. That the purchaser must, however, rely upon the description, and if it be found so defective when tested by rules of evidence ordinarily applied to the subject that nothing can be found, he will fail, otherwise he should recover. ,
I admit that the case of Crosby v. Dowd was very maturely considered, and that it should not be overruled unless plainly wrong. However, it is one of those decisions under which no rights can have grown up, and I think the rule mistakenly laid down exceedingly mischievous. A sense of justice will, I think, if the case be not overruled, impose upon this court the labor of differentiating case after case from that.
I think the judgment should be affirmed.
Searls, C. J., Paterson, J., McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Thornton, J., dissented.
Rehearing denied.