41 Cal. 552 | Cal. | 1871
The Sheriff’s deed of February 13th, 1869, transferred to the plaintiff all the interest the defendant had in the land in controversy at the date of the levy of the executions thereon, under which the sale thereof was subsequently made to plaintiff by the Sheriff) and no subsequently-acquired right or interest in such lands by the defendant could inure to the plaintiff as purchaser at such execution sale. For would such sale, followed by a Sheriff’s deed to the purchaser, estop the defendant from asserting a subsequently-acquired interest or right of possession in such lands, as against the right of possession of and interest therein sold under execution and transferred by the Sheriff’s deed.
It is apparent from the record that at the date of the levy of the executions by the Sheriff, and at the date of the sale of the lands thereunder—also at the date of the Sheriff’s deed to the purchaser at such sale—the demanded premises were public lands of the United States; that defendant was in possession thereof, claiming right of possession merely, without title or any vested interest therein, as against the United States. This possessory claim of defendant, and nothing more, passed to the plaintiff by virtue of his purchase on execution sale and subsequent deed of the Sheriff. By the subsequent entry of the same lands as a homestead by the defendant, on the 1st of February, 1870, under the Act of
This, however, could not relieve the defendant from his responsibility to plaintiff for the rents and profits of the premises from- the date of the Sherifl"’s deed to plaintiff up to the date of defendant’s homestead entry of the premises, or for so much of such period as defendant occupied the same.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings.