93 P. 867 | Cal. | 1908
The plaintiffs, claiming to be the owners and entitled to the possession of an undivided three fourths of a placer mining claim in Placer County, brought this action to recover damages from the defendant, which, it is alleged, unlawfully entered upon plaintiffs' ground and took therefrom gold-bearing earth and gravel of the value of five thousand dollars. The complaint asks judgment for three thousand seven hundred and fifty dollars, three fourths of the value of the earth and gravel so taken. The cause was tried without a jury, and the court, finding in favor of the plaintiffs' ownership as alleged, and that the defendant had entered and taken away earth and gravel of the value of $3,573.83, gave plaintiffs judgment for $2,679.77. The defendant appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
1. The property claimed by plaintiffs is known as the Harkness claim. The defendant was in possession of ground lying to the north of the Harkness claim. Certain ground had been worked by the defendant, and the dispute between the parties was whether this ground lay north or south of the northerly boundary line of the Harkness claim. The contention of the plaintiffs was that their northerly boundary line ran north of the ground worked by the defendant, and that this ground was therefore included within their claim. The plaintiffs, after showing that one Whitney was superintendent of defendant's, mine, were allowed to show, over proper objection by the defendant, that Whitney had made statements and admissions tending to support plaintiffs' contention as to the location of the boundary line. This was error. There was no showing of the extent of Whitney's authority beyond the fact that he was in charge of the defendant's property. An agent cannot bind his principal by declarations against the principal's interest, unless the making of such declarations is within the scope of the agent's authority. As superintendent in charge of a mine, Whitney had no authority to make any statements regarding the extent of the ground claimed or owned by his *714
principal, and any such statements, if made by him, were not binding upon the appellant. (Walrath v. Champion Mining Co.,
2. In view of the necessity for another trial, a point discussed by counsel may be briefly referred to. The plaintiffs offered evidence tending to show that in 1894 the title to the Harkness claim was in Harkness Gold Mining Company, a corporation. To deraign their title, the plaintiffs relied upon an execution sale following a judgment in the justice court of township number six of Placer County, against Harkness Gold Mining Company. The sale was to Spencer and Sellier, who conveyed to one Cusick, under whom the plaintiffs claim. It is urged by appellant that the court erred in admitting in evidence the certificate of sale and the deed issued by the constable to Spencer and Sellier pursuant to the execution sale, for the reason that the plaintiffs had failed to show that the justice court had acquired jurisdiction to render the judgment upon which the execution was based. It appears that all of the original papers in that action had been lost or destroyed. Plaintiffs offered in evidence the entries in the *715 justice's docket, which were, as the court stated, "admitted only for the purpose of showing those matters that may lawfully be entered in the justice's docket." The entry with reference to return of summons reads as follows: —
"1894, June 15. Summons returned as served in San Francisco, California, on the seventh day of June, 1894, by J.J. McDade, Sheriff of San Francisco Co., California, by J.J. Tiernan, Deputy Sheriff, on W.S. Chapman, President of the Harkness Gold Mining Co., the defendant therein named, by delivering to him personally, in the city and county of San Francisco, state of California, a copy of said summons attached to a copy of the complaint in said action."
No appearance having been made, judgment by default was rendered on the twenty-eighth day of June, 1894.
The entries required to be made in a justice's docket are primafacie evidence of the facts stated. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 912.) But the fact of the service of summons is not one of the matters required to be so entered (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 911), and the entry above quoted is therefore no evidence that the justice ever acquired jurisdiction to render the judgment upon which the execution was issued. (Fisk v. Mitchell,
It is unnecessary to consider the other points made.
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed.
Shaw, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.