98 Cal. 527 | Cal. | 1893
The plaintiff recovered a judgment in this action against the defendant for the conversion of certain wheat. The plaintiff claimed title to the wheat by virtue of his ownership of the land, and the defendant by virtue of a lease executed between him and one Boulware prior to the acquisition of the land by the plaintiff. The land is situated in Yuba County, and was originally owned by Lorenzo Gianella, the father of the defendant, and was conveyed to the plaintiff by á deed of conveyance bearing date April 12, 1888, and recorded two days thereafter. The deed was an ordinary grant, bargain, and sale deed of the land in question, "together with the rents, issues, and profits thereof,” and contained the following covenant: “And the said party of the first part and his heirs, the said premises in quiet and peaceful possession of the said party of the second part, and his heirs and assigns, against the said party of the first part and his heirs, and against all and every person and persons whomsoever lawfully claiming or to claim the same, shall and will warrant, and by these presents forever defend, subject however to a lease to Daniel Boulware, which said lease expires November 1,1889.” The defendant testified that his father had given him a lease of a tract of land, including that conveyed to the plaintiff, upon a money rent, for the term of five years, expiring November 1, 1889, and by virtue thereof on the sixth day of September, 1886, he had leased the same to Boulware for the term of three years from November 1, 1886, by the terms of which Boulware was to pay him a yearly rent or sum of one third of the crops in the stack at the machine. The lease from Lorenzo Gianella to the defendant was not acknowledged or recorded, and the lease from the defendant to Boulware was recorded at the request of the defendant April 3, 1888. The wheat which the defendant is charged
The conveyance from Lorenzo Gianella to the plaintiff had the effect to transfer to him the entire ownership of the land, including its rents, issues, and profits, subject to only such limitations as were contained in the instrument of transfer, or of which the plaintiff had either actual or constructive notice. As the lease to the defendant from his father was not recorded, there was no constructive notice thereby to the plaintiff @f its existence. The lease was a “conveyance'” of the land within the definition of section 1215 of the Civil Code, and the interest in the Zand that was thereby created in the defendant, though limited to a right to receive the products of the land, was as void as against the plaintiff, by reason of the failure to have it recorded, as if it liad been an unrecorded conveyance in fee. The record of the lease from the defendant to Boulware was net constructive notice of the lease to the defendant, or that he had any interest in the land. The. provisions of recording acts are for the protection of subsequent purchasers and encumbrancers from the common grantor, and do not affect the rights of strangers to the claim of title. (Chicago v. Witt, 75 Ill. 211; Losey v. Simpson, 11 N. J. Eq. 249; Traphagen v. Irwin, 18 Neb. 198; Ely v. Wilcox, 20 Wis. 523; Long v. Dollarhide, 24 Cal. 227; 2 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 658, 701.) Records are- only constructive notice of a title of which they enable a party to obtain actual notice or knowledge by means of a search. As the record did not impart any constructive notice to the plaintiff of the rights of the defendant in the land, it for him to show that the had
It clearly appears from the record that the plaintiff was wholly ignorant of any claim by the defendant to an interest in the land or in the lease to Boulware, until many months after he had made the purchase, and the position which the defendant held in the matter of the purchase by the plaintiff gave him every opportunity for giving to the plaintiff actual notice of his unrecorded lease. ÍA.S the representative of his father he had placed the property in the hands of the brokers for sale, and after the sale to the plaintiff had been effected by them, and the deed sent for execution to his father, who lived at Santa Rosa, the defendant wrote for the deed, and it was returned to him, executed by his father and containing the foregoing clause in reference to Boul ware’s lease • and upon its receipt the defendant notified the plaintiff thereof and they went together to a bank
Certain errors of law are specified in the statement, but none of them deserve any particular notice. It was within the discretion of the court to allow the plaintiff, after the motion for a non-suit had been denied, to supplement his case by additional proof. The objection to allowing any testimony by the witnesses thereafter called, upon the ground that after the motion for the non-suit had been denied it was incompetent to call them, cannot be used as against any particular testimony thereafter introduced, that was not specially objected to.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
De Haven, J., Beatty, C. J., and McFarland, J., concurred.