83 Cal. 1 | Cal. | 1890
This was a contest in the superior court of Tulare County as to. the respective rights of the plaintiff and defendant to. purchase a section of swampt land of the state. Judgment passed for the plaintiff, from which the defendant appeals.
The point made for-the-reversal of the judgment is, that the findings of fact do not support it.
The only ground relied upon in the complaint to defeat the defendant’s right to- purchase the land is, that his affidavit filed with the surveyor-general was false, in that it asserted that at the time of making it the defendant knew “ the land applied for and. the exterior bounds thereof,” when he did not so know.
The court found, among other facts necessary to enable the defendant to. recover in, finding 4/that “at the time of making and filing said affidavit and application defendant did not know of any valid claim to said land other than his own; he knew of his own knowledge that there were no settlers thereon, and he did not, and does not now, own swamp and overflowed land which, together with that sought to be purchased by him as aforesaid, exceeded 640 acres.”' But found, in the fifth finding, “that, immediately prior to- the making and filing of his affidavit and application, the defendant went to the section of land in controversy in company with John Gilcrest, a practical surveyor, whom the defendant employed to survey and point out to. him the said section;, they found the northeast corner of the section, which was marked by the government stake standing at that point; the surveyor setup his instrument at this point,and turning it south, projected the east line of said section,and at his request the defendant looked through the instrument along said line, the surveyor- at the same time informing him that he was looking along the east line of said, sec
From this the court, as a conclusion of law, decided that the defendant was not entitled to purchase the land,
The appellate court held in People v. Reed, 81 Cal. 76: “But conceding that the finding is one of fact, or, as counsel terms it, a ‘conclusion of fact/ it is apparent that the court below did not intend to cut off the right of the appellant to test the sufficiency of the specific facts found to show such dedication in the manner indicated. This finding is based upon the other facts found. It recites, in terms, that, ‘by the acts, facts, and matters above found, said premises were by said parties dedicated/ etc. It may be that if this finding had stood alone, and had not been put in this argumentative form, it might have been upheld as a sufficient finding of an ultimate fact. But this cannot be so where the facts are fully found, and the general finding of a dedication is expressly drawn as a conclusion from such facts. Counsel say it does not appear that the court found all the facts proved. But it does appear from the finding itself that it was based entirely upon the facts found, and not, in whole or in part, on facts proved but not found. Therefore, if the specific facts found do not support this one, which is a summing up of the others, the judgment should be reversed.”
The supreme court, in Price v. Beaver, 73 Cal. 625, said: “It is claimed for the appellant that the finding ‘that at said time she knew the land applied for, and the exterior hounds thereof, and knew of her own knowledge that there wrere no settlers thereon/ was not justified by the evidence; and this is the principal point made for a reversal of the judgment. We do not think the judgment should be reversed for the reason urged.....
It is true, the- qode requires any person desiring to purchase swamp and overflowed land to state in his affidavit ‘that he knows the land applied for, and the exterior hounds thereof, and knows of his own knowledge that there are no settlers thereon.’ (Pol. Code, sec. 3443.) And it is also true that in cases of this kind each
In the present case the point seems to he that the defendant did not know the exterior boundaries of the land applied for, because neither his own information, nor that derived from the surveyor he had employed, was sufficient to enable him to have such knowledge in the sense intended by the statute. But the findings of special facts show that the land wras covered with water, except in one corner of the section, and that on this dry land the defendant did find and have located by his surveyor the
It must, therefore, he apparent that the ultimate fact in finding 5"is manifestly inconsistent with the specific facts previously set out in the same finding, and the judgment is, therefore, without proper support. We advise that it be reversed.
Belcher, C. C., and Hayke, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is reversed.