85 Cal. 574 | Cal. | 1890
The plaintiff brought this action to recover possession of two lots of land in the town of Tulare, the complaint being in the ordinary form in ejectment. The. defendant, by her answer, denied all the averments of the complaint, and then, by way of cross-complaint, set up that she purchased the lots on the twenty-fifth day of July, 1882, and received a good and sufficient bargain and sale deed thereof, in her own name, which was afterwards recorded, and that she “ paid therefor money owned by her in her own exclusive right”; that ever since the date of her purchase she had been the owner of the lots, and in the actual and exclusive possession thereof; that the plaintiff claimed an estate or interest in the property adverse to her, under and by virtue of a deed made to him by a constable, under date of December 31, 1886, in pursuance of a sale of the property under an execution issued on a judgment against one H. G. Rogers, but that the plaintiff had no estate, right, title, or interest whatever therein; wherefore she prayed that her title be quieted. The answer to the cross-complaint denied that the defendant purchased the lots at the time named, or at all, or that she “paid for said land, or any portion thereof, with money owned by her in her own exclusive right, or owned by her at all”; and it alleged that the property was purchased by H. G. Rogers, who was, at the time, the husband of defendant, and paid for with money earned by him, and which was their community property, and that plaintiff had acquired the title of H. G. Rogers under an execution sale, and was the owner of
1. It is argued for the appellant that the verdict of a jury in an equity case is merely advisory, and has no force or effect until approved and adopted by the court; that there is nothing in the record here to show that the verdict of the jury was adopted by the court, and hence there is no finding upon the material issue as to whether or not the lots were paid for with money which was the separate property of the defendant; and that, for the want of such finding, the judgment should be reversed..
2. It is contended that the verdict of the jury “cannot be considered, for the further reason that it does not appear by any indorsement thereon to have ever been identified as such a verdict, or filed as such, and does not appear to have been recorded or entered upon the minutes of the court.” But the clerk of the trial court certifies “ the foregoing to be a full, true, and correct transcript of the issues submitted and answers thereto, and
3. It is further contended that the findings of the court in regard to the marriage relation of the defendant are contradictory, and being so, that they cannot support the judgment. This contention is based upon the following facts: The property -was purchased in July; 1882, and the plaintiff alleged in his answer to the cross-complaint that it was purchased by “ one H. G. Rogers, who was at such time the husband of defendant.” The court found that H. G. Rogers and the defendant were married in 1878, and that at the time the judgment was obtained against him, and the property levied on, sold and conveyed by the constable, they were husband and wife. It also found that all the allegations of plaintiff's answer to the cross-complaint were untrue.
Now, conceding, without deciding, that there was a conflict in the findings in regard to the defendant’s marital relations in 1882, still the question is, Was that issue, in view of the other findings, at all material? The defendant was sued in ejectment as a feme sole, and the question was, Did she own the demanded premises? or did the plaintiff own them? If the property was bought and paid for by defendant with money which she had at the time of her marriage in 1878, and which continued to be her separate property, then clearly she was the owner, and was entitled to have judgment entered quieting her title as against the plaintiff, whether at the time of her purchase she was the wife of H. G. Rogers or not. In our opinion, when the verdict of the jury was returned and adopted by the court, the issue referred to
Hayne, C., and Foote, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing' opinion, the judgment is affirmed.