125 Cal. 400 | Cal. | 1899
Action to quiet title to a certain tract of land situated in Monterey county. Plaintiff had judgment. Defendant appeals from the order denying his motion for a new trial. The land in question is a piece of about thirteen acres which defendant claims lies in the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 29, township 15, south, range 6 east, but which plaintiff contends is part of the northeast quarter of section 30 of that township. Plaintiff describes in his complaint the particular tract by metes and bounds. Defendant denied' plaintiff’s title and alleged title in himself. Defendant, by way of separate answer, avers that he commenced an action December 31, 1884 (entitled Hebbron v. Graves) against plaintiff in this action "for the recovery of the possession, claiming to be the owner thereof and seised in fee and entitled to possession of the following described land”; then follows the description of certain land lying in sections 19, 20, and 29 of said township, as to which defendant avers that the title was then involved, and also that the location of the line dividing sections 19 and 20 and sections 29 and 30, running north and south, and the location of the comer common to sections 19, 20, 29, and 30 were involved and litigated; and averring that it was admitted by Graves at the trial of said action of Hebbron v. Graves, that, if the boundary line between sections 19 and 20 and 29 and 30 was situated and located as claimed by Hebbron, then that Hebbron was entitled to judgment for the lands described in his complaint; that to entitle plaintiff in this action to recover "the said line running north and south between said sections 29 and 30 must be removed nearly eight chains further east than as located, fixed, and determined, adjudged and decreed by the judgment in the said suit of the said Hebbron against the said Graves, and the common corner to sections 19 and 20, 29 and 30 must he removed six and eighty-four one-hundredths chains east of where the same was located, fixed, determined, adjudged, and decreed in the said judgment of the said Hebbron against the said Graves, duly given an
Plaintiff introduced the patent of the United States, dated April 14, 1890, to the northeast quarter of section 30; a witness testified that the land in question is part of the northeast quarter of section 30. Plaintiff thereupon rested. Defendant showed title to the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter and the east half of the northwest quarter of section 29. It was stipulated that the transcript on appeal in Hebbron v. Graves might be offered and introduced in evidence for the same purposes and “to the same effect as. the original record might be introduced, if the same were, presented”; and the transcript in that case is set out in the transcript in this case. It contains the judgment-roll, statement of the case, the evidence at the first trial, the steps taken to appeal—in short, the entire record on Appeal. Defendant offered the transcript, as counsel stated, for the purpose of showing that the parties were the same as here, and to show that the land involved was the same, and that the object was to settle the boundary lines between the lands of the parties, the location of the corner common to sections 19, 20, 29, and 30, and that counsel would follow up the offer by showing that the appeal was perfected and the judgment of the lower court affirmed, and that “the controversy here is precisely the same controversy as in that suit.” Plaintiff objected to the judgment-roll' on the ground of its immateriality, irrelevancy, and incompetency, and on the same ground objected to the admission of the. statement of the case, part, of the transcript; and it is now claimed by respondent that, the statement is not properly part of this record,, and cannot be considered because there was no distinct ruling upon both of his objections. Some discussion ensued upon the objection, in which the court took part, and counsel for plaintiff stated as follows: “Our principle objection is that it is apparent from the inspection of the record itself (the transcript) that the judgment-roll was made up and that judgment was entered long prior to the title which we are
In support of the ruling of the court respondent relies upon Amesti v. Castro, 49 Cal. 325, and refers also to Caperton v. Schmidt, 26 Cal. 479; 85 Am. Dec. 187. In the first of these cases the question arose between two claimants of contiguous Mexican grants, title to both of which was inchoate at the time the judgment pleaded in bar was entered. In that action the
Subsequently, a patent was issued to Amesti which included the land recovered in the former ejectment suit. Castro's grant was also confirmed, and the survey excluded from his rancho the premises recovered in the ejectment suit. The claimants, being dissatisfied with the survey, caused the same to be returned to the district court for revision under the act of Congress and it was approved and became final. Subsequently, the heirs of Amesti commenced an action in ejectment to recover from the defendants claiming under Castro the same lands which were formerly recovered by the executors of Castro. The only defense offered was the judgment in the former action as an estoppel, in support of which the judgment-roll was offered and was excluded by the trial court, and that ruling was affirmed here. An examination of the opinion will show that the court treated Amesti's title prior to confirmation as incipient under which the question of the boundaries of his land remained undetermined, and that the duty later on of definitely fixing the boundaries rested first with the Mexican government and later, by treaty, with the United States government; and that "it alone, or its properly constituted tribunals, could adjudicate his claim, fix his boundaries, and invest him with perfect title.” In Caperton v. Schmidt, supra, the. court said: "The estoppel of a verdict and judgment is necessarily limited to the rights of the parties as they exist at the time when such verdict and judgment are rendered, and cannot preclude either party from showing that their rights have been varied or extinguished at a subsequent period.”
The case now here is altogether different from Amesti v. Castro, supra. When the parties acquired their rights the surveys had been made and the boundaries of the land had been determined by the government. Graves had a clear right to the northeast quarter of section 30, and could then go and find his land by the survey as already made, and he pre-empted the land according to this survey; and this was true as to Hebbron's title. So far as the boundaries of his land were concerned Graves acquired no new or greater right by his patent than he would
It is not claimed by respondent that there was error or fraud in the original survey, nor was it claimed by him that his patent called for any land different from that described in his final receipt, nor that the land claimed in this action was different from the land claimed in the former action. The subject matter of the action and the parties were admittedly the same, and it is now contended by appellant that the location of the line between sections 19 and 30 and the corner common to sections 19 30, 39, and 30 had to be determined in that action before the court could determine which of the parties owned the land in dispute. Manifestly, the trial court in this action so regarded
But it is urged that the judgment relied upon by defendant is uncertain, ambiguous, and indefinite, and cannot constitute an estoppel. (Citing People v. Frank, 28 Cal. 507; Ferrea v. Chabot, 63 Cal. 564.) In the latter of these cases it is said, quoting from Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606: “A judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction, upon a question directly involved in one suit, is conclusive as to that question in another suit between the same parties; but to this operation of the judgment it must appear, either upon the face of the record, or be shown by extrinsic evidence, that the precise question was raised and determined in the former suit. If there be any uncertainty on this head in the record, the whole subject matter of the action will be at large and open to new contention, unless this uncertainty be removed by extrinsic evidence showing the precise point involved and determined.”
We have carefully examined the pleadings and the judgment-in the former action. It would occupy much space, we think
It is advised that the order be reversed.
Britt, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order is reversed.
Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., Harrison, J.