17 F. 119 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1883
The contest in this case arises out of a defect in a conveyance from Henry Gierke to the town of San Francisco, executed in 1850; but the day and month are left blank. It was acknowledged, however, April 8, 1850, and recorded on the following day. Gierke, before the land was surveyed into lots, had received a grant of two 50-vara lots in 1848; or rather an unsurveyed lot 50 by 100 varas, equal to two 50-vara lots. Upon extending the surveys, subsequently, by direction of the ayuntamiento, six 50-vara lots
By referring to page 22 of this same Book B, the opposite page facing “pago 23,” we find the certificate of a grant of the premises in question, which states, as it was originally written, that, they were granted to Gerke by the authorities of the town on September 8, 1846, the very date mentioned in the deed containing the false description; and the grant in that case is also of “an equal quantity of land.” It is true that the figure 8, both in this grant and in the other grant certified on the same page, has, at some time sinco originally entered, been written over the figure 6, so that it now reads 1848 instead of 1846. But the original entry, as clearly appears, was 1846, and it is not known or satisfactorily shown when the change was in fact made. That it was made is clearly apparent, both from inspection and other testimony to the fact. Undoubtedly, the date should originally have been 1848, for Leavenworth was not alcalde in 1846, the date at which the grant was first certified
Whether the correction in the record was made before the execution of the deed in question containing the false description is not satisfactorily shown. If afterwards, then the description in the deed in question, at the time it was made, corresponded with the date then stated in the certificate, as well as with that of the “deed itself, bearing date September 8, 1846.” It is quite probable that the deed in question was drawn with this certificate on page 22 before the draftsman at the timo, and as the two pages face each other, in glancing at if to get the number his eye fell upon the wrong page, and hence the mistake in the page in his draft of the deed. But he would hardly have copied 1846 had the correction been then made, as the record now shows very distinctly 1848—the 8 in heavy lines appearing written over the 6. But, however this may be, by looking to the original petition and grant, a part of the record of the title, and to the deeds of the other lots conveyed in exchange, wherein the transaction of the exchange is fully stated, and the lots exchanged on both sides designated by their proper numbers, and considering the fact that the deed in question states the consideration to be a conveyance of “an equal quantity of land,” thereby directing attention to the other conveyance and the other surrounding facts disclosed by the evidence, and it is perfectly clear which is the false description, and that the falsity consists in appending to the description, which was clearly sufficient without it, “page 23,” instead of “page 22,” as it should have been if the page was to be mentioned at all. Page 23 being manifestly the false description, it must be rejected; and, rejecting it altogether, the application of the remaining description to the proper subject-matter is easy and entirely clear, in view of the surrounding-facts. That such rejection must be made, and effect given to the description left, is established by the decision of the United States supreme court in White v. Liming, 93 U. S. 524, in which the judgment of this court was affirmed, wherein several distinct calls of physical objects w-ere rejected, and the last course reversed, on the ground that the calls rejected and the course reversed appeared to be falsa demonstralio. That case presents a remarkable instance of the extent to which courts are justified in going in the rejection of false descriptions in written instruments.
Rejecting the false description apparent on the record, the part which is false appearing from the contemporaneous records and documentary evidence, and from the undisputed facts surrounding the
Again, the construction contemporaneously and subsequently put upon the deed in question, and for many years acted upon and acquiesced in by the.parties to the deed, brings us to the same conclusion. The city, acting under the deed, took possession of the property .intended and supposed to be conveyed, without objection from Gerke, who acquiesced in that possession for more than a quarter of a century after the transaction, before making, so far as appears, any adverse claim, or before he conveyed what he described as “all his right, title, and interest in the land” to his son-in-law, Cameron, while he had long before conveyed the lots received in exchange for the lots in question, as well' as all other lots granted to him by the alcalde, or the town of San Francisco. This, itself, is a practical construction of the defective deed by the acts of both parties to it; and in such eases the acts of the parties showing their own construction may be considered by the court in construing a deed of doubtful import. Malford v. Le Franc, 26 Cal. 108-110, and cases cited; Reamer v. Nesmith, 34 Cal. 627. Midford v. Le Franc was cited approvingly as an authority on this point by the supreme -court of the United States, in Steinbach v. Stewart, 11 Wall. 576.
Iam satisfied from the attendant facts that Cameron had actual notice of the condition of the title, if such notice or want of notice could affect his right in the matter. It is scarcely possible, considering his relation to the grantor and the notoriety of the facts,—being, as it were, a part of the public history of the town and city of San Francisco,—that he should not have known all about it. But if he did not, the state of the record of the various documents connected with the transaction, with the cross-references from one record to another,—the falsity of the description in some particulars apparent on the record itself of the defective deed,—the long-continued and then-present notorious and open possession of defendant afforded him means of notice of the real character of the transaction, and of the title of the city, that he was bound to avail himself of; and, making the inquiry he was called upon to make, he could not have failed to discover the truth. Besides, his conveyance itself only purports to convey such interest as the grantor had, which, under the circumstances, is a fact of great significance. Cameron himself testifies that he knew that. Gerke was not in possession, and that the premises were occupied and claimed as a public square; that he had an abstract of the record of the title, and consulted several eminent lawyers as to its validity before the conveyance to him. The conveyance to the plaintiff must also have been with notice; certainly with ample means of knowledge. Besides, he was not a purchaser for a valuable consideration. The conveyance purports on its face to have been made for the nominal
I have no doubt as to where the title is, and there must be findings and a judgment for the defendant; and it is so ordered