28 Cal. 331 | Cal. | 1865
By the Court,
Ejectment for a parcel of land in the coal district in Contra Costa County. The land in controversy consists of about twenty-seven acres. The plaintiff claims it by virtue of proceedings taken under the Act of the Legislature entitled “An Act prescribing the mode of maintaining and defending possessory actions on public lands in this State,” passed in 1852. (Laws 1852, p. 158.) The cause was tried by the Court, a jury having been waived, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs, which was subsequently set aside, and a new trial granted. The Court is asked to reverse the order granting a new trial.
On the 13th of August, 1860, Hawxhurst, one ofithe plaintiffs, made an affidavit with the view of securing a possessory right to a certain piece of land therein described. The parcel of land described consisted of one hundred and sixty acres. This affidavit was filed with the Recorder of the county on the same day, and was recorded. On the 7th of March, 1863, Hawxhurst made another affidavit, having for its object the securing of a possessory right to public land under the Act of 1852, which purports to be in aid of his first affidavit and to enable him to comply with the provisions of the statute, and “to make a claim to the land” therein described, “if the former one-did not.” This affidavit was filed for record, and recorded in the Recorder’s office of the county on the day of its date. The particular piece of land in controversy was not included by the description contained in the affidavit first made by Hawxhurst. The statute provides the mode by which a right under the statute to the possession of public land may be acquired, and if the right sought to be acquired fails because
From the evidence in the case it would seem that for some time before March, 1863, the defendants had been in possession of the particular premises in controversy, extracting from the same large quantities of coal, and were prosecuting the work of mining for coal when Hawxhurst made his second affidavit. It does not appear that at that time Hawxhurst was settled upon and occupying the land in controversy, or that he thereafter, before this action was commenced, occupied or was settled upon it “.for the purpose of cultivating or grazing the the same,” or for any other purpose. The mere making of an affidavit in conformity with the provisions of the statute, and procuring the same to be duly recorded, and causing the land described to be surveyed by the County Surveyor, would not invest the affiant with the right to recover the possession of the property, as against a person who was there, and before then, in the actual possession of it.
What may be the merits of plaintiffs’ claim to the possession of the twenty-seven acres in controversy we do not undertake to say, because the question is not in a condition to be fully passed on by this Court; but we are clear that the plaintiffs cannot depend for the right which they claim, on the proceeding taken by Hawxhurst in August, 1860, under the Act of the Legislature already referred to, and also on the proceeding taken by him in March, 1863, under the same Act. Without passing directly upon the particular points which induced the
Order affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Sanderson expressed no opinion.