105 Cal. 102 | Cal. | 1894
This action was commenced August 12, 1873, by William Ford against Robert Boyle, Benjamin S. Green, and five others, for the possession of certain land in San Mateo county. The defendants other than Green answered the complaint, and upon a trial of the action a judgment of nonsuit was entered in their favor August 12; 1881. August 22, 1881, the plaintiff caused a judgment to be entered in his favor against the defendant Green, whose default for want of an answer had been entered October 10, 1873. Prior to the entry of these judgments Ford had been adjudged a bankrupt, and Henry 0. Hyde, who had been appointed his assignee in bankruptcy, was substituted as plaintiff in the action. Green died in 1882, and on the 20th of November, 1888, an ex parte order of the superior court was made upon an application on behalf of the plaintiff for the issuance of a writ of restitution upon the judgment against Green. The writ was issued, and on the next day was placed in the hands of the sheriff, who, on
The lands involved in this proceeding have been in
In their application to vacate the order restoring ■Thornton to the possession of the lands from which he had been evicted under the writ of restitution issued November 20, 1888, the appellants state as the grounds therefor, “ that no persons are in possession of any of the lands in said writ described, who entered under the writ of restitution issued herein on the twenty-first day of November, 1888, and executed on the 23d of the same month; that B. S. Thornton has no right, title, or interest in or to said premises, nor any right to the possession, and that the execution of said writ issued on the 26th of March, 1892, would be an abuse of the process of the court.”
Upon the reversal of the orders for the writs of restitution Thornton was entitled to be restored to all that he had lost by virtue of these orders, and to be placed in the same position'as he was prior to the execution of the writ. This would require the removal of all persons who had been placed in possession of the land by virtue of the writ, as well as all others who had come in under them after that date. The sheriff returned that he executed the writ of restitution of November 21, 1888, “ by placing C. P. Bobinson, the assignee of the plaintiff therein, by his agent, Mr. T. M. Osmont, in the quiet and peaceable possession of the premises therein described.” Hannah Green, one of the appellants, states in her affidavit that the writ was executed as to her by her attorning to C. P. Bobinson, and that she signed a memorandum acknowledging the rights of Bobinson to the possession of the premises; that Bobinson had conveyed all his title to the premises to T. M. Osmont, and that for more than two years last past (that is, prior to April 6,1892, the date of her affidavit) she had occupied
The right of a plaintiff, in whose favor a judgment for the recovery of land has been rendered, to dispossess under a writ of restitution, not only the defendants in the action, but all persons who have entered under them subsequent to its commencement, is not questioned on this appeal. But in the present case the main and almost the only question which the court below was called upon to determine, was whether Thornton had entered under Green after the commencement of the action in 1873, and whether the other occupants of the land were tenants of Thornton. Upon both of these propositions there was a very sharp and decided conflict in the affidavits, and the action of the court in denying the motion of the appellants must be affirmed, upon the ground that the decisions of the trial court, upon conflicting statements of fact, will not be reviewed by this court. But even if the conflict in the affidavits had been less marked, and only such as to create an uncertainty in the mind of the judge, he was not required to grant the motion of the appellants, but would have been justified in requiring that their respective rights to the land should be presented to a jury before which the witnesses might appear in person, and be subjected to a cross-examination upon their statements.
The suggestion of the appellants, that because the plaintiffs’ title is derived through a purchase under the foreclosure of a mortgage, they are entitled to the same relief as if they had asked for a writ of assistance under the decree of foreclosure, cannot be maintained. This action is an ordinary action of ejectment, and the relief to be given is the same as that in any other action of ejectment, irrespective of the evidence by which the plaintiff may establish his right to the possession of the land.
The notice of appeal contains also an appeal from an
The orders appealed from are affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied. •