No. 3,062 | Cal. | Jul 1, 1872

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:

BLissling was in the actual possession and occupation in 1853, of the block of land of which the premises in controversy form a part. In that year he executed three deeds— one to Bryant & Irvine, one to O’Connor (the defendant’s grantor), and one to Wainright (the plaintiff’s grantor). The purchasers entered upon their respective tracts, and agreed to measure off with a tape-line, their respective lots, put up temporary fences, and that when the true lines should be *561ascertained, each should have his land according to the true lines; and they accordingly measured the lots with a tapeline, and each entered upon, and they and their grantees have since occupied, the parcels of land according to the measurement thus made. The grantees of O’Connor had no knowledge of the agreement in respect to the measurement of the lots. The true measurement shows that a narrow strip of the land conveyed to AVainwright, is included within the lines of the O’Connor lot, as run by the “tape-line measurement.” The title to the land in controversy passed, by virtue of the Van Hess Ordinance and its confirmation, either to AVainwright or to those holding under the O’Con-nor deed. The defendants claim that title, and also set up the Statute of Limitations. The jury found for the plaintiff.

In Brooks v. Hyde, 37 Cal. 366" court="Cal." date_filed="1869-07-01" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/brooks-v-hyde-5436888?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="5436888">37 Cal. 366, we stated that “ we are inclined to consider the word ‘ tenant,’ as used in the Van Hess Ordinance, as meaning a conventional tenant.” The point, however, was not decided, nor, indeed, was it involved in the case. Since that case, we have had occasion to consider the question again, and we were not inclined to restrict the meaning of the word “tenant,” as used in the ordinance, to so narrow a limit as was intimated in Brooks v. Hyde. AVe held, in Broad v. Broad, 40 Cal. 493" court="Cal." date_filed="1871-01-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/broad-v-broad-5437319?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="5437319">40 Cal. 493, that the term included a tenant in common, and we are satisfied that the decision is in entire harmony with the meaning and intent of the ordinance. It is not requisite that the relation of landlord and tenant should have existed between the parties, but whenever one party held the actual possession, in subordination to another party, under or by virtue of an agreement, either express or implied, the party so in possession will, in our opinion, fall within the meaning of the word “tenant,” as employed in the ordinance. Here each party entered upon the portion of land which was outside his true line, in subor*562dination to the title of the party upon whom he encroached, and with the agreement to restore the possession when the true lines should be ascertained; and he held the possession of the same by the license or permission of the owner of the adjoining land.

In respect to the defense of adverse possession, it is sufficient to say that a possession commenced as in this case is not adverse, and does not become so, until there is a distinct repudiation of the agreement under which the possession was taken. The grantees of O’Connor, having simply succeeded him in the possession of that to which they acquired no title by their deeds, occupy no better position than he did. The rule laid down in Sneed v. Osborn, 25 Cal. 619" court="Cal." date_filed="1864-07-01" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/sneed-v-osborn-5435589?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="5435589">25 Cal. 619, has no application here, for there the parties were not running a mere temporary line, as was done in this case, but were establishing what they then understood to be the true line, and it cannot be said here, as was said there, that the parties have acquiesced, for any period, in the lines which were run as the true lines.

Judgment affirmed.

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