140 P. 704 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1914
Action in ejectment. The case was tried before a jury which rendered a verdict for plaintiff. Judgment followed. Defendants moved for a new trial, in support of which they offered a statement of the case. The motion was denied, and this appeal is from the order denying the same. *154
The land, one hundred and sixty acres in area, is situated in Imperial County. The complaint, filed April 12, 1909, alleged that on January 28, 1907, plaintiff was seized in fee of "that certain 160 acres of land, . . . embraced in Desert Land Entry No. 3024 and in said Desert Land Entry described as the SE 1/4 of section 3, township 15 south, range 14 east; also known as the SE 1/4 of section 36, township 14 south, range 14 east, S. B. M., according to the Imperial survey; and also described as Tract No. 37 in township 14 south, range 14 east, S. B. M., according to the resurvey of said township authorized by act of Congress July 1st, 1902"; that defendants, without right or title, entered into possession and ousted and ejected plaintiff therefrom, and unlawfully withhold possession thereof to her damage in the sum of five hundred dollars; that the rents, issues and profits for the time that plaintiff was excluded from the property is five hundred dollars. By their answer defendants deny plaintiff's title and the alleged ouster; "deny that defendants, or either of them, now unlawfully withhold possession from plaintiff of any of the lands described in plaintiff's said complaint." This last denial as quoted is not only evasive, but a mere conclusion; hence insufficient to raise an issue as to defendants being in possession of the land. (De Godey v. Godey,
On January 26, 1910, after the commencement of the trial, plaintiff, over defendants' objection, was permitted to file a supplemental complaint wherein she alleged that, about July *156 1, 1909, she obtained a restraining order directed to defendants, restraining them from interfering with her in the performance of making improvements upon the land, required by the government as a prerequisite to the issuance of final certificate of purchase therefor, and that under and by virtue of said restraining order she went upon the land and made certain improvements thereon, as a result of which she made her final proof in the United States land-office, which proof was accepted and approved and a final certificate of purchase issued to this plaintiff for the land described in the original complaint; and she was also permitted, over defendants' objections, to offer evidence in support thereof. These rulings constituted error. The granting of the writ of injunction restraining defendants from interfering with plaintiff while she performed the required work as a condition of procuring a final certificate of purchase did not tend in any wise to establish her title. The question involved was whether shehad in fact acquired the government's title, not how she acquired it. If at the commencement of the suit she held a patent or certificate of purchase, which latter, as we have seen, under section 1925 of the Code of Civil Procedure, constitutes prima facie evidence of title, then under the pleadings it was immaterial whether she had made the improvements prescribed by the government as a condition precedent to the granting of a final certificate. The determination of such question is for the United States land department, and, acting within the authority conferred, its final ruling thereon can only be attacked for mistake or fraud.
The final certificate of purchase was obtained months after the commencement of the suit. It is a rule of universal recognition that in ejectment the plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the state of his title as it existed at the time when he commenced the action. (Johnston v. Jones, 66 U.S. (1 Black.) 209, [17 L.Ed. 117].) "Title acquired after the commencement of the action will in no case entitle the plaintiff to recover." (Tyler on Ejectment, p. 76.) To the same effect see: Vol. 15 Cyc., p. 29; Sacramento Savings Bank v. Hynes,
Other errors were committed, due apparently to an erroneous theory as to the issues involved under the pleadings. Defendants, without asserting any right thereto, admit their possession of land the title to which was, at the commencement of the action, alleged by plaintiff to be vested in her. They deny that she had title to the land as alleged. This is the chief issue upon which, if decided in plaintiff's favor, judgment must follow for her. Such title must be evidenced by a patent, or in lieu thereof a certificate of purchase (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1925) issued or assigned to her, the validity and interpretation of which are questions for the court, and not the jury. If issued, then under the present state of the pleadings it is immaterial whether or not she performed the conditions required by the government as a prerequisite to its issuance. A new action (if not barred), based upon the final certificate of purchase issued to plaintiff, or upon a patent, if one has been issued, would greatly simplify the case and in the trial thereof be the means, perhaps, of avoiding many errors of which defendants justly complain.
The order is reversed and the court directed to grant defendants' motion for a new trial.
Conrey, P. J., and James, J., concurred.