22 Cal. 255 | Cal. | 1863
By operation of Sec. 260 of the Civil Practice Act, and it may be said also of some other sections of that act, and certain sections
By the findings of the Court below it appears that the defendants took possession of the mortgaged premises by permission of the mortgagor, the Omega Ditch Company. But this was in the month of September, 1860, and by the same findings it appears that the plaintiff received the Sheriff’s deed, which constituted his title, on the twenty-first day of March, 1860. Therefore, at the time the Omega Ditch Company gave the permission to take possession, the title to the property and the right to the possession was "not in them, but in the plaintiff in this action. Hence, permission given by them at that time, conferred no right of entry upon the defendants.
Under these circumstances, if there was error in admitting the testimony of the witness Hawley, which is the main objection urged by the appellants, it was immaterial.
The objection that the respondents can only rely upon the point of the want of identity between the Omega Ditch and the Virginia Ditch, because that is the ground upon which the Court below based its conclusion of law, is not tenable. It does not appear that the conclusion of law was based alone upon that finding. The Court speaks of it as “ one of the main questions in the case.”
Hone of the errors assigned affect the findings which, as we have above specified, establish the plaintiff’s right to recover in this action.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.