10 Wash. 439 | Wash. | 1894
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This is an appeal from a judgment rendered upon a trial had in pursuance of the order of this court upon a former appeal reversing the judgment theretofore rendered (7 Wash. 23; 34 Pac. 199). Upon such new trial the pleadings were amended so that some new features were introduced. The principal contentions of the respective parties were, however, founded upon substantially the same facts as in the first trial. Then and now the plaintiffs claimed title in fee to the property in question, and sought to eject the defendant therefrom. Then and now the contention of the defendant was that the property was not that of the plaintiffs, but belonged to the United States, and was occupied by him for the purpose of enabling him to obtain title from the government. In addition to this, the amended answer set up certain facts tending to show that one of the grantors of the plaintiffs had so conducted himself towards the property in question and its occupation by defendant that he and they were estopped from asserting any title thereto as against him.
The first ground of defense was the one mainly relied upon at the first trial, and the evidence to establish the same was such that it was held upon the former appeal that it was sufficient to support the verdict rendered thereon, and the judgment would have been affirmed but for an erroneous construction of the statute of limitations.
Neither can we find that there was a waiver at the trial of a right to rely upon this ‘ ‘ island theory ” as a defense to plaintiffs’ action. Some such assertion was made at the time by counsel for plaintiffs, but the defendant so qualified his acquiescence therein that he was not thereby deprived of the right to rely upon all the facts pleaded which he could prove.
We have examined all the evidence and compared it with that put in upon the former trial, and are satisfied that the proof as to the ‘ ‘ island theory ’ ’ was much stronger upon this trial than upon the former one. At that trial there was a substantial contradiction by the plaintiffs of the proof
What we have said is sufficient to show that the action of the court in directing a verdict for the plaintiffs constituted reversible error, but in view of another trial we will discuss the other questions involved in the case. One of them is the claim on the part of the defendant that the plaintiffs did not prove title, in themselves. An examination of the record shows there is force in this contention so far as the actual introduction of evidence is concerned, but it is claimed that such evidence was made unnecessary by reason of certain stipulations and agreements entered into by the defendant. The record upon this appeal does not fully disclose all that may have had binding force upon the defendant in reference to this question, and we call attention to it now in order that at the next trial the matter may be more clearly put before the jury.
The other question grows out of the pleadings and proofs offered to show that plaintiffs were estopped from asserting title against the defendant. From these allegations and proofs the following facts were sufficiently established to require a submission of the questions relating thereto to the jury : That Christian Brownfield was the owner of a homestead claim upon the mainland opposite the property in question ; that said property was an island cut off from the mainland by a channel about eighty feet wide covered with water during the greater portion of the year to the depth of three or four feet; that the meander line which bounded his claim along the lake front was upon said mainland quite a distance from the center of the channel which divided the island therefrom ; that while he was such owner of the upland he invited the defendant to go upon this island and there make his home; that at that time he disclaimed all interest in the property himself, and stated that it belonged to the government ; that in pursuance of such invitation defendant went into possession of the property, cleared the same, erected buildings thereon, and there made his home continually from
The question remains as to the effect of such declarations and conduct when not made in bad faith. As to this there is a want of harmony among the cases, but in our opinion, under such circumstances as were shown by the testimony on the part of the defendant in the case at bar, the one who made these representations and those claiming under him were estopped, even although the representations were made in good faith. The effect upon one acting upon them is not changed by the motive which induced the representations. And we see no good reason why one who had made representations, even though acting under a mistake, as to the title of a piece of property for the purpose of inducing another to purchase the same and expend money thereon, should be allowed to stand by and see the money expended and afterwards assert title in himself to the property. The
We cite the following cases, some of which assert the doctrine to the full extent required to sustain the contention of the defendant upon the proof offered in the case at bar, and the reasoning of the others logically leads to the same result, although the element of wilfulness was a part of the facts upon which the decisions were founded. Los Angeles v. Cohn, 101 Cal. 373 (35 Pac. 1002); Eickelberg v. Soper, 1 S. D. 563 (47 N. W. 953); Roeder v. Fouts, 5 Wash. 135 (31 Pac. 432), Marines v. Goblet, 31 S. C. 153 (17 Am. St. Rep. 22, 9 S. E. 803); Putnam v. Tyler, 117 Pa. St. 570 (12 Atl. 43); Morgan v. Railroad Co., 96 U. S. 716; Trustees v. Smith, 118 N. Y. 634 (23 N. E. 1002). See, also, Broom’s Legal Maxims (8th ed.), *174.
It is true that in the case at bar the defendant was not induced to purchase the property, but the taking possession of it as government land with a view of obtaining title by residence and cultivation was, in our opinion, equivalent to a purchase.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Dunbar, C. J., and Stiles, J., concur.