124 Cal. 442 | Cal. | 1899
This is the third appeal of this case. The undisputed facts are these: In 1867, Matthew Tarpey was in possession and claimed to be the owner of the Carneros Rancho, in Monterey county, near tire town of Watsonville, consisting of four thousand four hundred acres. Murdock Nicholson was at the time living in San Francisco. In May or June of that year Nicholson came to Watsonville with a view of finding and buying some desirable piece of land. After some negotiations, an understanding was reached between the parties whereby Nicholson was to purchase for fifteen hundred dollars a piece of the rancho, which both parties assumed to contain about four hundred acres. The conveyance was to be executed upon completion of the payment. The tract lay in the northeast corner of the rancho, fronting on the south side of the public road leading from Watsonville to San Juan. About one hundred and fifty acres, more or less, adjoining the road was susceptible to cultivation. After the agreement to purchase Nicholson returned to San Francisco, leaving the land purchased in charge of Tarpey, who agreed to take care of it and see to the payment of the taxes. Under this arrangement Tarpey for -four years, from 1867 to 1871, looked after the property. He yearly returned to the assessor four hundred acres of the land to be listed to Nicholson, and four thousand acres, consisting of the remainder of the rancho, to himself. In 1868, Nicholson having completed the stipulated payment, Tarpey delivered to him a deed, which he represented to be in conformity with the agreement, and which was accepted as such by Nicholson. The instrument was at once sent to Monterey county, where it was recorded. In February, 1873, Nicholson, with his family, moved down and built a home upon the arable tract adjoining the public road. He at once caused a survey to be made, and ascertained the location of the lines of his deed upon the ground, and found that the description, instead of covering four hundred acres as supposed, included something less than two hundred. Tarpey owned and was occupying the land all around him, and the relation of the two parties seems to have remained friendly as before. Immediately after making the discovery that the land fell short of what was supposed, Nicholson gave in two hundred acres for the purpose of
On the first appeal (Nicholson v. Tarpey, 70 Cal. 608) the judgment was reversed on the ground of error in the admission of testimony on the part of the plaintiff as to what he told the assessor when he gave in the property for assessment. On the second appeal (Nicholson v. Tarpey, 89 Cal. 617) the judgment on the second trial was reversed on the ground also of error in the admission of testimony in reference to a conversation between the parties at the time of entering into the agreement which was offered and received for the purpose of proving the contents of said agreement.
The testimony of the witness G-ilkey did not purport to give the contents of the written agreement, and did not show that he had ever seen the written agreement, between Tarpey and the plaintiff, or read it or heard it read. It is simply the expression of Tarpey that he had sold a part of his rancho to a man in San Francisco, without even giving the name of the man to whom he had sold it. Under well-settled rules, the testimony was clearly inadmissible.
Appellants also rely upon the statute of limitations as a bar
Our Code of Civil Procedure changes the old rule in reference to pleading the statute of limitations. It is as follows: “Tn pleading the statute of limitations, it is not necessary to state the facts showing the defense, but it may be stated generally that the cause of action is barred by the provisions of section-(giving the number of the section and subdivision thereof, if it is so divided, relied upon) of the Code of Civil Procedure.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 458.) The plea of the statute in this case is according to the requirements of the code, and is sufficient. (Hagely v. Hagely, 68 Cal. 348; Alhambra Water Co. v. Richardson, 72 Cal. 598; Webber v. Clarke, 74 Cal. 11.)
This case is one, as shown by the testimony and all the surrounding circumstances, where it is justifiable to invoke and apply the bar of the statute of limitations, if ever. Under the old rule, the testimony of an interested party was not received, but now all parties, with certain exceptions, are allowed to give testimony, the credibility of such testimony to be left to the cpurt or jury. One of the excepted case is that “parties or assignors of parties to an action or proceeding, or persons in whose behalf an action or proceeding is prosecuted, against an executor or administrator, upon a claim or demand against the estate of a deceased person, as to any matter of fact occurring- before the death of such deceased person,” cannot be witnesses. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1880, subd. 3.) To escape this wholesome provision of the law, the action in this case is not against the estate of the deceased, Tarpey, but it is against those who succeeded to his title and éstate after the settlement and distribution of said es-' tate. It gives the plaintiff full sweep to testify—and the character of his testimony has already been noticed—whereas the other party to the contract had been dead some seven years before the action was commenced.
The plea of the statute set up in the answer presented an issue upon which the courf should have found, and the failure to so find is assigned as error, and now urged by the appellant. As already stated, the court finds that since 1871 the plaintiff has been in the actual and exclusive possession, adverse to all the world, of the premises in controversy, whereas the record shows that “it was proved by competent testimony that the piece of land stated in the complaint herein to have been described in the
The court finds that Tarpey was the owner in fee of the Eancho las Carneros at the time of entering into the contract. The pleadings admitted and conceded that Tarpey was the owner of only seven-eighths of the rancho, and the respondents’ counsel concedes that these admissions are according to the fact, and that the finding in this respect is erroneous; but he suggests that, if the judgment is sustained in all other particulars, the court below be directed to amend its decree accordingly, instead of ordering a new trial.
Por the reasons, however, given in reference to other parts of the case the judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed.
Garoutte, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.