54 Cal. 379 | Cal. | 1880
This action was brought by Olney against Sawyer and Baugh, to recover possession of a lot of land situate in the City and County of San Francisco. Judgment was rendered for defendants on the findings, from which plaintiff prosecutes this appeal, on the ground that the facts found do not support the judgment.
The Court found that in September, 1866, one Charles D. Carter was the owner and in actual possession of the portion of land in controversy described in the finding; that on the 13th day of April, 1867, one W. M. Dowling intruded into such possession, and ousted Carter therefrom; that on the 8th day of May, 1867, Dowling conveyed the premises to William Winter and Simon Sawyer, (defendant), at the same time having entered into an agreement with Winter and Sawyer that he should remain in possession of the premises as their tenant. The Court further found, that Dowling did remain in possession of the premises, as tenant of his grantees, until the 26th of October, 187 0, when he surrendered possession to the defendants, who have ever since been in possession; that on the 30th of September, 1869, Winter conveyed his interest in the lot sued for to Herman Wendt; that on the 18th of April, 1873, Wendt conveyed the same interest to George Brown; that on the 6th of October, 1873, Brown conveyed the same to plaintiff; that the second and third deeds just above mentioned were not recorded; that defendant Sawyer, on the 3rd of July, 1887, conveyed his interest in the premises to Paul Cams; that on the 3rd of November, 1869, Cams conveyed the same interest to defendant Sawyer and E. A. Lawrence; that defendant Sawyer conveyed to defendant Baugh on the 4th of April, 1870; that E. A. Lawrence conveyed to John.B.. Greenough on the 8th of December, 1870, and Greenough on the 21st of December, 1870, conveyed to defendant Sawyer; that on the 30th of November, 1870, Charles D. Carter conveyed his interest in the parcel of land to defendant Baugh, and on the 3rd of December, 1870, Baugh conveyed one-half of the interest derived from Carter to E. A. Lawrence.
At the time of the purchase and conveyance from Carter by Baugh, he, with defendant Sawyer, was in possession and holding possession. They obtained possession by the surrender of it to them by Dowling on the 26th of October, 1870, at which time Dowling was the tenant in possession, and holding possession for defendants and their cotenants in common. Herman Wendt, under whom the plaintiff claims, was then a cotenant in common with the defendants, to whom the surrender was made.
The entry of Baugh and Sawyer, as found, under one holding possession for all the tenants in common, was as tenants in common. It does not appear that they at that time disclaimed that relation, or that they entered in hostility to their cotenants. (Wright v. Sperry, 21 Wisc. 337.) We are satisfied that Baugh and Sawyer were there holding possession for themselves and Wendt, and that Wendt should be regarded, under the circumstances, as having been in possession with them, on the 30th day of November, 1870, when the conveyance to Baugh by Carter was executed.
In this state of the case, the question arises whether, where two or more tenants in common are in possession of land, claiming it as their own, one of the tenants in common can purchase an outstanding title, and use it to keep out of possession his co-tenant? Such is the question presented here for our consideration and determination.
It is contended on behalf of plaintiff, that the defendants cannot, under the facts appearing in the case, set up the title acquired from Carter, which is found to be the true title to the lot sued for. To sustain this contention, we are referred to the
To sustain the opposite view, counsel for defendants cite the case of Lawrence v. Webster, 44 Cal. 385. This. case was decided at the October Term, 1872, and in it one tenant in common was allowed against another to assail the common title, and call its validity in question, by using to protect his possession an outstanding title which he had purchased. In the opinion in this case, no reference was made to Bornheimer v. Baldwin, nor docs it appear from the meager report of the argument of the cause, that it was alluded to in any way by counsel.
It will be seen, on examination, that there was a fact in Bornheimer v. Baldwin entirely absent in Lawrence v. Webster. In the first case, (Bornheimer v. Baldwin) the defendant assailing the common title is treated as occupying the status of a tenant in common, entering and remaining in possession as such tenant. In the latter case, (Lawrence v. Webster) it does not appear that the defendants who set up the outstanding title were in possession, in any way acknowledging such relation to exist. The Court, in its judgment, obviously treated the status of the defendants as one of a mere tenancy in common, arising by operation of law on the conveyances introduced in evidence, unaccompanied by any acknowledgment that they held possession as such. On the contrary, the case shows the possession of defendants to have been held from its inception in hostility to any such relation.
An examination of the case, (Lawrence v. Webster) as stated by the Court, shows the correctness of this view. The action was ejectment for a tract of land in Contra Costa County, known as the “ Esperanza Rancho.” Ynocencio Romero and his two brothers claimed the “ Romero Sobrante,” which included the lands sued for ; and in 1852, Ynocencio executed a deed to one Wood, which purported to convey the lands in controversy. The undivided half of the interest thus conveyed vested by
The plaintiff, in support of his right to recover, took two positions, which he endeavored to maintain. In the first place ho relied on the lease executed by Leonard (his grantor) to the grantor of the defendant Lathrop, and the fact that the defendant entered under their conveyances from Lathrop. Secondly, that by virtue of the tenancy in common existing between him and the defendants, the purchase by the defendants of the title from Carpentier inured to his benefit. The Court proceeds to consider and dispose of the first proposition. This it does by virtue of the provisions of the 14th section of the Statute of Limitations then in existence (identical with § 326 Code Civ. Proc.) It holds that, under this section of the statute, the plaintiff could not rely on the lease upon the facts as they arc made to appear, but must prove title in the same manner that he would have been required to do had there been no lease. “ Here,” said the Court, “ the evidence clearly shows that the
The Court came to the conclusion that the plaintiff having proved no title at all, the lease did not aid him, under the circumstances as they existed, in maintaining a right to recover. In relation to the second proposition stated above, the Court uses this language : “ Whether the proposition be based on the tenancy in common subsisting between Leonard and the defendants in respect to the interest acquired under the deed from Romero, or on the fact that the defendants became the tenants of Leonard of his undivided half of the premises, it cannot be sustained in this case. The plaintiff, under the pleadings in the case, must rely on legal title; and if he seeks to obtain the benefit of the purchase which the defendants have made, he must resort to a Court of Equity, where all the matters relating to the transaction may be investigated, the expenses attending the purchase be properly apportioned, and the title acquired by the defendants or some portion of it, be transferred to the plaintiff, if it be found that in equity the purchase inured to his benefit. These matters cannot be adjudicated in an action at law.”
In the case before us it does not appear that the defendants held adversely, or that they in any way or mode denied the existence of a tenancy in common until the refusal to let plaintiff into possession on the day this action was begun, in which tenancy Wendt, under whom plaintiff in this action claims, was a tenant in common with them. On the contrary, they acquired the title from Carter, when in possession acknowledging the cotenancy, their cotenant having no knowledge of any such purchase or conveyance. The case, as presented, it appears to us, comes within the rule laid down in Bornheimer v. Baldwin.
It is contended on behalf of the respondents, that the rule as . declared in Bornheimer v. Baldwin is an obiter dictum. We cannot so regard it. . The question appears to have been made on the argument by the appellants, and urged as a reason why the judgment should not be allowed to stand, that the respond
The Court doubtless concluded, and properly concluded, that as the cause was to go to a new trial, it was proper to settle the law as to this question, which would arise on such new trial; and in reply to this position used this language at the close of the opinion: “ If the case of the plaintiff be otherwise established, the defendant cannot defeat it by the application of the maxim En dolo malo non oritur actio, nor set up in his defense that both he and the plaintiff entered upon the premises wrongfully in the first instance. Upon well-settled principles, he cannot be permitted, if entering and remaining in possession as a tenant in common, tot assail the common title or call its validity in question.” (42 Cal. 34.) We do not feel at liberty to disregard this decision.
The defendants cannot then use the title acquired from Carter to keep the plaintiff out of the possession of the interest which he has derived from Wendt, to all of whose rights he has succeeded. When the plaintiff has been so let into possession, defendants will then be at liberty to make their title available by an appropriate action.
The judgment will be reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to enter a judgment for plaintiff on the findings, for an undivided half of the lot sued for. So ordered.
Myrick, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.