37 Cal. 100 | Cal. | 1869
This case was here on a former appeal, and is reported in 28 Cal. 605. On that appeal the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. The legal propositions which arose and were decided on the former appeal, whether they were correctly decided or not, have become the law of the case, so far as they were applicable to the facts developed on the second trial. There would be no end to the litigation, if the same questions in the case once decided by the appellate Court were open to examination on every succeeding appeal. _ It has been so often decided by this Court that on a second appeal we will not re-examine the legal propositions decided on the first, as to render the citation of authorities unnecessary. It becomes material, therefore, to ascertain with precision what legal propositions were decided on the former appeal, in order that we may apply them to.the facts on the last trial.
The action is replevin for a quantity of hay, which was cut by the defendants on the Suscol Rancho in May, 1863. This rancho was claimed by M, G-. Vallejo, under a grant
It must be conceded that when the defendants entered, the land in question, though inclosed by the plaintiff and in his
The precise point before the Court on the former appeal was founded, on a ruling of the District Court upon a question of evidence. After the plaintiff rested, the defendants offered to prove that each of them possessed the qualifications requisite to entitle him to become a pre-emptor, and had filed his declaratory statement of intention to pre-empt the quarter section on which he entered and had resided since October, 1862; and that they had procured their several tracts to be surveyed by the United States Surveyor General. The Court below ruled out this evidence, and the only point decided on the appeal was that the-ruling was erroneous and that the evidence should have been admitted. We held the evidence to be admissible on the ground that, “conceding to the plaintiff the benefit of his prior possession, and regarding him as engaged in perfecting his claim to the pre-emption, the evidence offered by the defendants to prove that they were taking the necessary steps to establish their claim to the pre-emptions was clearly admissible and competent, in connection with proof of their entry in October, 1862, and actual possession of the premises up to the time when the hay was cut in 1863, to show that during that period they were in adverse possession of the premises.”
Proof of adverse possession by the defendants of the land at the time the hay was cut was held to be material and pertinent, on the ground-announced in Halleck v. Mixer, 16 Cal. 579, that “the plaintiff" out of possession cannot sue for property severed from the freehold when the defendant is in
“If the jury believe from the evidence that plaintiff had the prior actual possession of the lands upon which the hay grow ever since 1860 up to the time that defendants entered, and that he had up to that time subjected said promises to his rule and control, and that defendants then entered into said premises, such entry did not of itself divest the possession of the plaintiff necessarily, any further or to any greater extent than the defendants actually occupied the same; and if they only occupied one or more parts of said premises, then it would not divest the plaintiff of his prior possession of the portions not actually occupied by defendants; and if defendants, being in actual occupation of only a specific part or parcel of the general tract, entered into other parts thereof and cut the hay only thereon, this would not be such a divesting of the possession of plaintiff as would prevent the plaintiff from recovering in this action.”
This was a correct exposition of the law, and stated the legal proposition as strongly in favor of the plaintiff as he could reasonably have desired. The plaintiff also asked several other instructions, which were properly refused by the Court. The first may well have been refused on the ground that there was no evidence to support it, and that it
But some of the instructions, given at the instance of the defendants, and excepted to by the plaintiff, were erroneous.
The first, which declares that “the plaintiff having exhibited his deed from Vallejo, shows his title comes from him, and his title being decided invalid by the Supreme Court of the United States, is evidence against his title, and overcomes the prima facie evidence of title shown by possession,” is not only so awkwardly worded as to render it obscure, but, if we interpret it aright, does not correctly state the law. It is so well settled by repeated decisions of this Court that a party in the actual possession of public land, to which he has no title, is to be deemed the owner, as against mere intruders or trespassers entering without title or color of title, that it is no longer open to discussion. The fact that the plaintiff held a deed from Vallejo for the land could not place him in a worse position than if he had been there wholly without title except such as flows from the mere naked possession of public land; which, as we have seen, is sufficient to support an action against a mere trespasser. To overcome this right of action, founded on actual possession alone, it was incumbent on the defendants to show that they were not mere trespassers, but that they entered in good faith as pre-emptors, and as such took possession of the land on which the hay grew. This instruction, how
We deem it unnecessary to discuss the other instructions given at the instance of the defendants, some of which are by no means free from objection. For the guidance of the Court and counsel on another trial, we may remark that as the case stands on the facts now presented, the plaintiff, by virtue of his prior, actual possession of the land, will be entitled to recover, unless the defendants prove that they
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for'a new trial, and remittitur directed to issue forthwith.