Pryor v. Winter

82 P. 202 | Cal. | 1905

The plaintiffs are the children of John E. Church, deceased, and they brought this action to quiet their title to undivided interests in certain lots of land in the town of Red Bluff, in Tehama County, including the undivided half of a lot described as lot 22 in block 12. The court below, sitting without a jury, gave judgment to plaintiffs for the other property involved, but held that plaintiffs are not the owners of or entitled to the possession of any part of lot 22, and that defendant is the owner of all of said last-mentioned lot by adverse possession, and rendered judgment accordingly. From that part of the judgment which decrees that defendant is the sole owner of the whole of lot 22, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial plaintiffs appeal.

The said John E. Church, father of plaintiffs, died testate on January 13, 1886. At that time lot 22 was the community property of the deceased and his wife Elizabeth Church. By his will he devised all his real property to his surviving wife, Elizabeth, "for and during the term of her natural life," provided that she should not marry again, and it is provided by *556 the will that after her death the property should go to all of his children who should be then alive, share and share alike, as tenants in common, and in case of their death without issue then to go to his brothers and sisters, and it was to go in the same way upon her marriage. The wife was made executrix and acted as such until her death. She did not marry again, and at her death, which occurred on the twenty-second day of December, 1898, the children, plaintiffs herein, were both alive. Therefore, the references in the will to the contingencies of her marriage, and of the death of the children without issue, are of no consequence, except perhaps as touching upon the argument by counsel whether the remainder to plaintiffs was vested or contingent; and under our views of the case that question is immaterial. Therefore, the undivided half of lot 22 went to the widow in fee as survivor of the community; and under the will she took a life interest in the other half, with the remainder of that half to plaintiffs. The only question in the case, therefore, is whether the plaintiffs' right as remaindermen to the undivided half of the lot was barred by the statute of limitations.

Defendant's claim under the statute of limitations rests upon these facts: In March, 1894, the surviving wife, Elizabeth, in her individual capacity, executed two mortgages on property including lot 22 — one to the defendant herein to secure a loan of twenty-five hundred dollars, and the other to the husband of defendant to secure a like amount. Afterwards the defendant became the owner of both the mortgages, and brought an action to foreclose them. She made the plaintiffs herein defendants in the foreclosure suit upon the allegation that they claimed some interest in the property which was subject to the mortgages; and plaintiffs herein, defendants there, made default. Afterwards she obtained a decree of foreclosure, and purchased the property at the foreclosure sale and obtained a commissioner's deed. On March 30, 1893, she dispossessed the executrix and entered upon the said lot 22, and since then has held possession of the same, claiming to have held it adversely to the whole world. When the present action was commenced the defendant had been thus in possession of the lot in contest for more than five years from the time of her first entry; but this action was brought within less than five years after the death of Elizabeth, the life tenant. *557

Under the above facts the action was not barred — for the cause of action did not accrue until after the death of the life tenant, and it was brought within the statutory period of limitation after it had thus accrued. Before that time the plaintiffs had no right of possession of the lot, and had no cause of action touching such possession.

It has been universally held that the estate of a remainderman is distinct from that of a tenant of a preceding particular estate, and cannot be, in any way, affected by any act of the particular tenant or his grantee. The rule is stated by Chief Justice Kent in Jackson v. Schoonmaker, 4 Johns. 402, as follows: "Neither a descent east, nor the statute of limitations will affect a right, if a particular estate existed at the time of the disseizin, or when the adverse possession began, because a right of entry in the remainderman cannot exist, during the existence of the particular estate; and the laches of a tenant for life will not affect the party entitled. An entry to avoid the statute must be an entry for the purpose of taking possession, and such an entry cannot be made during the existence of the life estate. [Citing cases.]" And in Tiedeman on Real Property (par. 400) it is said: "The tenant cannot do anything to defeat a vested remainder; disseizin of the tenant affects the remainder in no manner. Nor can the possession of the tenant be deemed adverse to the remainderman, either for the purpose of preventing the latter from conveying his interest, or with a view to defeat it under the statute of limitations, unless the possession be continued after the termination of the particular estate. The statute of limitations does not begin to run until the remainder takes effect in possession." The citation of further authorities to the point is unnecessary; the principle is elementary, and we have been referred to no cases holding otherwise.

The conclusion of the lower court seems to have been arrived at by the process of looking only at section 318 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and considering nothing else. That section provides that no action for the recovery of real property or the possession thereof can be maintained unless the plaintiff or his predecessor was seized or possessed of the property in question within five years before the commencement of the action. But all the law on a wide subject like that of limitation of actions is not to be found in one section. All the statutory *558 provisions on the subject are to be considered, and they are to be construed in view of the presumption that the legislators are acquainted with well-settled principles of law, and legislate with reference thereto. For instance, in section 1452 of the Code of Civil Procedure it is provided that the heirs or devisees may maintain an action for the recovery of the real estate against any one except the administrator or executor; but surely that provision could not be considered as applicable to a remainderman, although he may have received his estate through a devise, and, therefore, is literally in the general category of "devisees"; it means only those heirs and devisees who have a present right of possession, and, therefore, a present cause of action as against every one except the administrator. And so it cannot be held that the legislature intended by section 318 to abrogate or overlook the principle — declared in jurisdictions where statutes of limitations include provisions similar to that of section 318, — that the statute does not commence to run against a cause of action before such cause of action shall have accrued, unless otherwise expressly provided. Our code itself expressly declares this rule in section 312 of the Code of Civil Procedure, where it is enacted that civil actions "can only be commenced within the period prescribed in this title, after thecause of action shall have accrued, unless, where, in special cases, a different limitation is prescribed by statute"; and there is to our knowledge no statutory provision prescribing a different rule except section 359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which refers solely to actions against directors or stockholders of corporations. The question here involved has not to our knowledge been directly decided by this court, — probably because no one has heretofore contended that the statute of limitations would run against a remainderman during the life of the particular tenant. But in Le Roy v. Rogers, 30 Cal. 230, [89 Am. Dec. 88], Justice Rhodes, in delivering the opinion of the court, expressly declared the rule as above stated. In that case the purchaser at a foreclosure sale undertook to maintain that by his purchase he took a new title, and that the statute commenced to run against him only from the date of his purchase; but the court held against this contention, saying that "his estate in the land is the estate that the mortgagor had." And in the discussion of the question the learned justice, after referring to *559 other instances where a new title might start a new running of the statute, said: "And the remainderman, upon the expiration of the particular estate, does not come in under it, but claims through an independent source of title, and he has his action, though the particular estate man may have been cut off from a recovery against the adverse possessor." And at the time of that decision the provision of said section 318 was part of the law of this state, as it has always been since 1850. (See 2 Hittells's General Laws of California, p. 633.) It would be strange, indeed, if during the life of the particular tenant a remainderman could be compelled to lose his estate on account of another's possession which he would be utterly helpless to interrupt.

Plaintiffs' rights were not affected by the fact that they were made defendants in the foreclosure suit; their title was not subject to the mortgage, but was an independent paramount title, and not a subject of litigation in that suit.

It appears that one Webb was appointed administrator of the estate of John E. Church, deceased, as successor of the executrix, and commenced an action of ejectment against the present defendant Winter to recover possession of the property here in contest. The defendant in that action pleaded the statute of limitations; the trial court gave judgment for her; Webb appealed, and this court affirmed the judgment. (See Webb v.Winter, 135 Cal. 455, [67 P. 691.].) But that judgment did not in any way bind the plaintiffs herein. An administrator is not a trustee for a remainderman, and the latter is not estopped by anything the former may do or suffer to be done. In that case the court said: "In this litigation the court is not concerned as to the individual legal status of the two adult children. If they have rights above and beyond that of the administrator, those rights are not in litigation here." Section 741 of the Civil Code expressly declares — what was always the law — that "No future interest can be defeated or barred by any alienation or other act of the owner of the intermediate or particular interest."

That part of the judgment appealed from and the order denying the new trial are reversed.

Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.

Hearing in Bank denied. *560