Rego v. Pelt

65 Cal. 254 | Cal. | 1884

The Court.

Appellant says plaintiff and the grantor of defendant were not tenants in common because their grantor —Evans—had no estate or interest in the premises, founded upon title or rightful possession. But Evans had actual possession and delivered such possession to his grantees. In ejectment neither is plaintiff called on to show a right of possession in a person from, whom both he and defendant deraign, nor can defendant assail the title of the common grantor. The unity of *256possession, where both derive from, the same source, cannot be denied by either.

The deed from Evans and wife to plaintiff and Hammond (grantor of defendant) was executed February 22,1854, prior to the passage of the act which, it is claimed, first made quit-claim deeds operative as conveyances, without any precedent estate or interest in the grantee. But as was said in Graff v. Middleton, 43 Cal. 344, “in this State from the earliest times, quit-claim deeds have been in everyday use for the purpose of transferring title to land, and have been considered as effectual for that purpose as deeds of bargain and sale.” In Sullivan v. Davis, 4 Cal. 291, decided at the October term, 1854, it was held that a quit-claim conveyed all the right and title of the grantor or releasor. And in Frey v. Clifford, 44 Cal. 343, the Supreme Court said that under the registry law a quit-claim deed received in good faith, and for a valuable consideration, which is first recorded, will prevail over an older deed subsequently recorded. So in Lawrence v. Ballou, 37 Cal. 521, it was held that a quitclaim deed passed the title. No reference is made to the statute of 1855. Without making the rfile in any respect dependent upon the statute, Downer v. Smith, 24 Cal. 123, and Carpentier v. Williamson, 25 Cal. 154, concur in construing Sullivan v. Davis, supra, as holding that an ordinary quit-claim deed in this State is sufficient to pass any estate the grantor had, and to enable the grantee to maintain ejectment if his grantor could have done so. As we have seen, the defendant here cannot dispute the title of’Evans, the grantor of plaintiff and Hammond.

The complaint (certainly in the absence of a special demurrer) sufficiently alleges an ouster by defendants. (Payne v. Treadwell, 16 Cal. 244.) It avers: “Defendants are in possession of said lands and premises and the whole thereof, withhold the possession of the whole thereof from plaintiff, and exclude plaintiff from the same.”

Judgment affirmed.