79 Cal. 288 | Cal. | 1889
This is an action to enjoin the enforcement of a decree for the sale of certain real estate in the city of San Francisco for the satisfaction of a street assessment, upon the ground that the plaintiff was at the time the action was brought and the decree rendered the owner of the property, and not having been made a party to the suit, the judgment as against it was void.
There was a demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled, and upon a trial by the court, a perpetual injunction was decreed.
This is the second time the case has been to this court on appeal. At the former hearing it was reversed, on the ground that the complaint was insufficient. (Archbishop of San Francisco v. Shipman, 69 Cal. 586.) The complaint has been amended in such a way as to avoid the objections then urged against it, and, as amended, is sufficient, and the demurrer to it was properly overruled.
The only question necessary for us to consider arises upon the point made by the appellant, that the findings of the court below are not sustained by the evidence.
The respondent contends that there is but one question in the case, viz., whether the respondent was or was not the owner o'f the property in controversy at the time of and subsequent to the commencement of the
The undisputed facts, as shown by the evidence, are these:—
Joseph S. Alemany was the Roman Catholic archbishop of San Francisco, and was, as such archbishop, a sole corporation. The real estate mentioned in the complaint was, on the twenty-fifth day of July, 1858,' conveyed to said Alemany, not as such archbishop, but in his individual name, by the then owner of the property; but the same was purchased by and paid for with moneys donated by members of the church. The property was, subsequent thereto, improved by said corporation by the erection of buildings, fences, and other improvements, but the title thereto, so far as it appears of record, has remained in the individual name of said Alemany from the time' of the execution of said conveyance to him until now. The complaint alleges the ownership of the respondent in the property as follows: “And the plaintiff avers that the said land above particularly described was purchased by said Alemany for the use and benefit of the Roman Catholic Church of the diocese of San Francisco, and was paid for with the money of said church, and that afterward,, and more than twenty years before the commencement of this action, said Ale-many delivered the possession of said land and premises to this plaintiff, and then and there this plaintiff entered into and took the actual, peaceable, exclusive, open, and notorious possession and occupation of said tract of land above particularly described, under a claim of title exclusive of any other right, and has ever since that time been in and maintained the actual, open, notorious, peaceable, exclusive, continuous, and adverse possession and occupation of said land, and every part thereof, claiming to own and hold the samé, and every part thereof, as its own under a claim of title in fee-simple*292 absolute, exclusive of any other right, and. adversely to all the world, during all of which time said land was by the plaintiff fully protected by a substantial inclosure; and said plaintiff paid during all the time of such occupation as aforesaid, and continuously, all the taxes— state, city, and municipal—which were levied and assessed upon said land, or any part thereof.”
The court below found this allegation of the complaint in favor of the respondent. There is no evidence tending to show that at the time of the proceedings to foreclose the street assessment the plaintiff therein had any notice that the respondent had or claimed any title or interest in the property, except as such notice might be inferred from the improvements made upon the property and the uses made of it. The learned counsel for the respondent has, by one or two admissions in his brief, very materially narrowed the controversy upon this point. He says: “Of course, if a title stood of record in a trustee, the cestui que trust could not attack a judgment duly rendered against the trustee without notice in the plaintiff of the interest of the beneficiary.” Again: “In his brief the counsel goes to the extent of citing authorities to show that the deeds which were executed by the Bernals to J. S. Alemany vested legal title in him as an individual or person. With the last proposition we entirely agree, and think there can be no doubt that the deeds originally vested the title in the individual and natural person, J. S. Alemany, though the parol evidence showed him to be a trustee only.”
We fully coincide with these views. Therefore, we take it as fully conceded,—1. That as a matter of record J. S. Alemany was the owner of the legal title to this property; 2. That it appears from the parol testimony in the case that he held the legal title as a trustee for the respondent; 8. That these facts alone would not entitle the plaintiff to enjoin the sale, but it must show that it had, subsequent to the deed,^become the owner
The respondent claims that it has shown the legal title in it by adverse possession. The court below so found. The question is, therefore, whether or not this particular finding is supported by the evidence.
The evidence shows conclusively that the respondent was a sole corporation; that the corporation was Joseph S. Alemany, Roman Catholic archbishop of San Francisco; that as such archbishop, he purchased the property for and with the money of the church, but took the deed in his individual name; that as such archbishop he had and actually exercised exclusive control over said property as fully as if he were the sole and individual owner thereof; that all improvements made thereon, and use made of the same, were made at the instance of and used under the exclusive direction and control of said Alemany, as such archbishop, as fully and completely as if he were the sole and individual owner of the property. There is no evidence showing, or tending to show, that any overt act was done as constituting a change of possession from Joseph S. Alemany, individual, to Joseph S. Alemany, archbishop. It is true, improvements are shown to have been made, and made with the money of the church, but the improvements were made and the money expended by Joseph S. Ale-many. The testimony of the archbishop shows this very clearly. After testifying fully to the improvements made upon the property, the use made of them, and that they were made with the money of the church, his examination proceeds:—
“Q. Has this corporation any secretary ? A. Yes, sir; that is, not as such,—not one specifically, especially for that.
“Q. It does not have a seal? A. Yes, sir.
*294 “Q,. Have you any trustees? A. The sole corporation has no trustees.
“Q. You have been the sole manager of that corporation, I suppose, from beginning to end, have n’t you ? A. I may say yes; but of course I have to take advice; I have to consult;, I have to guide myself a great deal with counsel.”
Again, the following, from the testimony of one P. J. Gray, a witness for the respondent, is equally convincing on this point:—
“A. Well, I was president of the college for five years; I went there in 1863, and I stopped there till 1868.
“ Q. What would you say with reference to the management and control of that property by the corporation? A. It was all under the archbishop; it was all managed by the archbishop; I was only representing him.”
Does this evidence show adverse possession in the respondent, such as is required to confer title, and such as could constitute notice of a transfer of title from the individual Alemany, to Alemany, archbishop ? We cannot think so.
To constitute the possession adverse, it must have been open, visible, notorious, and exclusive, and must have been retained under a claim of right to hold against the owner, and in hostility to his title. (Thompson v. Felton, 55 Cal. 547; Unger v. Mooney, 63 Cal. 586; 49 Am. Rep. 100.) Here the owner of the legal title, as it appeared of record, was in the actual possession of the property, and, as the sole corporation, he was the beneficiary under the deed conveying him the legal title, and as the respondent contends, he was also in possession as the adverse claimant, and holding in hostility to himself. So far as the title was concerned, he might have held it either as an individual or as the representative of the church, but the possession must have been by Joseph S. Alemany in person in either capacity, and his posses
“Where property vests in a bishop, parson, or other sole corporation, he holds it to his own use and benefit whilst he holds the office,-and afterward the estate, and the enjoyment, of it, go together to his successor when established. The transmission of the estate is perpetual, but the beneficial enjoyment" changes at each succession.” (Overseers etc. v. Sears, 22 Pick. 124; Weston v. Hunt, 2 Mass. 500.)
So he was equally entitled to the possession and control of the property, whether his holding was that of an absolute owner in his individual right or of a trustee under an absolute deed; and his right to the possession was precisely the same as if the deed had been made to him as the archbishop in his corporate capacity. (Fitzpatrick v. Fitzgerald, 13 Gray, 402; Perry on Trusts, secs. 321-328.) Such being the case, we cannot conceive of any theory upon which a title by adverse possession can be upheld under the circumstances of this case. One cannot hold in hostility to himself, nor can one holding in one capacity hold adversely to himself claiming in another capacity.
In the case of Heiss v, Vosburg, 59 Wis. 532, it was held that a priest being in charge of a church as the agent of the bishop, the possession of the building was, as a matter of law, in the bishop, although the congregation worshiped in the building, and paid the salary of the priest and the expense of keeping the property in repair and maintaining services, and although the committee of trustees aided the priest in the management of the temporalities of the church.
It must be presumed that Alemany held possession under the legal title vested in him by the deed; and as the undisputed evidence is that he continued in possession, there was no actual change of possession or control of the property that could amount to constructive no
The manner in which property is held and controlled by a sole corporation is well stated in Overseers v. Sears, 22 Pick. 128, in which it is said: “In all those respects the distinction between an" aggregate and sole corporation growing out of their different modes of constitution and forms of action is striking and obvious. A bishop or parson acting in a corporate capacity and holding property to him and his successor in right of his office has no need of a corporate name; he requires no peculiar seal; he performs all legal acts under his own seal, in his own name and name of office; his own will alone regulates his acts, and he has no occasion for a secretary, for he need not keep a record of his acts; no need of a treasurer, for he has no personal property, except the rents and proceeds of the corporate estate, and these he takes to his own use when received. By-laws are unnecessary; for he regulates his own action by his own will and judgment, like any other individual acting in his own right.''
It is claimed by the respondent that the use made of the property was sufficient to constitute adverse possession. The evidence shows that there was erected on the property a large brick building, used as a college for the education of young men, chapel, dormitory, stables, and other out-buildings, and that these buildings were used as a college and for church purposes. The construction of such buildings and the uses made of them were not necessarily inconsistent with private ownership, nor were they inconsistent with the trust under which. Alemany is claimed to have held originally; but if they were, the occupation and use of the buildings and,property are thus shown to have been by individuals, pre
As we look at this evidence, it was wholly insufficient to sustain the finding that the respondent was the owner of the property, and for that reason the case must be reversed. 1
There are other questions raised and elaborately argued, but the question of ownership being the decisive one, we need not extend this opinion by taking up the other points discussed.
Judgment and order denying a new trial reversed, and cause remanded.
Beatty, C. J., and Paterson, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.