62 P. 470 | Cal. | 1900
Action to quiet title to a right of way. Plaintiff recovered judgment and appeals therefrom, claiming that the judgment is erroneous in several respects, and that he is entitled to more relief than is therein given.
The court had the right to consider the acts of the parties in adopting the description contained in the deed of the right of way from defendant to plaintiff, and the building of fences by defendant and use of the road by plaintiff. (Tyler on Boundaries, 124; Mulford v. La Franc,
The portion of the findings and judgment directing that each party pay his own costs is erroneous. The code directs that costs are allowed of course to the plaintiff upon a judgment in his favor in an action which involves the title or possession of real estate. (Code Civ. Proc., sec.
The defendant claims that plaintiff is not entitled to costs, for the reason that he disclaimed in his answer any interest *225 in the right of way to which plaintiff's title was quieted by the decree. We do not so construe the answer. Defendant expressly admits in the answer that he claims an estate and interest in the property, and alleges "that the same is valid and absolute thereto." In the affirmative part of the answer the defendant admits the "right of plaintiff to travel so much of said land as lies between said fences." This was not an admission of "the right of way appurtenant to plaintiff's land" which the plaintiff claimed, and which the court found he was the owner of.
The findings and judgment provide that the right of way does not include a line of fruit trees on the north side of said right of way, and that wherever the limbs of said trees interfere with the substantial passage over said road the defendant may remove them, or so much of them as will free said right of way. This was in regard to matter not properly before the court, and it has no place in the judgment and findings. There was no issue made by the pleadings as to any fruit trees. It was not necessary for the court, after describing the right of way by metes and bounds to say what was included in the right of way. Neither was it necessary to authorize the defendant or the plaintiff to remove the limbs of trees overhanging the road. The action was brought to have plaintiff's title to the right of way quieted, and this was sufficient and all that was necessary for the court to do. Besides, there is no evidence that any limbs of any trees interfere with the right of way.
We advise that the judgment be modified by striking therefrom the following clauses: "And that each party shall pay his own costs herein, and plaintiff is denied costs against defendant," and "The above right of way does not include the line of fruit trees, or any of said trees, on the north side of said right of way, standing from the county road up to opposite the house of defendant; but wherever the limbs of said trees interfere with the substantial right of passage over said road the defendant may remove them, or so much of them as will free said right of way"; and as so modified the judgment be affirmed, the plaintiff to recover his costs on this appeal.
Haynes, C., and Gray, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is modified by striking therefrom the following clauses: "And that each party shall pay his own costs herein, and plaintiff is denied costs against defendant," and "The above right of way does not include the line of fruit trees, or any of said trees, on the north side of said right of way, standing from the county road up to opposite the house of defendant; but wherever the limbs of said trees interfere with the substantial right of passage over said road the defendant may remove them, or so much of them as will free said right of way"; and as so modified the judgment is affirmed, the plaintiff to recover his costs on this appeal.
Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., Harrison, J.