16 Cal. 100 | Cal. | 1860
Cope, J. and Field, C. J. concurring.
This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial, and setting aside a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff below.
The plaintiff deraigned title through an attachment in favor of one Hillman against George C. Potter, which was levied on this lot' on the seventeenth of November, 1854; judgment obtained in the attachment suit, and deed made in October, 1857. Respondents set up a mortgage, dated November 22nd, 1853, by one Hutton to W. T. Sherman to the premises. This mortgage was foreclosed, and a deed made under the decree to H. S. Turner, July 1st, 1858. Respondents took a lease from Sherman on the eleventh of November, 1856. Sherman, on the twenty-third of April, 1857, conveyed premises to Turner; respondents before this suit, by direction of Sherman, attorned to Turner. Plaintiff. showed a deed from George C. Potter to Sherman, dated June 18th, 1855, contending that respondents, as lessees of Sherman, were estopped from denying the title of George C. Potter. The deed from Potter to ' Sherman conveyed “ the interest derived by said Potter by the foreclosure and sale of a certain mortgage from G. M. Hutton, dated April 10th, 1854.”
We assume that the title was in Hutton when the mortgage to Sherman was made. The effect of the decree and sale was to vest the title in the purchaser (and the title would thus relate to the date of the mortgage) if the necessary parties were made. But it is said "that to this decree Potter was not a party, and therefore he was not bound by it. It is not shown expressly that Potter was the assignee of Hutton at the time of this suit of Sherman or of the decree, or the successor, in interest, in any way, of Hutton; except that it is insisted that Sherman took the deed before described from Potter, and that thereby Sherman acknowledged Potter’s interest in the premises, and hence, that these lessees, claiming through Sherman, cannot dispute Potter’s title; therefore, as the plaintiff has an older title from Potter than that of Potter to Sherman, he is entitled to recover from these lessees of Sherman, though the latter acknowledge and hold under the title of Turner deraigned from Sherman. But the plaintiff claiming through this Sheriff’s deed to Potter (which was made after the sale of the premises, bound by the levy of the attachment) takes only such title as Potter had in the property at the time of the levy of Hillman and the subsequent sale. There is no evidence here that Potter .had any title, except from the fact that Sherman took a deed from him of his interest derived from this sale
If he got any.title, it was a paramount title to that of Sherman, derived from Potter, and existing by virtue of the lien of the attachment. But he was not bound to give any effect to the deed of Sherman, and therefore, he cannot claim that Sherman is bound by taking the deed to acknowledge the title which he got through Potter.
There is no question as to the possession of Sherman under Potter, or the effect of it upon the principle here asserted. That is a matter of fact which was contested below, and we cannot decide it on this appeal, the proofs being conflicting. Whether the principle would be at all affected by this fact, it is not necessary to determine.
Order affirmed.