21 Cal. 60 | Cal. | 1862
Field, C. J. and Cope, J. concurring.
On the trial, the plaintiff offered in evidence the above-mentioned agreement for partition. Objection was made to its admissibility, on the ground that it had not been executed by John T. Dean, Francisco Martinez de Soto, Merced Martinez de Welch, and José Ramon Castro, who were named as parties to it, nor by Joseph Emeric, not named as a party, but who is said to be admitted by the pleadings to be interested in the rancho. This objection was sustained, and the proffered evidence excluded, to which ruling the plaintiff excepted.
The defendant’s title was derived from Victor Castro and E. W. Leonard, by a deed made after the date of the partition agreement, which agreement was signed by them. Ko question is made but that this agreement is valid against the defendant, if it was valid against his grantors. The first point, therefore, which arises in the case, is whether this agreement is valid and binding against those who executed it, although it has not been executed by others who are named in it as contracting parties, and who are declared in it to have interests in the land proposed to be partitioned^
We are pressed with the consideration that many third persons may have acquired supposed interests in severalty under the various parties to this partition agreement, and that for this reason it should be sustained. Such considerations are always regarded by Courts as far as they can be without violating legal principles; and it is under such influences that the Courts have gone very far to uphold parol partitions and to apply the doctrine of estoppel. But we have no power to give vitality to void contracts, or to create estoppels where none have arisen from any act of the parties sought to be estopped. Such, we think, would be the effect of a decision that the defendant or his grantors ha,d parted with or are estopped from asserting the title to an undivided interest in the San Pablo Rancho, which it is conceded they had at the date of that agreement.
The judgment must be affirmed.