Touchard v. Crow

20 Cal. 150 | Cal. | 1862

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, J. and Norton, J. concurring.

This is an action of ejectment to recover the possession of certain real estate situated in Sonoma county, constituting part of the tract known as the Rancho of Roblar de la Miseria. The plaintiff claims under a patent of the United States, issued upon a confirmation of a Mexican grant, under the Act of Congress of March 3d, 1851. The grant was made to Juan N. Padilla by Pio Pico, former Governor of California, in November, 1845, and was approved by the Departmental Assembly in June, 1846. It is for four square leagues of land, and embraces the premises in controversy. On the thirteenth of June, 1849, the grantee conveyed the tract granted to Heyerman, and on the thirtieth of July, 1852, the latter, in connection with his wife, executed a conveyance of then* interest to Stevens. This conveyance was acknowledged before the Deputy Clerk of the county of Sonoma on the day of its execution, and was recorded in the office of the Recorder of the county on the twenty-third of August following. On the second of June, 1859, proof of the execution of the conveyance by Heyerman was made before a Notary Public, and on the twenty-fourth of April, 1860, the conveyance was again recorded in the same office. From Stevens the plaintiff traced title to the premises in controversy by sundry mesne conveyances to Matthey, his testator.

On the twenty-fourth of February, 1852, Heyerman, in connection with eight other persons, filed a petition before the United States Land Commission for a confirmation of the claim under the grant to Padilla. The record before us does not disclose the manner in which the eight other petitioners acquired their interests, but as Heyerman, who had previously possessed the entire claim, united in the petition, it is to be presumed that they acquired their interests through him, and that his subsequent conveyance to Stevens was only intended to pass his remaining interest. He would at least be estopped by his petition from denying that they were interested with him in the premises. The claim was confirmed to the *156petitioners by the Land Commission in February, 1853, and, on appeal, by the United States District Court in September, 1855. In November following, the United States having declined to prosecute an appeal to the Supreme Court, the petitioners had leave to proceed upon the decree of the District Court as upon a final decree. Upon this decree, and the approved survey of the premises by the Surveyor General of the United States for California, the patent was issued. From the patentees the plaintiff traced title to the premises in controversy to his testator—from Heyerman through the conveyance to Stevens which we have mentioned, and from the eight other patentees through various mesne conveyances, execution sales and probate proceedings.

The defendants also claim under the patent of the United States, and seek to connect themselves with it through a conveyance from Heyerman to Baylis, bearing date on the twenty-first of February, 1860, and recorded in the office of the Recorder of Sonoma county on the twenty-sixth of April, 1860. By the conveyance to Stevens, the grantors, Heyerman and wife, bargain, sell and quit-claim all their right, title, interest, estate, claim and demand, both at law' and in equity, and as well in possession as in expectancy,” in and to the tract, describing it as that piece of land situated in Sonoma county, known as the Rancho Roblar de la Miseria. By the conveyance to Baylis, the grantor, Heyerman, “ grants, bargains, sells and conveys ” the tract, describing it in the same manner, with the additional designation that it was granted to Padilla in the year 1845, and by him conveyed to Heyerman on the thirteenth of June, 1849.

As will be thus seen, the principal question between the parties relates to the operation and effect of these deeds from Heyerman. The appellants contend: 1st, that the deed to Stevens Was not acknowledged or proved, so as tq entitle it to be recorded, and that in consequence its record did not impart any notice to them, and they are protected as bona fide purchasers without notice; 2d, that the deed was only a quit claim, and did not operate to pass the interest which vested in Heyerman from the confirmation of the grant and the patent of the United States; and 3d, that the deed was only intended to pass the interest of the grantors in one-half of a league of the four leagues embraced by the grant.

*1571. The deed to Stevens, as we have stated, was acknowledged on the day of its execution, before the Deputy Clerk of Sonoma county. The certificate of the acknowledgment is in its form correct ; it contains a statement of every particular required by the statute. Its concluding attestation clause is as follows: Witness my hand and seal of Court hereto affixed at office, this thirtieth day of July, A. D. 1852. John A. Brewster, Deputy County Clerk of Sonoma county,” and in the margin opposite this attestation the seal of the Court is affixed. We must at least conclude that the seal is thus affixed, for the word seal,” embraced in brackets, appears in the copy of the certificate embodied in the record. If any other seal than that of the Court, of which the officer was Deputy Clerk, is affixed to the original, that fact should have been made the ground of objection at the trial. No objection of the kind was taken, and we must therefore infer that no ground for any existed. The objection urged to the certificate is not to its form, or to the seal affixed, but to the authority of the officer to take the acknowledgment. If the County Clerk himself could take it, his deputy could also take it, for the deputy is invested by statute with the same power in all respects which the principal possesses. (Act defining the duties of County Clerks, of April 18th, 1850, sec. 3; see also Beaumont v. Yeatman, 8 Humph. 542.) The Act concerning Conveyances provides that the proof or acknowledgment of conveyances may be taken within the State by the “ Clerk of a Court having a seal,” and when thus taken, that the certificate shall be under his hand and the seal of the Court. The questions for determination are whether the acknowledgment under consideration was taken before the deputy of an officer of this character, and whether the fact sufficiently appears from the certificate.

The County Clerk is by the Constitution ex officio Clerk of the District Court, and by statute he is also ex officio Clerk of the County Court, Probate Court, and Court of Sessions of his county. (Const, art 6, sec. 7; Act defining the Duties of County Clerk, sec. 1; Pr. Act, sec. 644.) The statute defining his duties speaks of the acts which he is authorized or required to perform, as acts to be performed by him as County Clerk. It says each County Cleric may appoint one or more deputies; the County Cleric may *158take from each of his deputies a bond for the faithful performance of his duties; the County Cleric shah either in person or by deputy attend each term of the County Court, District Court, Probate Court, and Court of Sessions held in his county; he shah issue ah writs and process; he shah enter, under the directions of the Court, ah orders, judgments and decrees proper to be entered, and the like. It would thus seem that he may issue process and attest proceedings of the Courts of which he is ex officio Clerk, over his signature as County Clerk, and leave to the title of the proceedings, or the contents of the instruments, the identification of the Court to which they belong. It is the usual practice for the Clerk in such cases simply to append to Ms individual signature his char- • aeter as Clerk of the Court, or Ms general character as County Clerk, with the addition of his character as ex officio Clerk of the particular Court from wMch the process is issued, or in which the proceedings are taken. We have never heard the sufficiency of either of these modes of signing process or attesting proceedings questioned, nor could it be questioned successftdly. TMs being the case, we do not perceive any principle upon which the process or proceedings should be held invalid by reason of the absence of the - designation of the Court of wMch. the County Clerk acts as ex officio Clerk, provided that fact otherwise sufficiently appears upon the face of the papers. The County Clerk is by law ex officio Clerk of all the Courts of the State having a seal, except of the Supreme Court. He is the keeper of the seals of those Courts. The seals have inscribed upon them the name of the Courts to which they belong. The affixing of - the seal, bearmg the inscription mentioned, does therefore sufficiently designate the Court of wMch the County Clerk in the particular matter acts as ex officio Clerk. No one could be mistaken or misled by the omission of any further designation of the Clerk’s official connection with the Court.

By the Constitution, the County Judge is required to perform the duties of Surrogate or Probate Judge, (art. 6, sec. 8) and by statute he is declared to be ex officio Probate Judge. (Act to regulate Settlement of the Estates of Deceased Persons, of May 1st, 1851, sec. 1.) Yet there is no umformity in the manner in which the different County Judges sign or attest the orders and proceed*159ings in the settlement of estates before them. Sometimes they use their simple signatures, without any designation of their official character, and sometimes they add the designation County Judge,” and sometimes “ Probate Judge,” and it has never been held or supposed that the validity of the orders or proceedings was in any respect affected by the absence of the official designation from the signature, or the presence of the designation “ County Judge ” instead of “ Probate Judge.” It has always been considered sufficient that the papers disclosed on their face the character in which the Judge acted.

Looking then to the certificate of acknowledgment annexed to the deed to Stevens—its attestation clause, the seal of the Court affixed, the inscription which the seal bears—and considering the law as to the ex officio character of the County Clerk as Clerk of all the Courts in his county having a seal—and the equal authority of his deputy—we are of opinion that it does sufficiently appear that the acknowledgment was taken before an officer empowered to take it, and that the certificate authorized the record of the deed; and consequently, that its record imparted constructive notice to subsequent purchasers from the same grantors.

We do not find any cases precisely similar to this, and therefore directly in point, but the general current of the authorities is that the certificate is to be sustained, if possible; and in support of it, reference may be had to the instrument to which it is attached. Thus in Brooks v. Chaplin, (3 Vt. 281) the certificate of the acknowledgment did not show in what State the acknowledgment was taken, and the omission was supplied by reference to the deed, in which the grantor described himself as a resident of “ Suffield, in the county of Hartford and State of Connecticut.” The acknowledgment purported to be taken within two days after the execution of the deed in Hartford county, and the Court said that it could intend no other than the same county of Hartford in which the deed was supposed to have been executed. “ It is not indispensable,” said the Court, “ that the place of taking should fully appear from the acknowledgment itself, provided it can be discovered with sufficient certainty by inspection of the whole instrument.” And in Luffborough v. Parker, (12 Serg. & Rawle, 48) the certificate of *160proof given by the officer stated that A B appeared before him and made oath that he saw the grantor sign, seal, execute and deliver the deed, without stating that A B was a subscribing witness, but as it appeared upon the inspection of the deed that A B was one of the subscribing witnesses, it was held that the certificate was sufficient. The statute under which the certificate was given required that a deed should be proved by one or more of the subscribing witnesses before it could be recorded. “ The Act,” said the-Court, “ must be substantially complied with; but when substance is found, it is neither the duty nor the inclination of the Court to defeat conveyances by severe criticism on language.”

From the views thus taken of the acknowledgment before the Deputy County Clerk, it has become unnecessary to consider the proof subsequently made of the execution of the conveyance before a Notary Public, and the effect of the second record of the deed on the twenty-fourth of April, 1860.

2. The deed to Stevens is not strictly a quit claim. The operative words of release in a simple quit claim deed are “ remise, release and quit claim.” Here the words “ bargain, sell and quit claim ” are employed, and they operate not merely to release,- but to transfer any interest which the grantors possessed at the execution of the deed. Whether the words “ in expectancy ” can be considered, in the connection in which they are used, as referring to any greater or further estate in the premises, which the grantors might acquire in future, it is unnecessary to express any opinion. At the time the deed was executed, the claim of Heyerman and others to the land embraced in the grant to Padilla was pending before the Land Commission for confirmation. The decree of confirmation affirmed the validity of that grant, and of the claim of the petitioners. The patent following the confirmation took effect by relation at the date of the presentation of the petition to the Land Commission, on the twenty-fourth of February, 1852. As the deed of the United States, it is to be regarded, so far as all intermediate conveyances of the petitioners are concerned, as having been executed at that time. (Moore v. Wilkinson, 13 Cal. 478; Yount v. Howell, 14 Id. 465; Stark v. Barrett, 15 Id. 361; Ely v. Frisbee, 17 Id. 250; Leese v. Clark, 18 Id. 570.) The deed *161to Stevens must therefore be held to have passed the interest acquired by the patent. In Landes v. Brandt, (10 How. 370) the Supreme Court of the United States applied the doctrine of relation for the protection of a title acquired by a Sheriff’s deed upon a sale, under execution, of the confirmee’s interest made after the . presentation of his claim, and previous to the confirmation. The claim referred to in that case was filed in 1805, the Sheriff’s sale was made in 1808, the confirmation was had in 1811, and the patent issued in 1845, and the Court said: “Applying the doctrine of relation, and talcing all the several parts and ceremonies necessary to complete the title together, ‘ as one act,’ then the confirmation of 1811 and the patent of 1845 must be taken to relate to the first act—that of filing the claim in 1805. On this assumption, intermediate conveyances made by the confirmee, or by the Sheriff on his behalf, of a date after the first substantial act, are covered by the legal title, and pass that title to the alienee. And on this ground the deed made by the Sheriff to McHair is valid.”

3. The position that the deed to Stevens was only intended to pass the interest of the grantors in one-half of a league of the four leagues embraced by the grant, finds no support from the deed itself, or from anything which appears in the record. The deed in terms conveys, as we have stated, all the interest of the grantors in the tract known as the Rancho of Roblar de la Miseria—the designation given to the tract granted to Padilla. The tract is thus designated in the several conveyances produced on both sides. Subsequent to the deed to Stevens, numerous parties became possessed of the undivided fractional interests in the premises, and some of them conveyed to others them interests only in a portion of the four leagues—reserving from the operation of them conveyances a parcel known as the Heyerman tract, embracing half a league, and from this circumstance the appellants’ counsel draws the inference that the deed to Stevens was only intended to transfer the interest in this half league. It is hardly necessary to observe that there is nothing in this circumstance to warrant the inference. The half league may have been called the Heyerman tract for many reasons. Heyerman may have at one time resided upon this portion of the grant, or have inclosed it, or cultivated it, and it may *162have been thus called to distinguish it from the general tract. .Whatever the reason for the designation, the fact neither shows nor . tends to show that the deed to Stevens (even were this permissible against its language) only applied to the half league, or that the grantors intended that it should only so apply.

The views we have thus expressed as to the operation of the deed to Stevens, dispose of the principal questions presented by the appellants, and in fact, of the merits of the case. The other questions raised, so far as they are covered by the grounds of the appeal embodied in the record, (and only such can we notice) arise upon the rulings of the Court below as to various transfers of undivided fractional interests in the premises. Some of these transfers were made under proceedings had in the Probate Court, and the validity .of the proceedings is attacked; one of them was made under a power of attorney from a married woman, and her capacity to confer the power is denied; and one of them has a certificate of ac.knowledgment which is impeached. Now it is of no consequence whether the rulings of the Court below upon these matters were erroneous or not. The admission in evidence of the conveyances attacked did not affect the right of the plaintiff to recover, nor would them exclusion have defeated him. If the conveyances were valid, the testator of the plaintiff was at his death seized in fee of the entire premises in controversy; but if they were .invalid, he was only seized in fee of certain undivided interests. In either case, he was entitled at the time of his death to the possession of the entire premises as against the defendants, and all parties except his cotenants; and as a consequence, could have recovered in ejectment against them. In Stark v. Barrett (15 Cal. 371) the complaint alleged, as in the present case, that the plaintiff was seized in fee of the premises, but the proof showed that he was only thus seized as a tenant in common of one undivided half, and we held that he was notwithstanding entitled to recover against all parties but his cotenant, and persons holding under him. “ Under the allegation of seizin in the complaint,” we said, “ it was sufficient for the plaintiff to establish any interest in the premises which gave him a right of possession.” (See also Smith v. Starkweather, 5 Day, 210; Bush v. Bradley, 4 Id, 302.) And by our law the executor *163is required to take possession of all the estate of the testator, both real and personal, and is authorized to maintain any action to recover the possession of such property, which the testator might have maintained. (Act to regulate the Settlement of the Estates of Deceased Persons of May 1st, 1851, secs. 194,195.)

This action was tried by the Court without the intervention of a jury. Of course, in such cases the Court not only performs its peculiar and appropriate duty of deciding the law, but also discharges the functions of a jury, and passes upon the facts. The counsel of the appellants impressed, as it would seem, with this dual character, requested the Court to charge itself as a jury, and handed in certain instructions for that purpose. The Court thereupon formally charged that part of itself which was thus supposed to be separated and converted into a jury, commencing the charge with the usual address, Gentlemen of the jury,” and instructing that imaginary body, that if they found certain facts they should find for the plaintiff, and otherwise for the defendants, and that they were not concluded by the statements of the Court, but were at liberty to judge of the facts for themselves. The record does not inform us whether the jury thus addressed differed in their conclusions from those of the Court. These proceedings have about them so ludicrous an air that we could not believe they were seriously taken, but for the gravity with which counsel on the argument referred to them. If counsel, when a case is tried by the Court without a jury, desire to present for consideration certain points of law as applicable to the facts established or sought to be established, upon which the Court might be called to charge a jury, were there a jury in the case, the proper course is to present them in the form of propositions, preceding them with a statement that counsel makes the following points, or counsel contends as follows. The mode adopted in the present case, though highly original, is not of sufficient merit to be exalted into a precedent to be followed.

Judgment affirmed.