Appeal from a judgment in an action for partition of real property.
Plaintiff, the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in 310 acres of land in Merced County, brought this action praying for partition of said land between herself and defendant bank, the owner of an undivided three-fourths held in trust for Helen P. Lansdale. The bank and Mrs. Lansdale filed a joint answer alleging that the property could not be partitioned in kind without great prejudice to the owners, and after trial the court so found and ordered the prop erty sold. Plaintiff appeals, contending that the evidence is insufficient to support such finding. The case is before us on a bill of exceptions, containing the testimony of but two witnesses, both of whom were called for defendants.
The land in controversy consists of a half section, excepting a ten-acre piece belonging to Shell Oil Company. It is rectangular in shape, a mile long and half a mile wide. It is nearly fiat, with a gentle uniform slope from west to east and a more gradual slope from north to south. The land is used to raise barley, and when the action was brought was leased to R. J. Butts, who owns and farms adjoining lands. For years the custom has been to let it lie fallow one year and to take off the barley crop the next year. The stubble is pastured after the barley is harvested. The main county road runs along the eastern boundary of the tract, there is a right of way running along the southern boundary for three-quarters of a mile, and another county road contacts the northeast corner of the property. There are no buildings on the land, and the only improvements consist of a well, windmill, pump and tank in the northwest corner.
Defendants claim that the property cannot be partitioned in kind because it is spotted in character, different portions thereof varying in value from $20 to $27 an acre; that three different lines have been surveyed across the property for the proposed canal of the Central Valley Water Project, and as yet no one knows which line of survey (if any) will be actually used when the canal is constructed; and that the land, considered as dry farming land, is not of sufficient size to permit it to be divided without greatly increasing the cost of farming the portions as units.
The rule in California, and generally elsewhere, is that partition in kind is favored by the law, and that a sale will be ordered only when it is necessary to prevent great prejudice to the owners. In
Mitchell
v.
Cline,
It is said in 47 Corpus Juris 442, section 436: “As between a partition in kind or sale of land for division, the courts will favor a partition in kind, since this does not disturb the existing form of inheritance or compel a person to sell his property against his will, which, it has been said, should not be done except in eases of imperious necessity. It is no objection to a partition in kind that some of the co-tenants prefer a sale to a partition. ...” (Italics ours.)
In 40 Am.Jur. 72-74, it is said that at common law and in equity as well, in proceedings for the partition of land, the co-tenants were entitled to partition in kind if they so demanded, regardless of the difficulty and inconvenience of partitionment; that the right to have the premises sold if they are of an impartible nature has been provided for by statute, but that the burden of proof to establish the necessary requisites to a sale rather than a partition in kind, is on the party alleging the necessity and advisability of such sale, that a sale cannot be decreed merely to advance the interests of one of the owners; and that before ordering a sale the court must ascertain that the interests of all will be promoted. It is also said that the generally accepted test of whether a partition in kind will result in great prejudice to the owners is whether the value of the share of each in case of a partition will be materially less than his share of the money equiv
In
East Shore Co.
v.
Richmond Belt Ry.,
In
Thompson Estate Co.
v.
Kamm,
In
Williamson Inv. Co.
v. Williamson,
In
Blanchard
v.
Cross,
In
Chittenden
v.
Gates,
In
Pigeon River Lumber Co.
v.
McDougall,
In
Croston
v.
Male,
In light of the principles set forth in the foregoing cases we believe that a partition in kind of the property here involved should be ordered. There is no evidence that a sale will make the aggregate value of the land any greater than the value of the parcels into which it may be divided, and there is no evidence that if sold, anything like a fair price may be secured. On the contrary, according to the testi
It is contended by respondents that the fact that three different surveys for such canal have been made across the land make partition in kind impossible. We are not impressed with this argument. The fact that surveys have been made is no assurance that a canal will be built on the line of any one of them, or at all; and, if such future development should occur it would be of advantage to plaintiff to hold her share of the land in contemplation of same rather than to sell it where there are no buyers in sight except the Lansdales to whose advantage alone a present sale would result. As was said in the Pigeon River Lumber Company case, supra, where condemnation (for a dam site) would probably bring a better price to owners after partition in kind, a sale should not be ordered, particularly where the only probable bidder was the plaintiff in the action whose interests would be best served by a low price.
Appellant also contends on this appeal that there was no evidence justifying the finding of the trial court that the services of the attorney for defendants “are and will be for the common benefit of plaintiff and defendants,” and no justification for its conclusion that fees should be allowed said attorney, when no allowance is made for plaintiff’s attorney. Respondents in their brief do not attempt to justify the
Section 796 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the costs of partition, including reasonable attorney’s fees expended by the plaintiff or either of the defendants for the common benefit, must be paid by the parties respectively entitled to share in the lands divided, in proportion to their respective interests therein, and may be included and specified in the judgment. It is said in 20 Cal.Jur. 639, that costs or attorneys’ fees may not be allowed until the final judgment is entered, and should not be included in the interlocutory decree.
We conclude that the allegation that the services of defendants’ attorney are and will be for the common benefit of plaintiff and defendants has no place in the findings, that whether the services of the attorneys for either or both parties have been for the common benefit, and the reasonable value thereof is matter for determination at the conclusion of the litigation, at which time such fees may be specified and included in the final judgment. But in view of the decisions in
Capuccio
v.
Caire
in
The judgment is reversed with instructions to the trial court to order partition of the property in kind according to the respective rights of the parties.
Schottky, J. pro tem., and Thompson, J., concurred.
