125 Cal. 316 | Cal. | 1899
This is an action in ejectment to recover possession of certain lands described in the complaint. Judgment below went for plaintiff, and defendants appeal from the judgment and from the order denying a motion for a new trial.
Plaintiff claims title under a homestead entry made in accordance with the United States laws upon that subject (see Wormouth v. Gardner, 105 Cal149), and before the filing of the cross-complaint hereinafter mentioned he received a United States patent for the land in pursuance of his homestead entry. The principal contention of defendants for a reversal is in relation to what they call their equitable title. This title, as shown in the cross-complaint, is briefly as follows: It is averred that the land in contest here was within the exterior boundaries of a certain Mexican grant, made in 1835 to Juan Reed,of a certain tract of land called the Rancho Corte de Madera del Presidio—usually called the Reed rancho; that this grant was presented to the land commissioners and the United States district court, and was confirmed; that a United States patent to the rancho was issued to the heirs of Reed in February, 1885, and that the patent excluded the land in contest in this case, and that the Reed heirs supposed the land was included within said grant, and with that understanding conveyed the same to various parties, through whom, by mesne conveyance, whatever right they had to this piece of land became vested in the defendant, Jacob Gardner, whose immediate grantor was one Throckmorton. It is further averred that in January, 1875, the said Throckmorton made application to the United States land department to purchase said lands under the act of Congress entitled, "An act to quiet titles in California,” approved July 23, 1866; basing his application upon the facts hereinbefore stated, and that the plaintiff herein, Wormouth, was made a party defendant in said application, and that a contest took place in the land department between Throckmorton, upon his claim as aforesaid, and Wormouth, as a. homestead claimant; that the register and receiver of the United States land office at San Francisco, in which application was made, decided the case in favor of Wormouth and against Throckmorton; that Throckmorton appealed to the commissioner of the general land-office, who also decided the case against him; and that he
What appellant claims as his legal title was presented to the jury in the shape of an issue as to damages for detention of the land. The jury found a verdict of two thousand dollars, which the court reduced to sixteen hundred dollars. The United States patent to the Beed heirs was finally determinative of the boundaries of the grant; and we see no other point in the case necessary to be discussed.
The judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Temple, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.