Agmar v. Solomon

261 P. 1029, 87 Cal. App. 127, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 142
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 25, 1927
DocketDocket No. 6037.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 261 P. 1029 (Agmar v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Agmar v. Solomon, 261 P. 1029, 87 Cal. App. 127, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 142 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J., pro tem.

Plaintiffs brought an action in ejectment to recover possession of a lot of land having a frontage of twenty-five feet and six inches on Washington Street, San Francisco. The defendants filed an answer denying the material allegations of the complaint and by way of cross-complaint defendants Aaron Solomon and Hazel Solomon, his wife, prayed the court for a decree quieting their title to a strip of land four and one-half inches wide by 102 feet in depth, and it is the ownership of this strip of land that is in dispute. The remaining defendants have no interest in the land, being only tenants of defendants Aaron Solomon and Hazel Solomon.

It is conceded that the plaintiffs established the record title to the whole of the lot of land" described in the complaint, including the land in- dispute, to be in themselves, such title antedating the acquirement by Koenig—grantor of defendants Aaron Solomon and Hazel Solomon—of the land adjoining on the west the land of plaintiffs, and that such record title continued in plaintiffs up to and including the rendition of judgment herein. Koenig after acquiring title to the lot of land adjoining plaintiffs on the west, which record title did not include the strip of land in dispute, had his lot surveyed. This survey of Koenig’s lot included in the survey the strip in dispute and which was a part of plaintiffs’ lot, and it is conceded that this survey was incorrect in including within the boundaries of Koenig’s lot such strip of land. Koenig built an apartment house according to the lines of this survey, building it upon his lot and over and upon this strip of land in dispute, which was in the possession of plaintiffs and to which they held the record title.

*130 The judgment adjudges that “the said defendants Aaron Solomon and Hazel Solomon, and their grantees and successors, remove at once from said described piece or parcel of land (the strip in dispute) the portion of the building now situate thereon and all obstructions of any sort now situate thereon.” From the judgment entered herein and from the order denying a new trial, the defendants have appealed. '

Appellants urge in support of their appeal that the admissions of the answer to the cross-complaint are conclusive as to the matters thus admitted, and cannot be controverted by the evidence or the findings; that the plaintiffs by their act and conduct are estopped from claiming the possession of the land in dispute, and the court erred in awarding the plaintiffs relief by mandatory injunction.

As to the first point urged that “the admissions of the answer to the cross-complaint are conclusive as to the matters thus admitted, and cannot be controverted by the evidence or the findings,” it may be said that at the trial of the case, counsel for appellants assumed that all the material allegations of the cross-complaint were denied. Not a suggestion was made in the trial court as to the allegations of the cross-complaint being admitted, and no objection was made to the introduction of evidence to controvert such allegations. This objection cannot, therefore, be urged for the first time on appeal. “This court does not look with approval upon the practice of trying a case in the lower court upon the theory that the pleadings are sufficient, and, without making any objection to them or to the evidence, raising the point here for the first time that some of the issues were, in fact, admitted. The plaintiff should not be allowed to lull the defendant into repose by introducing evidence upon each and every issue, and allowing the defendant to do the same, and then, if the verdict or decision is against him, to say for the first time in this court that some of the allegations of the complaint were not denied” (Weidenmueller v. Stearns Ranchos Co., 128 Cal. 623, 625 [61 Pac. 374]). “It is well settled that where the parties have proceeded to trial upon a pleading without objection to its sufficiency to raise a particular issue, and evidence has been received as to the fact, and the issue found upon, the party whose duty it was to object will not *131 be heard in this court to say that the finding is not within the issues” (Illinois Trust & Savings Bank v. Pacific Ry. Co., 115'Cal. 285, 297 [47 Pac. 60]). This has been the rule in this state since the earliest cases. In Tully v. Tranor, 53 Cal. 274, we find this language: “We have repeatedly held that when a cause has been tried in the court below upon the theory of an issue joined, a plaintiff cannot here for the first time demand judgment upon the admissions of defendant’s plea.”

In contravention of the rule quoted from the foregoing cases, appellants cite a number of decisions and particularly direct our attention to White v. Douglass, 71 Cal. 119 [11 Pac. 860], McKee v. Title Ins. & Trust Co., 159 Cal. 207 [113 Pac. 140], and Estate of Cover, 188 Cal. 147 [204 Pac. 583]. In White v. Douglass the court uses this language: “Where a complaint in an action contains an allegation of fact which is distinctly and unqualifiedly admitted by the answer, there is no issue as to the fact. The allegation of the fact being admitted is conclusive. A finding against the admission is therefore outside the issues, and a judgment based upon such a finding, or upon a finding which is not justified by or is contrary to the evidence, cannot be sustained.” In that case the cross-complaint of the defendant contains the allegation “that pursuant to his (defendant’s) application, the land-agent of the university filed in the United States land-office at Stockton, California, an application to have said land located as part of the agricultural college grant—said application being made for the use and benefit of the defendant.” That allegation is not denied. The plaintiff answered it in the following words: “Further answering, plaintiff admits that the land-agent, upon the application of defendant, filed in the United States land-office at Stockton, an application to have the land located as a part of the agricultural college grant, and that the application was made for the use of the defendant.” In the present case a different situation is presented. Most of the facts alleged in the cross-complaint are controverted, leaving, however, a few alleged facts, which it is claimed are admitted by reason of a failure to specifically deny them. This failure to deny was evidently caused by oversight on the part of plaintiff’s counsel, and as no objection was made and no question raised in the trial court, we con- *132 elude that it was likewise an oversight on the part of defendant’s counsel. He evidently thought all the material allegations of the cross-complaint were denied; otherwise he would not have offered evidence to sustain such allegations. In White v. Douglass, supra, it will be noted that the allegations of fact were “distinctly and unqualifiedly admitted by the answer,” and the court there says: “Where a complaint in an action contains an allegation of fact which is distinctly and unqualifiedly admitted by the answer, there is no issue of fact. The allegation of fact being admitted is conclusive, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 1029, 87 Cal. App. 127, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agmar-v-solomon-calctapp-1927.