Alpha Stores, Ltd. v. Nobel

135 P.2d 625, 57 Cal. App. 2d 867, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 443
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 29, 1943
DocketCiv. 6354
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 135 P.2d 625 (Alpha Stores, Ltd. v. Nobel) 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
Alpha Stores, Ltd. v. Nobel, 135 P.2d 625, 57 Cal. App. 2d 867, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 443 (Cal. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

ADAMS, P. J.

Appeal from a judgment for defendants in an action to quiet title.

Plaintiffs brought this action on April 28, 1938, seeking to quiet title to an unpatented placer mining claim in Nevada County, hereinafter called Lot 80, alleging that they “are now and for a long time hitherto have been the owners, in the possession and entitled to the possession’’ of said claim. Defendants answered denying any interest of plaintiffs, and set up, as a special defense, that in a prior action the title of defendants to said claim had been quieted, that plaintiffs were in privity with the plaintiffs in said former action, and *868 are therefore estopped by the judgment in said action, and that said judgment is res judicata and a bar to the present action.

Plaintiffs claim title as purchasers at an execution sale. On August 14, 1935, Alpha Stores, Ltd., commenced an action against You Bet Mining Company for a balance due upon an open book account, and on August 15, 1935, had an attachment levied against the property in controversy. Judgment for plaintiff in said action Avas entered September 10, 1935, a sheriff’s sale on execution Avas held on November 7, 1935, the sheriff issued a certificate of sale to Alpha Stores, Ltd., on November 8, 1935, and a sheriff’s deed covering several mineral locations, including Lot 80, followed on November 10, 1936. The Nevada Irrigation District, plaintiff in this action, thereafter acquired an undivided interest by deed from Alpha Stores, Ltd.

Prior to the commencement of the foregoing action, and on May 8, 1935, Nobel, et al. (defendants in the action on appeal) had commenced an action in the Superior Court of Nevada County to restrain the You Bet Mining Company and its agents from interfering with said plaintiffs’ occupation of said Lot 80. The You Bet Mining Company had filed an answer and also a cross-complaint seeking to quiet title to the land. The action was tried on the cross-complaint and the answer thereto as a quiet title action. Judgment was rendered in favor of the Mining Company on January 17, 1936, but on February 28, 1936, the court reopened the case for further evidence, and thereafter made new findings. It found, among other things, that at the time of the commencement of the action, and ever since the 7th day of February, 1930, plaintiffs in said action and their predecessors in interest had been and were the owners, in possession, and entitled to the possession of the land in suit, subject to an easement not of importance here; that said plaintiffs ever since said 7th day of February, 1930, had been in actual, open, notorious, hostile, adverse, exclusive, continuous and uninterrupted possession of said land, under a claim of right, pursuant to a mineral location made on said 7th day of February, 1930; that on said date skid land was unoccupied United States mineral land, open and subject to location as a mining claim, and that on said date plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest located it as and for a mining claim. *869 A judgment quieting the title of Nobel et al. was entered June 29, 1936, subsequent to the date of the sheriff’s sale to plaintiff Alpha Stores. Said judgment was affirmed by this court September 23, 1937. (Nobel v. You Bet Mining Co., 22 Cal.App.2d 623 [72 P.2d 205].)

Thereafter, the action now before this court was commenced, plaintiffs seeking to quiet their own title to Lot 80 as against Nobel et al. As hereinabove stated, defendants Nobel et al., answered denying any interest in plaintiffs, and set up the special defense aforementioned. The trial court found that none of the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint were true; that all of the allegations of the amended answer were true; that plaintiffs were barred by the judgment in Nobel v. You Bet Mining Company from asserting any claim to the property in controversy; that defendants were and ever since the 7th day of February, 1930, had been the owners and entitled to the possession of same, subject only to the paramount title of the United States; and that defendants ever since said date had been in the actual, open, etc. possession of same. A decree quieting defendants’ title followed, and plaintiffs have appealed.

As we view this case, two questions are presented for review, first, are plaintiffs in this action barred by the judgment in Nobel v. You Bet Mining Company as found by the trial court; and, second, was there evidence properly before the trial court to support its findings that none of the allegations in plaintiffs’ complaint were true and that all of the allegations of defendants’ amended answer were true.

Whether plaintiffs herein are bound by the judgment in Nobel v. You Bet Mining Company appears to depend upon the construction to be put upon section 1908 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section provides that the effect of a judgment or final order in such an action is that “the judgment or order is, in respect to the matter directly adjudged, conclusive between the parties and their successors in interest by title subsequent to the commencement of the action or special proceeding, litigating for the same thing under the same title and in the same capacity, provided they have notice, actual or constructive, of the pendency of the action or proceeding.”

It appears to be conceded that plaintiffs are successors in *870 interest to defendant in Nobel v. You Bet Mining Company, by title subsequent to the commencement of that action, and that they are here litigating for the same thing and in the same capacity; plaintiffs contend that they had no notice of the pendency of the preceding action. Defendants make no contention that plaintiffs had actual notice, and it is conceded that no notice of lis pendens was filed for record in said action. But respondents contend that the filing of such notice is not the only way in which a party may be charged with constructive notice under the foregoing section, and that the absence of a notice of Us pendens is, therefore, not conclusive; and that plaintiff Alpha Stores, Ltd., as an execution purchaser, is chargeable with notice “of all documents of record, having any bearing on the title to the property thus acquired”; that there were of record a notice of location of the lot in controversy by defendants, recorded March 3, 1930, and an amended notice of location recorded December 8, 1934, and that these were sufficient to put plaintiff, as execution purchaser, upon notice that respondents were claiming the property as their own; also that because in the prior action the court found that Nobel et al. were in possession, such possession was notice to plaintiffs.

Assuming for the moment, but not deciding, that such notices were sufficient to show that respondents were claiming the property at the time plaintiffs purchased it, we cannot see that they did or could constitute constructive notice of the pendency of the action between Nobel and You Bet Mining Company, so as to make the judgment in said action conclusive upon plaintiffs in this action.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P.2d 625, 57 Cal. App. 2d 867, 1943 Cal. App. LEXIS 443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpha-stores-ltd-v-nobel-calctapp-1943.