Anderson v. Fisk

36 Cal. 625
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 Cal. 625 (Anderson v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Fisk, 36 Cal. 625 (Cal. 1869).

Opinion

By the Court, Crockett, J. :

This is an action in the usual form to recover a tract of land, which is a portion of a larger tract which was granted and has been finally confirmed and patented to Yaca and Peña. The plaintiff's claim title from Yaca under a deed made in 1848, and which was recorded in December, 1851, but without any acknowledgment or proof of its execution. The defendants claim title under two subsequent deeds, one from Yaca and the other from Peña, both of which, though subsequent in time to the plaintiffs’ deed, were first recorded. Several answers were filed by the defendants, all of which, besides a general denial of the allegations of the complaint, contained sjiecial matters of defense, which were separately pleaded. To these special defenses separate demurrers were [631]*631filed by the plaintiffs in July, 1861. The record does not disclose what action, if any, was taken by the parties or tlie Court in respect to these demurrers prior to September 21st, 1864, on which day the following order was entered by the Court:

“In this cause, on motion of W. S. Wells, attorney for defendants, ordered that this cause be placed on the calendar, and the demurrer to defendants answer be overruled.

There is nothing to inform us whether or not the demurrers had before then been submitted to the Court, nor whether they were overruled for want of prosecution or on the merits. Under these facts, the plaintiffs insist, on this appeal, that the Court erred in overruling the demurrers; whilst the defendants claim that from the long time which elapsed between the date of filing the demurrers and the order of the Court overruling them, they must be deemed to have been abandoned, and we should presume that the Court overruled them, not on the merits, but for want of prosecution. If it had appeared from the record that the Court overruled them for the latter reason, and not on the merits, and nothing further was disclosed, we should not have interfered with the exercise of its discretion in that réspect by the Court. But, for aught that appears, the demurrers may before then have been duly submitted to the Court, and its decision not announced until the date of the order. If such were the facts, the order submitting them would have formed no part of the judgment roll, and could not properly have gone into the record, unless the fact was made to appear in some other proper manner. If they were in fact overruled for want of prosecution, it was incumbent on the defendants to see that it was so recited in the order, or it should be made affirmatively to appear in some other proper method. In the absence of such a showing, we cannot presume, on the facts disclosed by the record, that they were not overruled on the merits. It becomes necessary, therefore, to inquire whether these demurrers were properly overruled. That some of the special defenses set up in the answers were insufficient, is too [632]*632plain, to admit of argument. It appears from the complaint that the plaintiffs claimed title under a Mexican grant duly-confirmed and patented. To this complaint all the answer set up as a defense, “that neither the plaintiffs, or either of them, or their ancestor, predecessor, or grantor, or either of them, was seized or possessed of the premises in question within five years before the commencement of this action.” Also, that the defendants are in possession under Vaca and Peña, the grantees of the Mexican Government, and that plaintiffs’ cause of action did not accrue within two years next before the commencement of the action. And as another defense, that the defendants are in possession of undefined portions of the premises in contest, under conveyances from Vaca and Peña, the original grantees, from whom the defendants purchased, in good faith, for a valuable consideration, without notice of the plaintiffs’ claim. Also, that the defendants, in good faith and under color of title, have made permanent and valuable improvements on the premises severally occupied by them. This is apparently pleaded as a defense to the action, and is not limited on the face of the answers as a setoff against rents and profits. The answer of Dobbins, Glenn, Jewett, and Jones also attempts to set up a former recovery as against Mrs. Anderson, one of the plaintiffs.

The Statute of Limitations of five years is well pleaded. It is in the language of the statute in force at the time, and it was not incumbent on the defendants to rebut, in advance, the matter which the plaintiffs might set up in avoidance, to wit: that they held under a Mexican grant, finally confirmed within less than five years next before the commencement of the action. (Richardson v. Williamson, 24 Cal. 296; Arrington v. Liscom, 34 Cal. 365; Vassault v. Seitz, 31 Cal. 228.)

The demurrer to this defense was, therefore, properly overruled. But the limitation of two years, attempted to be set up in the answers, was no defense. This was founded on the Act generally known as the “ Settlers’ Act,” (Stats. 1856, p. 54,) which has been decided to be unconstitutional and [633]*633void. (Billings v. Hall, 7 Cal. 1; Lathrop v. Mills, 19 Cal. 513; Pioche v. Paul, 22 Cal. 105.)

The demurrer to this defense ought, therefore, to have been sustained. If the fact that the defendants had made valuable and permanent improvements on the premises in good faith, under color of title, was intended to be pleaded as a defense to the action, it was, of course, a bad pleading; but though it contains no offer to offset the value of the improvements against rents, as it ought to have done, it nevertheless stated the essential facts to justify such offset; and we apprehend neither the counsel nor the jury were misled as to the real object of the averment, and that it was not treated at the trial as raising an issue of fact which, if found for the defendants, would defeat the action. That part of the answers which sets up as a defense that the defendants were in possession of portions of the premises in contest under purchases made in good faith from the original grantees, without notice of the plaintiffs’ claim, is defective in omitting to describe the particular portions of which they were thus in possession. It is a familiar rule of pleading that a defendant setting up title to only a portion of the demanded premises, must specify the part he claims, in order to apprise his adversary of it, that he may bring his proofs un derstaudingly. But these answers do not either specify the quantity claimed nor describe it in any other manner. On loose, vague allegations of this character no judgment could be entered, even though the plaintiffs conceded them to be true. The second special defense contained in said answers is also insufficient for the same reason, and for the. further reason that it does not aver an adverse claim or possession in the defendants. The plea of former recovery by Dobbins and others is also badly pleaded in this, that it does not describe or specify the land which was in contest in the former action, and is pleaded as a general defense to the whole action, whereas it could in any event be a defense as against Mrs. Anderson only. These answers were loosely [634]*634drawn, and lacked the precision which is indispensable to a good pleading. We think all the special defenses except the first were badly pleaded, and the Court erred in overruling the demurrers to them.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Cal. 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-fisk-cal-1869.