Bath v. Valdez

11 P. 724, 70 Cal. 350, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 793
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1886
DocketNo. 9938
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 11 P. 724 (Bath v. Valdez) 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
Bath v. Valdez, 11 P. 724, 70 Cal. 350, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 793 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

Searls, C.

This action was brought to quiet title to the north half of lot eight (8), block three (3), of Ord’s survey of the city of Los Angeles.

The decree of the court below established the ownership of the plaintiff to an undivided one half of the whole of lot eight (8), and that certain of the defendants were the owners of the other undivided half of said lot, in the proportion" of one twelfth each, and that plaintiff had not acquired the interest of the defendants by adverse possession.

The appeal is prosecuted by plaintiff from the judgment, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

In 1862, Julian Valdez had title to the premises as the [353]*353common property of himself and his wife, Manuela. In 1863, Julian Valdez died intestate, leaving him surviving Manuela, his widow, and his mother and several brothers and sisters, as his heirs. In April of that year, the widow obtained letters of administration. In 1865, Manuela intermarried with one Chavez, and thereafter, in the same year, she and her then husband executed a deed of the premises to one Peppers, by which they remised, released, and quitclaimed “ all that lot,” describing a tract including the premises in controversy. Under this deed, Peppers took and retained possession until, in July, 1872, she executed a grant, bargain, and sale deed to Burrows, and from Burrows the title comes by mesne conveyances of grant, bargain, and sale to plaintiff. Plaintiff’s grantors were respectively in the undisturbed possession of the premises during the periods while they had title; they placed improvements on the property, received the rents, and had the entire enjoyment thereof. Plaintiff purchased in January, 1882, and this suit was commenced in October, 1882. The court also found:—

“That the said plaintiff, his grantors, ancestors, and predecessors, from the 4th of October, 1865, have received all the rents, issues, and profits of the premises, paid all taxes that have been imposed thereon, and occupied the same, and that neither the said plaintiff nor his grantors or ancestors or predecessors, or any of them, ever gave any notice, actual or otherwise, to the defendants, or any of them, that he or they or any of them intended to or did or were claiming and holding the said premises or any part thereof adverse to the said José E. Erigido, Vicente, Juan, Felipe, and María de Los Angeles Valdez, and Guadalupe V. de Bocha, or either or any of them, nor was the said plaintiff, or the said Burrows, or Boques, or the said Dassaud, or the said Goodwin, or any or either of them, ever heard to make or assert any claim to the land in controversy adverse to the said defendants, Valdez or Bocha, or any of them, or [354]*354under whom they claim, prior to the commencement of this action.”

The court found further that neither the plaintiff nor his grantors, Dassaud, Boques, or Goodwin, or any or either of them, had or claimed to have any knowledge or notice of the interests or claims of the defendants, or any of them, in or to the premises until after the purchase of plaintiff in 1882.

From the marriage of the widow of Julian Valdez, in 1865, until 1882, nothing was done in the administration of the Valdez estate; but in 1882, Erigido Valdez, one of the brothers of the deceased, obtained letters, and such proceedings were had that in 1883, after the commencement of this action, distribution of the property was made by the Superior Court, sitting in probate, one half to Burrows, grantee of Manuela, and the other half to brothers and sisters of the deceased,—one twelfth each, —the mother and one brother having died in the mean time.

The court below based its decree on two propositions, viz.: 1. The plaintiff had mot acquired the property as against the heirs of Julian Valdez by virtue of the statute of limitations; and 2. He was estopped by the decree of distribution in probate from asserting that the Valdez heirs had no title.'

Some question was made at the hearing in this court as to whether the parties in interest were all- before the court.

By a memorandum filed April 9,1886, we are' referred to the various amendments, pleadings, supplemental pleadings, and stipulations whereby they were brought in and the objection obviated.

There is on file a written consent on the part of defendants and respondents that the decree bé so modified that the undivided twelfth interest in the premises awarded to Vicente Valdez be decreed to belong to the plaintiff, whereby it is conceded plaintiff is entitled to a [355]*355decree for an undivided seven twelfths (7-12) of the premises.

The plaintiff brought his action to quiet title to the north half of lot 8. His testimony showed:—

1. That he had purchased such north half .of the lot, and no more; and
2. That he claimed the north half, and no more, by virtue of the adverse possession of himself and his grantors.

The decree should therefore in any event be so modified as to award to plaintiff the undivided seven twelfths (7-12) of the north half only of lot 8.

Such modification of the decree can be made by the court below without the necessity of a retrial of the cause, provided a new trial is not made necessary by the validity of the other errors assigned.

These alleged errors involve the two propositions above mentioned as the basis of the decree, and to them we address our attention: 1. Did plaintiff establish a title under the statute of limitations as against defendants, the heirs of Julian Valdez ?

The findings are against the claim under the statute.

It is true that the prominent facts which negative plaintiff’s adverse holding under the statute of limitations are to be found in the conclusions of law.

This displacement, however, does not alter or detract from their efficacy as facts, and under the former rulings of this court does not prevent the finding from being accepted as sufficient to support a judgment. (Jones v. Clark, 42 Cal. 192; Breuner v. Ins. Co., 51 Cal. 107; Edwards v. Sonoma Valley Bank, 59 Cal. 148.)

We shall therefore treat the findings as sufficient in this respect to support the judgment, and confine our attention to the question whether or not the findings are warranted by the evidence.

The testimony on the subject is all one way, and shows that in 1865 Manuela Valdez, the widow of Julian Val[356]*356dez, having intermarried with one Chavez, united with her husband in the execution of a quitclaim deed to one Peppers, by which they remised and quitclaimed to the latter lot No. 8, etc., which deed was properly acknowledged and recorded in 1866.

Peppers entered into possession of the lot, and retained such possession until July, 1872, when she conveyed by deed of grant, bargain, and sale the entire lot to Burrows, and from the latter the title to the north half of the lot passed in July, 1875, to Dassaud and Boques, under whorq, plaintiff claims' through sundry mesne conveyances, all purporting to convey the legal title.

The several deeds of conveyance were recorded at or about the date of their execution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 P. 724, 70 Cal. 350, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bath-v-valdez-cal-1886.