Campbell v. Grennan

110 P. 156, 13 Cal. App. 481, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 159
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 26, 1910
DocketCiv. No. 686.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 P. 156 (Campbell v. Grennan) 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
Campbell v. Grennan, 110 P. 156, 13 Cal. App. 481, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 159 (Cal. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The evidence shows, as stated by appellant, that defendants’ house projects a little more than eighteen inches over and upon the west half of lot No. '33, in block 245, in the city of Vallejo. The defendants obtained title to the east half of this lot from one Mrs. Barr, who was the owner of the entire lot. In March, 1906, the plaintiff purchased the west half of said lot from the administrator of Mrs. Barr’s estate. The lot has a frontage on York street of fifty feet between two board fences which have stood in their present location for thirty years. The defendants do not claim title to the small strip in dispute through the deed from Mrs. Barr, but predicate their claim upon an oral agreement with her by which she and the defendant, Charles Grennan, agreed upon the division line. This agreement was never reduced to writing, hut it is admitted by appellant that “if this were an action between Mrs. Barr and the defendants, there is no doubt that she would be estopped from disturbing the defendants in their possession of the disputed ground, simply because she knowingly permitted defendants, to hold over the line.” But it is contended that the vital question in the case is: Was the plaintiff an innocent purchaser without notice? And in this connection it is urged1 “that from the time defendants built upon the disputed premises until the plaintiff purchased from Mrs. Barr’s administrator, Mrs. Barr in her lifetime, and her administrator *483 thereafter, occupied and was in possession of the full twenty-five feet constituting the western half of lot 33.” It is conceded that defendants were also in possession of the disputed strip, but the rule is invoked that requires open, notorious and exclusive possession to impute to the purchaser of the record title notice of undisclosed equities in favor of another person. The authorities seem to be uniform as to this legal proposition. It is stated in Smith v. Yule, 31 Cal. 185, [89 Am. Dec. 167], as follows: “Where the vendor is in the apparent possession, the subsequent purchaser, finding the title of record in the vendor, is put upon no further inquiry, because the possession appears to. be according to the title; and if at the same time another person is also in possession, there is no presumption of title in him inconsistent with that' found in the vendor. . . . The subsequent purchaser is not justly chargeable with fraud in failing to make inquiry for a prior unrecorded conveyance, unless there is some fact or circumstance apparent to his observation, calculated to excite the suspicion of a prudent man dealing with the property, that a prior conveyance has been made. The existence of such a conveyance would not be suggested by the possession of a third person, while the vendor held the title appearing of record and was in the apparent possession.” Other cases are cited to the same effect. It is urged by re-, spondents, however, that the rule finds no application- to the facts of this case. Attention is called" to the evidence showing that “appellant was familiar with the premises for a period of nearly forty years. He knew that Grennan had purchased one-half of the lot. He knew that Grennan, during the time of construction, was erecting a building upon the half of the lot claimed by him, and he knew that G-rennan was living alone with his own family in the house he had erected and that there was no division of possession between himself and Mrs. Barr.”

Upon the assumption that the foregoing quotation from respondents’ brief is a full statement of the facts, it could not be gainsaid that respondents’ position is entirely sound. The problem, though, is somewhat affected by the circumstance that a short time before respondents’ house was erected Mrs. Barr moved her residence from the center of the lot to the rear of the same and located it so that it projected *484 over the agreed division line and easterly of the center of said lot.

The ease, then, in brief, is this: B. owns the entire lot and sells the easterly half to G. They agree upon the division line and G. erects a residence abutting thereon. To enable him to do this B. moves her residence to the rear and leaves it partly upon G.’s property. This she occupies until the time of her death. G. and his family are the sole occupants of his residence for five years, when C., with a knowledge of all the facts, except the said agreement between B. and G., purchases the legal title to the westerly half of said lot, which includes, as we have seen, a strip about eighteen inches in width east of the said agreed line. If appellant is awarded possession of said strip respondents will be greatly damaged, or, as testified by one of the latter: “If I am compelled to move that part of my building which the plaintiff claims is on his part of the lot, I will have to cut off about eighteen inches of my house—it would practically ruin the house. It would take off the roof and part of the room that projects eighteen inches over the line claimed by plaintiff; it would certainly injure the building if that part of it were removed.”

Under such circumstances what does equity require? We think there can be reasonably but one answer to the question. The moral and legal duty was east upon appellant to make inquiry concerning these patent and obtrusive circumstances. The knowledge that respondents were building and occupying exclusively a dwelling upon the disputed tract and thus exercising acts of ownership would arrest the attention and challenge the investigation of any prudent person contemplating the purchase of the property. The peculiar location of the other building in the rear of the lot also would naturally excite comment and lead to inquiry. These two facts and circumstances were apparent to appellant’s observation, and were both calculated to excite the suspicion of any prudent man that some agreement not disclosed by the record was made by the parties owning the lot. At any, rate, it is undisputably true that respondents were in the open, notorious and exclusive possession of the portion of the lot covered by their dwelling, and the presumption follows that their ownership was coextensive with the claim thereby asserted, and *485 of this appellant was clearly put upon notice. It would be manifestly unjust, therefore, to eject respondents from the portion of the lot actually occupied by them. But the question in relation to the whole strip has been treated as one and indivisible and involving the same situation, and therefore the judgment in favor of respondents should not be disturbed. With the knowledge possessed by plaintiff it must be presumed that he purchased the west half of the lot in view of respondents’ possession.

Where land is occupied by buildings up to the agreed line, the grantee is presumed to have bought the property with a view to the boundaries thus visibly marked, and to have relied thereon and fixed the price according to the value of the property as thus defined and used. (Young v. Blakeman, 153 Cal. 483, [95 Pac. 888].)

The cases cited by appellant clearly involve a different situation from what we have here. In the Smith case, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 156, 13 Cal. App. 481, 1910 Cal. App. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-grennan-calctapp-1910.