Chapman v. Moore

91 P. 324, 151 Cal. 509, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 457
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1907
DocketL.A. No. 1881.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 91 P. 324 (Chapman v. Moore) 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
Chapman v. Moore, 91 P. 324, 151 Cal. 509, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 457 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action was originally commenced by M. M. Davis, as plaintiff, and subsequent to its commencement the present plaintiff, William Chapman, was substituted in the superior court for said Davis as plaintiff.

The action was brought to quiet title to lot 4 in block “C” of the Sunset Tract in the city of Los Angeles, the plaintiff making the usual allegations of ownership of the property, and the defendants asserting claims thereto adverse to him.

The defendant 0. A. Moore in her answer denied the alleged ownership of plaintiff, and asserted ownership of the lot to be in herself; the defendants Strohm, in a separate answer, also denied the ownership of plaintiff, and asserted that the defendant Susan Strohm was the owner of the property. These latter defendants also pleaded in abatement of the present action the pendency of a prior action brought against them by M. M. Davis to quiet title to' this same lot.

Upon the trial the court found in favor of the defendants Strohm on their plea of abatement; found also that plaintiff was not the owner of the property, and entered judgment that the action abate as to the Strohms, and in favor of 0. A. Moore for her costs.

Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and an order denying a motion made by him for a new trial.

On the trial of the cause the only evidence presented upon the issue of ownership of the property was that offered by the plaintiff. No evidence was offered by the defendants at all, save by the Strohms in support of their plea in abatement.

*511 As grounds for a reversal it is insisted by appellant that the court erred in sustaining the plea of abatement interposed by the Strohms, that it erred also in rejecting certain evidence offered by plaintiff, and that the finding of the court that plaintiff was not the owner of the property in dispute was not justified by the evidence.

As to the plea in abatement. This was the first issue tried by the court. In support of it the Strohms offered in evidence the record in the suit of M. M. Davis versus B. E. Ninde, Samuel Strohm, Susan Strohm, William Patterson et ah, which showed that a suit to quiet title to the same lot involved in the action then on trial was commenced February 3, 1903, (the complaint in this action was filed August 27, 1904,) and was then pending as to the said defendants Strohm. This was the only evidence offered, and at its conclusion a motion was made on behalf of said defendants Strohm, on such showing, to have this action as to them dismissed, which was granted. The showing was sufficient to sustain the plea, and upon it the Strohms were entitled to have the subsequent action against them abated. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 430 (subd. 2), 433.)

The Strohms by this order of the court having been dismissed from the case, the trial then proceeded between the plaintiff and the defendant Moore.

To sustain his title against her, plaintiff offered in evidence, among other documents, a certificate of sale of said property made July 3, 1895, to the state of California for state and county taxes for the year 1894; a deed of said property, dated July 6, 1900, from the county tax-collector to the state of California for said taxes; also a deed of said property from said tax-collector to plaintiff, dated September 21, 1901, made pursuant to an authorization of the state controller to sell said land. The court refused, upon defendants’ objection, to admit such instruments in evidence, and this ruling is assigned as error. In the briefs of respondent no grounds are suggested in support of the ruling and no specific objections are urged against the validity of these several tax-sale instruments. Counsel for respondent simply says: ‘ ‘ The questions as to the validity of this state deed involved in this action are the same as those now before the supreme court in the ease of Barrett [which should have been Baird] versus Monroe, Los Angeles No. 1623....” The case of Baird v. Monroe, 150 Cal. 560, *512 [89 Pac. 352], had not been decided by this court when the briefs in this present appeal were filed, but it has been since, and the various grounds urged against the validity of a tax-deed there involved, similar to the one in question here, were deemed untenable and the validity of the deed sustained. It is unnecessary to refer here to the objections urged against the deed considered in that case, or to restate the grounds upon which the court sustained its validity, as they will fully appear from an examination of the decision rendered. (Baird v. Monroe, 150 Cal. 560, [89 Pac. 352], See, also, Carter v. Osborn, 150 Cal. 620, [89 Pac. 608].) It follows, therefore, that the trial'court erred in refusing to admit in evidence the tax-deed offered by plaintiff.

The only other questions presented upon this appeal involve the validity of a certain judgment and its effect, if valid.

It was stipulated on the trial that a certain deed, dated and recorded in October, 1887, conveyed title in fee to the lot of land in controversy here to one Walter Patterson. Such admission being made, the plaintiff offered in evidence a judgment-roll in a suit brought by M. M. Davis, the predecessor of plaintiff, versus B. E. Ninde, Samuel Strohm, Susan Strohm, and Walter Patterson (the same action heretofore referred to as pleaded in bar by the Strohms), which showed that an action to quiet title to this same property was commenced by Davis against the defendants by complaint filed February 3, 1903; that an affidavit and order for publication of summons on one of the defendants—Walter Patterson—were subsequently made and filed and service of the summons made upon said Patterson by publication; that the default of Patterson was subsequently entered, and thereafter, on April 4, 1904, a decree was entered quieting the title of said Davis to said lot against the said defendant Patterson. No objection was offered to the admission of the judgment-roll, and it was received in evidence. The plaintiff supplemented this offer by proof of a conveyance of the lot in controversy from M. M. Davis to himself, and rested his case.

It is insisted by appellant that this showing—the admission of title in Patterson at a given date, the decree quieting title subsequently obtained against Patterson by plaintiff’s predecessor Davis, and the conveyance of Davis to himself— *513 sustained his claim of ownership to the property against the defendant Moore, and the finding of the court that he was not such owner was not justified by the evidence.

This claim of appellant is, in our judgment, unquestionably true, unless, as insisted by respondent, the decree quieting title to the lot in question against Patterson in the case just referred to is void, or unless there is some merit in the position of respondent, that, even if valid, the decree was not available to plaintiff as a muniment of title against her.

Now, as to the validity of the decree.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P. 324, 151 Cal. 509, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 457, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chapman-v-moore-cal-1907.