Cosgrave v. Donovan

199 P. 808, 52 Cal. App. 625, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 209
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 13, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2305.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 199 P. 808 (Cosgrave v. Donovan) 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
Cosgrave v. Donovan, 199 P. 808, 52 Cal. App. 625, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 209 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

FINCH, P. J.

The plaintiffs sued to quiet their title to the southwest quarter of a section of land and to ascertain and adjudge the location of the eastern boundary line thereof. It is alleged that the plaintiffs and defendants together surveyed and laid out said boundary line; that the plaintiffs at large expense, and with the consent and acquiescence of the defendants, built a substantial fence on the line so fixed and that said line is the true boundary line of said land. The defendants answer, setting up title to the southeast quarter of said section and other lands in defendant Kate Donovan and denying the allegations of the complaint relative to the establishment of such boundary line. The court found for the defendants on the issue as to the boundary line and the plaintiffs appeal from the judgment.

It appears that there was a public road running east and west through the north half of the south half of the .section and crossing the common boundary line.

Plaintiffs endeavored to show that the boundary line was established by agreement between the predecessors in title of the plaintiffs and defendants.

[1] In the year 1880 Michael Cosgrave owned the southwest quarter of the section and David Maloney the southeast quarter. Near the center of the dividing line there was then “a little open space” called the “flat.” To the north and the south of the “flat” there were “trees and rock.” During that year Maloney caused to be plowed “a double furrow and a single furrow, a few feet apart.” Maloney then told George Cosgrave, a son of Michael, that “he had produced a line and to keep the sheep on the west side of the line.” About the year 1883 Michael Cosgrave built a fence on “the same line” and Maloney “furnished a part of the lumber to build it.” George Cos-grave, the only witness who testified concerning the transaction, said he did not remember “any conversation at all.” The fence thereafter remained as at first located and was used by both owners. This fence was about a quarter mile long, running south from the road. The land was *628 surveyed by the United States in 1876. The testimony shows that the land was "staked” for several years; that the "stake” in the center of the section was in place -for several years after the fence was built. It is plain that this evidence is insufficient to prove an agreed line. The "stakes” of the original survey locating the corners were in place when the fence was built, and, hence, there could have been no uncertainty at that time as to the location of the true line. [2] The law applicable is well settled. "The doctrine of an agreed boundary line and its binding effects upon the coterminous owners rest fundamentally upon the fact that there is, or is believed by all parties to be, an uncertainty as to the location of the true line. When that uncertainty exists, or is believed by them to exist, they may amongst themselves, by agreement, fix the boundary line, and that agreement will bind all the consenting parties. Acquiescence is merely evidence of the agreement and can properly be considered as evidence of an agreement only when a formal agreement would itself have made a binding contract. But a formal agreement to fix a boundary line is not valid, indeed is void, if the parties know, or one of them knows, that the agreed line is not the true line, or, in other words, if there be not an actual or believed uncertainty as to the true line. This is so because under our law title to real property can be transferred only by descent, devise, conveyance inter vivos, or by adverse holding, and to allow parties where their common boundary line was not uncertain or in dispute by a mere agreement to give one title which belongs in another would be the recognition of a mode of transferring title not countenanced by law.” (Clapp v. Churchill, 164 Cal. 745, [130 Pac. 1061]. See, also, Lewis v. Ogram, 149 Cal. 505, [117 Am. St. Rep. 151, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 610, 87 Pac. 60]; Mann v. Mann, 152 Cal. 23, [91 Pac. 994]; Grants Pass Land etc. Co. v. Brown, 168 Cal. 457, [143 Pac. 754]; Friedman v. Southern California T. Co., 179 Cal. 266, [176 Pac. 442]; Staniford v. Trombly, 181 Cal. 372, [186 Pac. 599]; Wilder v. Nicolaus, 50 Cal. App. 776, [195 Pac. 1068].)

[3] The proof produced is not so clear and certain as to require a finding that the line was agreed upon. (Grants Pass Land etc. Co. v. Brown, 168 Cal. 457, [143 Pac. 754].)

*629 [4] In an effort to prove an agreed line north of the road, tlie plaintiff introduced evidence to the effect that in the year 1908 one of the plaintiffs, James Cosgrave, and the defendant W. F. Donovan laid out and agreed upon the location of the line and that the plaintiffs built a fence upon the line so located, Donovan furnishing part of the material. Donovan denies that he agreed to this line. The court found against the plaintiffs on this issue and, in view of the conflict in the evidence, such finding is conclusive on appeal. [5] Furthermore, the evidence shows that the defendant Kate Donovan, the wife of W. F. Donovan, then owned an undivided interest in said southeast quarter and that she was neither a party to the alleged agreement nor gave her consent thereto and, consequently, was in nowise bound by it.

[6] The court sustained objection to the following question propounded to the defendant W. F. Donovan, who was a witness for the defendants: “Now then, after you and Mr. Cosgrave made that survey and before this action was commenced you had some disagreement, some ill feeling?” Whether or not the ruling complained of was erroneous, it did not prejudice the substantial rights of the plaintiffs. The witness had testified to but two material matters: (1) Relative to the alleged agreed line north of the road, and, as has been pointed out, that issue was necessarily determined against the plaintiffs because Kate Donovan was not a party to the agreement; (2) that a subsequent survey showed that the plaintiffs’ fence north of the road inclosed about an acre of the southeast quarter of the section, and this evidence is uneontradicted. Further, the court did not fix the location of the dividing line, other than by reference to the public land surveys of the United States. The evidence did not furnish the court with the necessary data to more definitely locate the line.

[7] The court limited its judgment to the lands lying north of the road. The complaint alleged ownership of all of the southwest quarter of the section. The answer does not deny this allegation. The defendants alleged ownership of all of the southeast quarter. The evidence established such ownership. The parties were entitled to have their respective ownerships adjudged. The court found that the plaintiffs are the owners of the southwest quarter of the section and that the defendant Kate Donovan is the owner *630 of the southeast quarter.

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Bluebook (online)
199 P. 808, 52 Cal. App. 625, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cosgrave-v-donovan-calctapp-1921.