De Castro v. Fellom

67 P. 142, 135 Cal. 225, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 682
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 27, 1901
DocketS.F. No. 2462.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 67 P. 142 (De Castro v. Fellom) 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
De Castro v. Fellom, 67 P. 142, 135 Cal. 225, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 682 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The plaintiffs appeal from a judgment rendered against them on demurrer to their complaint. The suit was brought to establish a trust in favor of the plaintiffs in lands confirmed and patented to the predecessors or predecessor of the defendants under the act of March 3, 1851, “to *227 ascertain and settle the private land claims in the state of California.”

The material facts alleged in the complaint, omitting those given in explanation of delay in bringing suit,—which, under the view we take of the ease, will be immaterial,—are as follows:—

The plaintiffs are descendants and heirs of Tgnacio Ortega, who died in the year 1833, owner of the tract of land known as the sitio, or rancho, of San Tsidro, containing eleven square leagues, or thereabouts, and leaving as his sole heirs six children,—to wit, three minor daughters (Merced, Gertrudes, and Maria Antonia), two married daughters (Maria Clara, married to John Gilroy, and Isabella, married to Julian Cantua), and a son, Quintín. The title of the plaintiffs is deraigned through the three daughters first named, that of the defendants through one or more of the other heirs. The claims of the plaintiffs’ ancestors were never presented for confirmation.

After the death of Tgnacio, and in the same year, a conciliation suit (“juicio de conciliación”) was instituted, before an alcalde, against Quintín, by Gilroy and Cantua, on behalf of their wives, resulting in an agreed judgment, or agreement of record, by the terms of which the “place called San Tsidro” was divided among them,—the southern part of the ranch being assigned to Quintín, the middle to Mrs. Gilroy, and the northern part to Mrs. Cantua. This judgment, or agreement, is important, not only as part of the history of the case, but because it is made the basis of a claim by the plaintiffs that Quintín and the two married sisters thereby became trustees for the minor sisters. The document itself is not set out in or attached to the complaint, but translations only,— of which there are three,—two in the complaint, and one among the exhibits attached thereto. These do not altogether accord, but, on collating them, the nature of the transaction is apparent. Quintín, it appears, had made a petition to the governor for a grant of the land, on the ground that the title papers of his mother and father had been lost, and Gilroy and Cantua had made complaint on behalf of their wives. Thereupon Quintín disclaimed the intention of seeking to obtain an exclusive right, and an arbitration was agreed upon, resulting in the division of the land—i. e. of the whole ranch —to the three parties as above stated. The agreement, after *228 reciting Quintín’s application for a new trial, and the interests of the other sisters, concludes with the following proviso: “Both of the contending parties must bind themselves on that account and agree to divide anew the above-mentioned land among the other three sisters, that have not as yet appeared, so that they may not be injured or defrauded of the part that belongs to them”; and it is added: “To these terms they all agreed, [and] the alcalde, the arbitrators, and the two interested parties signed, Cantua not doing so, because he could not write.” The document was signed accordingly. By the terms of the document, this agreement is apparently conditioned on some contingency, differently stated in the several translations, but which, probably, may have been the finding of the original title papers, or the validation of the title of Ygnacio by a new grant. But, in the absence of the original, this point cannot be determined. (As to the nature of this proceeding, see Von Schmidt v. Huntington, 1 Cal. 59, and Escriche, Dic. de Leg., article “Juicio de Conciliacion.”)

In the same year, according to the allegations in the body of the complaint, Quintín, Mrs. Gilroy, and Mrs. Cantua made an application to the governor, representing in writing, .among other things, that they were the only heirs of Ygnacio Ortega, and that they had lost the title papers of their father, and praying “that, in lieu of the original title papers, a new title issue to them”; and the governor, “relying upon said representations, and believing them to be true, issued, in lieu of the lost papers, another evidence of title by reason of said descent.” Afterwards Quintín and his two married sisters and their husbands sold their interests, by a quitclaim deed, to Julia Martin and Henry Miller, who, in the names of their grantors, presented to the board of land commissioners ‘£ a petition” for the confirmation of “the evidenciary grant before referred to, made in lieu of the real title papers, ’ ’ and obtained a confirmation “of the said evidenciary grant.” These allegations, it will be observed, all refer to and describe a single grant, made to the three grantees named as heirs of the deceased Ygnacio, and in confirmation of his title, and also to a confirmation of this title to the grantees. But in other allegations as to the same proceedings several grants are referred to,—as, for example, that the claimants “made such averments in their petition as to make it appear that said *229 grants were made to the respective petitioners as original and authentic titles,” etc.,—and that “such proceedings were had . . . that decrees confirming said evidenciary grants, . . . and patents issued to the said petitioners and their grantees.” And, from the exhibits attached to the complaint, and referred to therein as “the decree of confirmation,” etc., and as describing “the lands . . . affected by this suit,” it appears there were in fact three several grants to the parties named, respectively, all of date June 19, 1833,—to wit, the grant to Mrs. Cantua, attached as exhibit, being for one league in the “portion of the rancho . . . San Ysidro,” allotted to her in the conciliation proceeding; the grant to Mrs. Gilroy, of one league in the portion of the rancho allotted to her in the same proceedings, confirmed by the decree of the United' States district court, attached as an exhibit; and the grant to Quintín (incidentally referred to in that decree, and presumably for the same quantity), in the part of the rancho allotted to him. The only decree of confirmation that appears is that of Mrs. Gilroy’s claim, above referred to. Whether the grants to Mrs. Cantua, and to Quintín were ever confirmed, or presented for confirmation, cannot be determined from1 the allegations of the complaint. It, indeed, appears from the decree confirming Mrs. Gilroy’s claim that Quintín was a party to that proceeding, and that his claim was rejected. But the rejected claim was his claim to the land claimed by Mrs. Gilroy and her grantee Martin, and his own grant may or may not have been confirmed in some other proceeding.

The above, and other inconsistencies in the complaint, render it difficult to determine the particular grant or grants intended to be attacked, or the particular decree or decrees of confirmation under which the plaintiffs claim to be beneficiaries. From the several grants to Mrs. Gilroy, Mrs. Cantua, and Quintín, it must be presumed that there was no such grant or confirmation as that referred to in the body of the complaint, —i. e. a grant to the three of the whole rancho,—and its subsequent confirmation to them. None of the allegations of the complaint (other than the reference to the exhibits for description of the land) pointed directly to the grant and confirmation to Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

AO Alpha-Bank v. Yakovlev
California Court of Appeal, 2018
AO Alpha-Bank v. Yakovlev
230 Cal. Rptr. 3d 214 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
Estate of Kennedy
106 Cal. App. 2d 621 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
Estate v. American Trust Co.
235 P.2d 837 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P. 142, 135 Cal. 225, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-castro-v-fellom-cal-1901.