East Shore Co. v. Richmond Belt Railway

155 P. 999, 172 Cal. 174, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 509
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1916
DocketS. F. No. 6781. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 155 P. 999 (East Shore Co. v. Richmond Belt Railway) 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
East Shore Co. v. Richmond Belt Railway, 155 P. 999, 172 Cal. 174, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 509 (Cal. 1916).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 176 The action was for partition of lands. The Richmond Belt Railway had obtained from the East Shore Company, before the action was begun, a deed purporting to convey to it, in severalty and entirety, certain strips or parcels of the common land. The deed stated that the strips were conveyed "as and for a right of way" for a railroad "to have and to hold all and singular the said premises, right and privilege unto" the said grantee "so long as the same shall be used for railroad or terminal purposes." During the progress of the suit, and before the decision in the court below, some of the common owners made deeds purporting to convey to third persons, in severalty, the whole title to other specific parcels of the common land. After the evidence was closed and the cause was submitted the court, on motion of plaintiff, opened the case and allowed proof to be made of these conveyances. This was done over the objection of the appellant.

The court found as a fact that the land was susceptible of division between the common owners without material injury to their interests. Thereupon it made an interlocutory judgment of partition, declaring the interests of the respective *Page 177 tenants in common, setting forth, also, the said several conveyances of entire parcels thereof to third persons and describing said parcels, and appointing three persons as referees to make the partition. With respect to the specific parcels conveyed in whole title, the judgment directed that each such parcel be charged against and deducted from the share of the common owner who made the conveyance, that such common owner should be allotted only the interest remaining in him after such deduction, and that each person so receiving a conveyance of a parcel in whole title should have such parcel set apart to him, provided the same could be done without material injury to the rights and interests of other tenants in common who did not join in such conveyance. From this interlocutory judgment the defendant, J. Goodwin Thompson, appeals.

Certain principles have been established in this state concerning the rights of the parties where one tenant in common has conveyed, in whole title, a part of the common land, which principles control the decision in this case. They are well stated in the following extracts from our decisions: "A suit in partition under our code is, in its nature and essence, equitable, and the court, in its decree, proceeding to do what is 'equitable, just, and proper,' will not only allot to a cotenant that part of the common land upon which he has valuable improvements, but will also set apart a specific tract to the share of a cotenant who has undertaken to convey the title in fee to such tract in severalty, so that the grantee may have that which is justly his, when such disposition of the land can be made 'without material injury to the rights and interests of the other cotenants!' " (Emeric v. Alvarado,90 Cal. 444, 457, [27 P. 356].) Substantially the same doctrine is stated in each of the two decisions in Gates v. Salmon, the first reported in 35 Cal. 576, [95 Am. Dec. 139], and the other in 46 Cal. 361, and in section 764 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Another rule is stated in the first case, at page 588, where the court says, with respect to a conveyance of such special tract: "The grantor, before his conveyance of the special tract, held his undivided interest therein subject to the contingency of the loss of it, if on the partition of the general tract the special tract should be allotted to one of his cotenants. The grantee, then, acquires all the interest of his grantor in the special tract, and that interest is a tenancy in *Page 178 the special tract in common with the cotenants of his grantor, but his conveyance did not sever the special tract from the general tract, so far as the cotenants are concerned, and the general tract is, therefore, liable to a partition so far as the cotenants of the grantor are concerned, as it would be had the conveyance of the special tract not been made." In pursuance of this doctrine it was held in Pfeiffer v. Regentsof University, 74 Cal. 156, [15 P. 622], that one tenant in common could not by his conveyance create an easement in the common land which would be good against any of the tenants other than himself.

A large portion of the brief of the appellant is devoted to an endeavor to show errors with relation to the conveyances of special tracts located within the common land by tenants other than himself. With respect to all of these it need only be said that the appellant, since he did not join in the conveyances and since his share cannot be affected in any injurious manner by anything done under the decree with respect to these specific parcels, has no interest in the question, and the errors, if any, are immaterial to him and insufficient to authorize the reversal of the judgment, upon his appeal. This was decided in Gates v. Salmon, 46 Cal. 361, 375. Referring to a conveyance by Theodocia, one of the tenants, of a specific parcel of the common land, the court said: "The other original tenants in common, and their grantees, whether of undivided interest or of special locations, are unaffected, either in the amount of their interests, or their rights or equities, in respect to the partition, by the question whether Theodocia did or did not convey any of the special locations. The question concerns only those who claim under her." The same rule renders it immaterial whether or not the deed above mentioned to the Richmond Belt Railway conveyed the title in fee or only an easement. Whether it was a fee or an easement, it affected only the interest of the grantor, the East Shore Company, in the common land, and no partition could justly be made under the decree herein which would make any disposition to the grantee of that easement that would be prejudicial to the interests of the other tenants in common.

The appellant objects to the action of the court in opening the case and permitting proof of some conveyances of special locations, which were made after the suit was begun and *Page 179 which were not mentioned in any pleading on file. The same principle applies to this objection. None of these conveyances was made by the appellant, and as they involve only the relative rights of the grantees and grantors in the share set apart by the partition to the grantors and cannot, under the decree, in any respect injure the appellant, the ruling of the court thereon is one which he cannot question. It is immaterial to him whether the causes of action of these grantees, with respect to their respective grantors, existed when the action was begun or not. Perhaps if the procedure resorted to had resulted in a delay of the decision of the case which worked injury to the appellant in its practical operation, he might be allowed to make an objection, but no injury of this kind is suggested or claimed. The opening of the case caused a delay of only a few weeks, and it does not appear that the appellant was at all prejudiced thereby. In this behalf it is urged that the motion to reopen the case was made by the East Shore Company, originally one of the tenants in common, and he claims that by its conveyances it had parted with its entire interest. From this he argues that a motion made by one not having any interest should not have been entertained.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 999, 172 Cal. 174, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-shore-co-v-richmond-belt-railway-cal-1916.