Emeric v. Alvarado

90 Cal. 444
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1891
DocketNos. 13275, 13276, 13871, 13984, 14006
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 90 Cal. 444 (Emeric v. Alvarado) 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
Emeric v. Alvarado, 90 Cal. 444 (Cal. 1891).

Opinions

McFarland,- J.

— This is an action for the partition of a tract of land called the San Pablo Ranch, containing l7,938.59 acres. It is situated in what is now Contra Costa County, and was granted by the Mexican government, and afterwards patented by the United States, to the successors of Francisco Maria Castro, who died on the fifth day of November, 1831. The action was commenced.on November 19, 1867, in the district court of the fifteenth judicial district, in and for the city and county of San Francisco, and an interlocutory decree was rendered in that court on July 15, 1878. Several appeals were taken; and the judgment and order denying a new trial were reversed by this court, because the findings as to two or three issues were deemed defective, and furthermore, and mainly, because the decree determined rights, interests, and shares in the land only as they existed in the hands of the original tenants in common, and did not determine the present rights, interests, and shares of all the parties to the suit as they existed at the time the action was commenced. Most of the findings of the district court were approved, and the cause was remanded to the superior court (successor to said district court), with instructions to find on certain issues mentioned, and “ upon the findings heretofore made and herein approved, and those hereafter to be made under the directions of this court,” to proceed and specify in its interlocutory decree the “ rights and interests of all parties to the action,” and adjudge partition between them according to such rights and interests. (Emeric v. Alvarado, 64 .Cal, 627.) It was established by the first decree and the decision of this court that the persons denominated original tenants in common,” and the shares belonging to each, were as follows: Martina Castro de Alvarado, fifteen equal twenty-second parts of said rancho; Antonio Castro, Joaquin I. Castro, Juan José Castro, Gabriel V. Castro, Victor Castro, and Jesus Maria Castro, each one equal twenty-second part; [451]*451and Luisa Moraga de Briones, Maria de Los Angeles Moraga de Briones, José Moraga, Guadalupe Moraga de Martinez, and Francisca Moraga, each one equal one fifth of one equal twenty-second part of said rancho. (The seven persons first above named were children of Francisco Maria Castro, and the five persons last named were children' of Francisca Castro de Moraga, a deceased daughter of said Francisco Maria Castro.) After the cause went back to the superior court, further findings were had; and that court, — Judge James G. Maguire presiding, — with great care, and in a systematic method that must have cost great labor and thought, found, determined, and stated the interests and shares not only of the said original co-defendants, but of all persons holding or claiming under them, and being parties to this action, and entered an interlocutory decree adjudging partition among the parties in accordance with the findings. The case now comes here the second time, upon numerous appeals from the interlocutory decree, and from an order denying a motion for a new trial.

There are several hundred parties ^o the action. The interests of many of the parties to the appeals are friendly as to some matters and hostile as to others, so that they are appellants as to some points and respondents as to others, thus presenting different and contradictory claims upon the same transcript. The findings of fact of the superior court number 274; many of them having numerous subdivisions, and they were all necessary to the disposition of the case. These findings, with the conclusions of law, the original findings of the district court, and the last interlocutory decree, occupy 752 pages of the printed transcript No. 13276, while there is much additional matter in the other transcripts. It is apparent, therefore, that the labor of the court below must have been very great, and that it would be impossible to give here a full statement of the whole case in detail, without exceeding all reasonable limits of an opinion. [452]*452As, however, the opinion of this court delivered on the former appeal contains quite an extensive history of the case, and as the points arising on the present appeals may be grouped into a few general classes, we think that the case can be disposed of without much detailed statement of facts. There are five separate trans-scripts,—Nos. 13276, 13275, 13871, 13984, and 14006. In the present opinion rendered in No. 13276 we will consider and determine all the points made in all the appeals, and judgments will be rendered in the appeals based upon the other transcripts, according to the conclusions declared in this opinion. (The references here made to the transcript refer to transcript 13276, unless otherwise stated.)

I. Specific Tracts.

At various times, individual tenants in common, owning larger undivided interests in the ranch, undertook, by grant, bargain, and sale deeds, to convey the whole of particular parts of the ranch, described by metes and bounds, or other sufficient description, as though the grantor ownecPin severalty the particular part conveyed. The lands described in these conveyances are called “ specific tracts.” There are' more than a hundred of such tracts, and they are designated in the findings by numbers. The court below found that these specific tracts, conveyed by deeds purporting to convey the whole title, “ should be allotted and set apart in partition as a portion of the shares and interests of such co-tenants, and in such manner as to make such deeds effectual as conveyances of the whole title to such segregated parcels, if the same can be done without material injury to the rights and interests of other co-tenants who did not join in such conveyances, or those claiming under such other co-tenants, or any of them; and the tracts so conveyed are to be charged in proportion to their value to the interests in said . rancho of the said grantors.” (Folio 4123.) This finding is attacked as erroneous by [453]*453some of the appellants, who contend, — 1. That such a conveyance is void; and 2. That if not void, the grantee-under it of a specific tract should take, on partition, only such a share as is equal to the undivided interest which the granting co-tenant had in such specific tract.

Upon this subject it is declared, in section 764 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as follows: “ Whenever it shall appear in an action for partition of lands, that one or more of the tenants in common, being the owner of an undivided interest in the tract of land sought to be partitioned, has sold to another person a specific tract by metes and bounds, out of the common land, and executed to the purchaser a deed of conveyance, purporting to convey the whole title to such specific tract to the purchaser in fee and in severalty, the land described in such deed shall be allotted and set apart in partition to such purchaser, his heirs and assigns, or in such other manner as shall make such deed effectual as a conveyance of the whole title to such segregated parcel, if such tract or tracts of land can be so allotted or set apart without material injury of the rights and interests of the other co-tenants who may not have joined in such conveyance.” If this section of the code controls in the case at bar, then the question under discussion must be answered adversely to the contention of appellants. But the part of the section above quoted was not enacted until 1876; and as the conveyances here involved were made prior to that time, it is contended by appellants that the said provision of the code is not applicable to this case.

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Bluebook (online)
90 Cal. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emeric-v-alvarado-cal-1891.