Figg v. Mayo

39 Cal. 262
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1870
DocketNo. 2,112
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 39 Cal. 262 (Figg v. Mayo) 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
Figg v. Mayo, 39 Cal. 262 (Cal. 1870).

Opinion

Crockett, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This is an action to recover the north half of a square or block of land situate in the City of Sacramento, between N and O and Eleventh and Twelfth streets. The action was tried before the Court without a jury; and judgment having been rendered for the defendants on the findings, the plaintiff has appealed on the judgment roll alone. He claims that, on the facts as found by the Court, the judgment ought to have been for the plaintiff; and this is the only question for our decision.

[264]*264Amongst the facts, the Court finds that the premises in controversy are included in a grant from the Mexican Government to Sutter, and that the land embraced in the grant was patented to Sutter by the Government of the United States in June, 1866, and that .the defendants deraign title by regular mesne conveyance from Sutter. The findings are silent as to the date at which the final approved survey was made, on the confirmation of the title. The fact that the defendants are in possession, under a patent of the United States, founded on a confirmed Mexican grant, establishes a prima facie title in them, unless it has been overcome by other facts found by the Court. The plaintiff claims to have established a better title, founded on an exclusive adverse possession, commencing in 1855; and which is alleged to have continued without interruption down to the time of the. defendants’ alleged entry in 1868, shortly before the commencement of this action.

The facts in respect to the occupation of the plaintiff, as found "by the Court, are, briefly, that in September, 1855, the plaintiff entered into the actual possession of the entire block, which was then inclosed with a substantial fence, and had a frame house on the south half of it; that the inclosure was" kept up by the plaintiff, and the house was occupied by his tenant until the year 1862, when the fence was destroyed by a freshet, and the fence around the north half of said square was not rebuilt by plaintiff; but the premises in litigation lay open and unfenced until about April 21, 1868, when a skeleton fence was built partly by the plaintiff and partly by others. That the said premises had been so excavated by the grantors of the plaintiff that they were unfit for use until filled in again; that .from 1862 until about the time the defendants entered, the plaintiff had requested and permitted the offal from neighboring stables to be deposited in said excavations, and, in the spring of 1868, planted celery on one of the lots forming the north half of the block; that said block, as laid down on the map or plan of the city, is divided into two equal portions by an alley running through it from east to west, and the north'half of the block, as laid down on said map or plan, is divided into lots numbered [265]*2651, 2, 3, 4, and was separated from the south half by said alley way, when the city was first laid out, prior to 1851; “but it was not separated by any fence or mark on the surface of the earth. ”

There is no finding to the effect that the plaintiff entered under a deed or written instrument; but in its conclusion of law, the Court held that each lot, being a legal subdivision of the city, the continued possession of a part of the block did not confer upon the plaintiff a title to the whole, by possession and limitation, “although his entry was upon all, under a color and claim of title under a deed; and although said lots, one, two, three, four, were never separated by any fence or otherwise, and although said lots are unfit for use until they are filled in.” We are not at liberty to treat this as a finding of fact, to the effect that the plaintiff entered under a deed for the whole block. It is not placed amongst the findings of fact, but amongst the conclusions of law; and, as we understand it, the Court intended only to say, that it was immaterial whether the plaintiff entered under a deed or not; and even if it be assumed that he did enter under such a deed, that it would not benefit him. We have had occasion, very often, to animadvert upon the practice of blending together in the findings, in a confused mass, the facts found, and the conclusions of law. But, from the example now before us, our previous admonitions appear to have had but little effect in correcting a most pernicious practice. In such cases, when the facts are so obscurely found, or are so blended with legal conclusions, as to render it doubtful whether the facts are only hypothetically stated, we must disregard it as a finding of fact.

But in this case, if it be assumed that the Court intended to find and did find that the plaintiff entered under a deed which was “a color and claim of title,” I am unable to perceive how that fact can benefit him. From 1855 to 1862, he had the actual possession—the “pedis possessio,” by means of a substantial inclosure of the whole block, and with a tenant residing in a house on the south half of it. During this period, he needed no entry, under color and claim of [266]*266title, to establish a constructive possession, because he had the actual possession of the whole block. But, during this period, how was it material as against Sutter and his grantees, whether the plaintiff entered under color or claim of title or not. (^The Statute of Limitation, as amended in 1855, was then in force, and was not running against the Sutter title, which was not finally confirmed by the issuance of the patent until June, 1866. By Section 7 of the statute,, as amended in 1855 (Statutes 1855, p. 109), actions founded on titles derived from Spain or Mexico, might be prosecuted within five years from the time when the title was finally confirmed by the Government of the United States; and it has been repeatedly decided by this Court, that the confirmation referred to was the issuing of the patent,;/ but since jhe passage of the Act of Congress of June 14, 1860, giving to ,-a final approved survey the effect of a patent, we have held ■-‘that,the Statute of Lintitations begins to run, in such cases, from the final approval of the survey. 4 It is clear, then, that so long as Section 7 of the Statute of Limitations, as amended in 1855, remained in force, the statute did not begin to run against Sutter or his grantees, prior to the final approval of the official survey of his claim under the final decree of confirmation. But this section of the statute was amended in 1863 (Statutes 1863, p. 325); and by Section 6 of the amendatory Act, it was, amongst other matters, provided that where the title was derived from Spain or Mexico, and had not been finally confirmed more than five years before the passage of that Act, persons holding under the title were allowed five years from and after the passage of the Act, within which to commence actions founded on the title, or to make a defense based on the title; and by another provision it was declared that final confirmation, within the meaning of the Act, shall be deemed to be the patent, or the final determination of the official survey, under the Act of Congress of June 14, 1860. In this case, the findings are wholly silent as to the date of the final approval of the official survey, or of the entry of the defendants upon the premises in controversy. The complaint alleges that the defendants entered on the 3d day of June, 1868; but the answer of the defendant, Clunie, avers [267]*267that his grantor, Freeman, “on or about the 24th day of July, 1867, peaceably and quietly, as he of right might do, entered in and upon said Lot No.

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Bluebook (online)
39 Cal. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/figg-v-mayo-cal-1870.