Follette v. Pacific Light & Power Corp.

208 P. 295, 189 Cal. 193, 23 A.L.R. 965, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 318
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1922
DocketL. A. No. 6332.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 208 P. 295 (Follette v. Pacific Light & Power Corp.) 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
Follette v. Pacific Light & Power Corp., 208 P. 295, 189 Cal. 193, 23 A.L.R. 965, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 318 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J., pro tem.

This appeal is from a judgment in the defendant’s favor in an action of ejectment. The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts which may be summarized as follows: On and prior to the eighteenth day of November, 1915, one Charles H. Bogart was the owner of the premises in controversy, which are situated near Baldwin Park, Los Angeles County, California. On the above date he made a deed to the Pacific Light and Power Corporation, a California corporation having its offices and principal place of business in Los Angeles, California, of an easement of right of way over and across a portion of said premises for the uses of its light and power lines as a public utility corporation engaged in the transmission to its consumers and to the general public of electric energy in various forms. This conveyance was duly recorded and the grantee took possession of the portion of said premises required for the exercise of its said easement and has since continuously been in the actual and visible possession and occupancy thereof. On September 8, 1916, said Bogart filed a petition in the superior court of Los Angeles County for the registration of his title to said property under the provisions of the so-called “Torrens land title law,” adopted as an initiative measure in 1915. (Stats. 1915, p. 1932.) The said Bogart did not in his said petition mention or in any way refer to the fact of the existence of said easement or of the occupancy and possession of any portion of said premises by his said grantee thereunder nor did the name of or any reference to the Pacific Light and Power Corporation appear therein, but the said Bogart alleged that he himself was and for more than five years last past had been in the actual, exclusive, and adverse possession of said premises and of the whole thereof, claiming to own the title thereto in fee simple as against all the world. Upon the filing of said petition the court ordered notice of the hearing thereon to be given as provided in said law and the said notice was thereupon published in a newspaper of general circulation in said county for four successive weeks. No service of said notice other than by said publication was made and it is an admitted fact in the case that *196 no other service thereof, or of any other process, was had upon the Pacific Light and Power Corporation and that neither said published notice nor any knowledge of the pendency of said proceedings ever came to its attention until about the time of the institution of the present action by the successor in interest of the said Bogart. On December 18, 1916, the trial court, upon proof of said publication of said notice and after hearing had upon said petition, made and entered a decree of registration decreeing said Bogart to be the sole and exclusive owner in fee simple of said premises and the whole thereof; and thereupon a certificate of title was issued to him in conformity with said decree. Thereafter and on January 17, 1917, said Bogart sold said premises to one Leo Gibbs, who paid full value therefor and who relied exclusively upon the said certificate of title to support his claim of being an innocent purchaser for value. On February 16, 1917, said Gibbs sold the premises in question to Channing H. Follette, the plaintiff herein, who similarly relied upon said certificate of title as supporting his claim as being an innocent purchaser thereof for value. Neither said Gibbs, nor said Follette went upon or examined, either in person or by agent, the premises they were thus purchasing, nor did either of them have any actual knowledge of the claim, interest, easement, occupancy or possession of the Pacific Light and Power Corporation in or to said premises or any portion thereof. Shortly after the purchase of said premises by said Follette he inspected the same, and finding the Pacific Light and Power Corporation in possession of its said portion thereof by virtue of its easement therein, commenced this action in ejectment against said corporation. The defendant appeared in due time and presented an answer denying generally the plaintiff’s averments as to his exclusive title and right of possession to the portion of said premises covered by its said easement. It also presented and filed a further and separate answer setting forth in detail the proceedings which had been taken by said Bogart under said Land Title Act to obtain the registration of his title and showing that all mention of said defendant of its interest in or possession or occupancy of said premises had been omitted from said proceedings and that no notice thereof had ever been personally served upon said de *197 fendant, nor knowledge thereof been brought to its attention during the course of its occupancy of said premises or prior to the institution of the present action, and that said defendant had at all said times been and still was in the actual, exclusive and complete possession and occupancy of the portion of said premises required in the exercise of its said easement and during all of the said time and by the use and exercise thereof had been and was engaged in supplying electricity to its customers in its capacity as a public service corporation. It was further alleged that said defendant was a California corporation having its offices and principal place of business in the city of Los Angeles and being at all of said times within reach of personal service of notice. The defendant further alleged that the omission of the name, title and interest of said defendant by said Bogart and of the fact of its possession and occupancy of said premises from his petition for the registration of the title thereof under the said land title law and the failure of the said petitioner to serve upon said defendant any personal notice of the fact of the filing of said petition or of the hearing thereon were and each of them was willful and intentional and done for the purpose of defrauding said defendant and depriving it of its said interest in said premises without due process of law. The defendant, while denominating its foregoing pleading as an answer, prayed for the affirmative relief of having its title quieted to the portion of said premises occupied by its said easement and for such other and further relief as might be meet and just in the premises. The issues being thus made up, the parties, prior to the trial of the cause, entered into the stipulation as to the agreed facts in the case above noted, in the concluding paragraph of which it was stipulated and agreed that: “For the purpose of enabling the court to enter any judgment in this action to which either of the parties may be entitled by reason of the law applicable to the facts herein set forth, it is further stipulated that the respective pleadings of the parties herein shall be deemed to be amended by incorporating therein appropriate allegations of any or all of the facts set forth in this stipulation, and appropriate prayer by each party for all of the relief to which such party is entitled upon the aforesaid facts.” Upon the submission of the cause upon the fore *198

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P. 295, 189 Cal. 193, 23 A.L.R. 965, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/follette-v-pacific-light-power-corp-cal-1922.