Furlong v. Cooney

14 P. 12, 72 Cal. 322, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 528
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1887
DocketNo. 9674
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 14 P. 12 (Furlong v. Cooney) 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
Furlong v. Cooney, 14 P. 12, 72 Cal. 322, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 528 (Cal. 1887).

Opinion

Belcher, C. C.

The controversy in this case is about a strip of land sixty-eight feet nine inches long and from four to thirteen inches wide. The strip is a part of fiftyvara lot No. 186, which is situated on the side of Telegraph Hill, in the city of San Francisco, and is bounded on the north by Union Street, and on the west by Montgomery Street. The plaintiffs claim title to the strip under an alcalde grant of the lot, and through sundry mesne conveyances from the grantee, and the defendants claim title to it under the statute of limitations. The case was tried before a jury, and the plaintiffs recovered a verdict, on which judgment was entered for the possession of the strip in question, and damages in the sum of three hundred dollars for the withholding thereof. The defendants moved for a new trial, and now prosecute this appeal from the judgment and an order denying their motion.

The material facts of the case, as disclosed by the evidence, are as follows:—

In 1850, John J. Cooney, the husband of the defendant Hannah Cooney, became the owner of a part of lot 186, bounded on the north by Union Street, and extending back southerly sixty-eight and three fourths feet, and having its western line parallel with Montgomery Street, and distant therefrom sixty-eight and three fourths feet. In 1851, Cooney had his lot surveyed out, and then built a two-story house thereon. The house faced on Union Street, and from its southwest corner he built a fence back to his rear line, and then around, so that with the house the lot was wholly inclosed. Subsequently he built a one-story dining-room and kitchen at the end of his house, leaving then about fifteen feet of the rear portion of his lot uncovered by buildings. The west line [324]*324of the dining-room and kitchen was four inches farther west than the corresponding line of the main house, and the roof extended out five inches farther. From the time of its construction until his death, in 1879, Cooney resided with his family continuously in this house, and since his death his widow has resided in it. During all the time of his residence there Cooney claimed to own all the land covered by his buildings and improvements, and, so far as appears, his ownership was never questioned or disputed until 1876, when the plaintiffs became the owners of the lot lying west of and adjacent to his property.

A few years after Cooney erected his house, one O’Con-nor built a two-story house on the lot now owned by the plaintiffs, placing it back from Union Street, so that the front line of it was only a few inches nort'h of the rear line of Cooney’s main building. Prior to 1876 that lot was owned and occupied by several different parties, one of whom, E. B. Mastick, was called as a witness for the plaintiffs, and he was the only one of them called by either side. He testified that he knew the lot from 1853 to 1864, and that he bought it and was in the use of it for five or six years, and built a barn there. “ I never had the place surveyed. I supposed that the Cooney houses were east of my easterly line,—the easterly line of this land in controversy. Ho question arose about it when I lived there. When I bought the lot, Mr. Cooney’s buildings were standing on the west line of his lot, where they'stood during all the years I was there. We never had any dispute about our lines of land. They were good neighbors. Mr. Cooney’s house was, I think, a two-stdry in front and one-story in rear, and a high hoard fence extended from his kitchen to the rear of the lot south. It was all inclosed. It was in that way all the time I was there.” And on cross-examination he said: “When I bought my lot I saw the Cooney buildings and fence there. ' Mr. Cooney occupied these prem[325]*325ises and buildings with his family from 1853 to 1864. To my own knowledge, he was in actual possession of the ground all that time. I never disturbed him, nor did he disturb me. The house now called Furlong House formed the in closure on the east, and the Cooney fence was to the rear. Question. Did you during all that period, from 1853 to 1864, acquiesce in the possession by John J. Cooney of all this land inclosed and built upon by him ? Answer. Yes, sir; I never knew of their being beyond the line.”

The defendant Hannah Cooney was called as a witness for defendants, and testified, among other things, that sh® began to live on the lot in 1850, and had resided there ever since. “ My husband and family occupied the land and premises, upon which our buildings and fences now stand, since 1850 to the time of his death, continuously, without any interruption by anybody until Mr. Furlong interfered with us. .... He did not hold this strip of land under anybody. He claimed it in his own right. He occupied it as Ms home and for his family during all those years, and he held it as his own. .... Mr. O’Connor built this Furlong House where it stands. The eaves of my kitchen and the main house were just the same when he built his house as they are now. .... We did'not know we were off our line, and did not know until after survey made in June, 1876..... I believe my husband had a survey made in early times, —I think it was in 1851,—and according to the survey, we built our house there. I recollect his making a survey. We lived on this property before we put up our building. We had a tent there before that.”

Another witness was called for defendants, who had owned and lived upon the lot adjoining on the south the Cooney and Furlong lots for about thirty years. He testified that he had known these lots since 1851, and as to the times when and the .persons by whom the improvements thereon were erected and occupied, and then said: [326]*326“ I never heard any of the former owners of the Furlong lot dispute Mr. Cooney’s right to occupy this land upon which his buildings stood. I never heard any one dispute Mr. Cooney’s right to occupy the land in dispute, and upon which his buildings have stood since 1851. Hudson occupied the adjoining lot at one time as owner. He never disputed Cooney’s right to it. His right to it was never questioned by the owners before Furlong. I never heard any controversy between them,—Cooney and Furlong’s predecessors,— as to this boundary line. There never was any claim made, to my knowledge, by any owner before Furlong, for anything east of the Furlong House; they never claimed east of that. Mr. Cooney always, since 1851 to the time of his death, claimed all the land, upon which his buildings stand, to be his property.” And on cross-examination he said: “I did hear Mr. Cooney speak of this property; of course I did. He said he owned it. He claimed it all, because he had a survey made in 1850 or 1851. When he built his house he told me so. When I bought my lot he told me that the lot was his lot. I never heard him say anything about thirteen inches of land on Furlong lot. He did not know that he was on the Furlong lot.”

In June, 1876, after the plaintiffs purchased their lot, they had it surveyed, and then for the first time discovered that Cooney’s main building extended over their line four inches, his dining-room and kitchen eight inches, the roof reaching out five inches still farther, and that the fence in the rear was over the line four inches. Thomas Furlong, one of the plaintiffs, testified that after making this discovery he at once notified Cooney of it, and that, after looking at the surveyor’s lines and conversing upon the subject for about an hour, Cooney said he “ did not want any man’s land, and that he would fix it, and would pay whatever the land was worth,—the value he would leave to arbitration.....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 P. 12, 72 Cal. 322, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/furlong-v-cooney-cal-1887.