Galvin v. Palmer

45 P. 172, 113 Cal. 46, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 742
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1896
DocketS. F. No. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 45 P. 172 (Galvin v. Palmer) 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
Galvin v. Palmer, 45 P. 172, 113 Cal. 46, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 742 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Henshaw, J.

Appeal from the order granting a new trial. Plaintiffs, who- at the date of the commencement of this action were minors, averred their ownership and possession of a piece of land situated at the corner of Beach and Hyde streets, in the city and county of San Francisco. They further averred that defendant asserted title to the land; that this title was based upon a deed obtained by defendant’s grantor from the city and county of San Francisco by fraud. After the United States had granted the land to the city and county of San Francisco, upon trust to convey to those in bona fide possession at the date of the passage of said act (July 1, 1870), defendant’s grantor falsely and fraudulently represented himself to hold such possession of said land, and thereby procured a deed to the same from the city. At the date of the passage of the act, defendant’s grantor was not, but plaintiffs’ grantors were, in such actual possession, all of which was well known to the defendant at the time he took his deed. The prayer was for a decree declaring defendant to hold his title in trust for plaintiffs and compelling him to convey the same to them.

For answer the defendant made denial, pleaded the [50]*50statute of limitations, and by cross-complaint setup his title and asked a decree establishing it as good and valid. Though the action was in equity, the court impaneled a jury, whose verdict, being advisory merely, it was in nowise bound to accept. At the conclusion of the evidence the jury was instructed to render a verdict for defendant, which it did, and judgment was entered in accordance therewith.

Thereafter plaintiffs moved for and obtained a new trial, from the order granting which this appeal is taken. The grounds urged for the new trial were newly discovered evidence, insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, and errors of law occurring at the trial. The court in granting the motion based its order upon the single ground that it had erred to the prejudice ■of plaintiffs by admitting in evidence a portion of a map—which ruling will hereafter come under review.

This order of the court relieves from consideration the question of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the evidence. (Kauffman v. Maier, 94 Cal. 277.) While it is true that in actions at law, where a trial by jury is a matter of right to either party, it is error for the court to instruct the jury to render its verdict for one or the other when the evidence is conflicting—the rule does not obtain where in equity a jury is impaneled merely as a body advisory to the court to assist it in determining disputed facts. In such cases the court may even? under conflicting evidence, reject the verdicts general or special of the jury, and enter a decree in accordance with its own determination, or, what is an equivalent, it may direct a particular verdict upon the facts as being in accord with its own conclusions. There was no error therefore in the court’s instruction, even if it be conceded that the evidence was conflicting.

But in truth the evidence was not conflicting; or, even if by a most liberal concession a conflict be acknowledged, it was upon matters which by reason of other considerations could not have advantaged the plaintiffs if the disputed points had been determined [51]*51in their favor. To make this apparent a review of the facts here becomes necessary.

In 1850 the President of the United States by proclamation reserved for public purposes certain lands upon the peninsula of San Francisco at Point Jose or Point San Jose, now commonly designated Black Point. By later proclamation in 1851 the boundaries of this reservation were reduced and made to embrace the fol. lowing tract: “The promontory of Point Jose within boundaries of not less than eight hundred yards from its northern extremity.” By all the evidence in the case uncontradicted it appears that the lot in question was within the boundaries both of the original and of the reduced reservation.

By act of Congress of 1870 (16 U. S. Stats, at Large, c. 197, sec. 16), in which the United States relinquished certain of these reserved lands to the city and county of San Francisco, one of the trusts declared was “to grant and convey the remainder of said land to the parties severally, who are, at the date of the passage of this act, in the actual bona fide possession thereof, by themselves or their tenants, and in such parcels as the same are so held ■ and possessed by them; or who, if they have not such possession, were deprived thereof by the United States military authorities when they went into the occupancy of said military reservation, or were deprived thereof by intruders or trespassers, against whom possession may be recovered by legal process.”

Defendant’s predecessor in interest made proof of his right to a deed to the land in question under this act, and through this source title vested in defendant by deed of the city December 24, 1870.

Plaintiffs introduced a deed of the land from the commissioners of the funded debt to J. W. Bowman, acknowledged in November, 1852; a deed of an undivided one-half thereof from Bowman to S. Hopkins, acknowledged in January, 1853; a deed from Bowman to plaintiffs of his remaining interest, acknowledged in July, [52]*521881, and a deed from Hopkins to plaintiffs of his interest, acknowledged in April, 1880.

Their title from this source depends for its validity upon the soundness of the claim which they urge, that the land originally belonged to the city of San Francisco. This claim, however, is untenable. Upon the conquest of California title to the lands of the pueblo which had not passed into private ownership vested in the United States. (Grisar v. McDowell, 6 Wall. 364; Trenouth v. San Francisco, 100 U. S. 253; United etc. Assn. v. Knight, 85 Cal. 470; Thompson v. Doaksum, 68 Cal. 596; People v. Holladay, 68 Cal. 443.) It is not claimed that these lands were held in private ownership prior to the commissioners’ deed. And, as it has been decided that the reservation of the presidio was a valid executive act which excluded these lands from acquisition by private individuals (Grisar v. McDowell, supra), it follows, necessarily, that the commissioners’ deed was ineffectual and worthless as a conveyance of title.

Plaintiffs next sought to establish a title by adverse possession; but, as they were unable to prove payment of taxes for the requisite number of years, their claim failed so completely and admittedly that it is not even argued in their briefs.

Plaintiffs’ final effort was directed to showing that defendant’s predecessor was not in the bona fide possession of the land at the date of the act of relinquishment, and that defendant’s deed was, consequently, procured by fraud. But neither of the plaintiffs who are minors was born at the date of the passage of this act. They themselves cannot claim, therefore, as beneficiaries under the a'ct. They must rely, as was admitted, upon the strength of their grantors’ rights. In this regard, then, they occupy the same and no better position than would these grantors. As to them, the fraud, if fraud there be, was committed in 1870. They were chargeable with knowledge of it, since not only were the proceedings public, but they culminated in a recorded [53]*53deed to the property which they claimed.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P. 172, 113 Cal. 46, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galvin-v-palmer-cal-1896.