Gardiner v. Miller

47 Cal. 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1874
DocketNo. 2,569
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 47 Cal. 570 (Gardiner v. Miller) 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
Gardiner v. Miller, 47 Cal. 570 (Cal. 1874).

Opinion

By the Court, Wallace, C. J.:

The title of the plaintiff to the premises in controversy— a city lot in the city of Sacramento—is derived from Sutter, who held the Mexican grant of June, 1841. The grant was for the quantity of eleven leagues of land, to be thereafter located within exterior boundaries of much greater extent. The survey was finally determined in the Federal Courts in June, 1865; the patent was issued to Sutter in 1866, and this action having been commenced in 1869, the [572]*572defendant succeeded in the Court below solely upon the defense of the Statute of Limitations—he appearing to have been in continuous occupation of the lot in controversy since 1858. It is claimed by the counsel for the respond-dent, in support of the judgment below, that the right of the plaintiff became barred in 1868, by the lapse of the period of five years from the passage of the Act of April 18th, 1863, entitled “an Act to amend an Act defining the time-of commencing civil actions, passed April 22d, 1850.” (Act 1863, p. 325.) The argument is rested mainly upon the language of the sixth section of the Act, which is as follows: “Section 6. No action for the recovery of real property, or for the recovery of the possession thereof shall be maintained, unless it appear that the plaintiff, his ancestor, predecessor or grantor was seized or possessed of the premises in questiofi within five years before the commencement of such action.”

The title of the plaintiff at the date of the passage of the statute under consideration, was under the grant to Sutter, imperfect in its character. The grant had passed a present and immediate interest in the general tract to the extent of the quantity designated; but that quantity had to be segregated, and until the segregation, the title attached to no particular part of the premises. The principal question, therefore, is, whether the statute then commenced to run against the right of the Government, thus to segregate and perfect the grantee’s interest, for if it did not, the action having been commenced within five years after the issuance of the patent was well brought, unless, therefore, we are to consider the period between the 18th day of April, 1863, (when the Act was passed), and the 20th day of June, 1866, (when the patent was issued), as forming a part of the five years limited by the statute for the commencement of the action, the plaintiff must prevail. Stated in a different form, the question is whether, in case the patent had not issued until after 1868, or had not issued at all, the possession held by the defendant would have operated, under the Act of 1863, to extinguish the right of the United States and vest a perfect title in the defendant, within the princi[573]*573pie laid down in Arrington v. Liscom, 34 Cal. 365, and the other cases which have followed the doctrine of that case. If the legal title which passed to Sutter by the patent in June, 1866, was at that time unaffected by the Statute of Limitations, it operated to vest him with the seizin in law of the premises, and the action brought within five years thereafter was not barred.

1. The Statutes of Limitations of the several States are not binding upon the rights of the United States. (Angell on Lim. Sec. 39.)

In Lindsey v. The Lessee of Miller, 6 Peters, 666, the defendant in error relied upon a patent for the premises issued to his lessor by the United States in the year 1824; the plaintiffs in error were in possession under a patent for the , premises issued by the commonwealth of Virginia, in 1789, founded upon an entry and survey made in 1783. In 1784 the territory northwest of the Ohio, in which the premises were situated, was ceded to the United States, with a reservation in favor of the legal bounties of the Virginia troops on the continental establishment. It appearing, however, that the services upon which the entry and survey, and the patent from the State of Virginia, under which the plaintiffs in error claimed, had been issued for military services performed, not under the continental establishment, ■ but in the Virginia State line, and, therefore, not within the reservation contained in the cession to the United States, it resulted that no title had passed to the plaintiffs in error. They having been, however, in the uninterrupted possession of the premises in controversy for upwards of twenty-one years, requested the Circuit Court to instruct the jury that such possession upon their part constituted a bar to the action, which instruction was refused. Upon this point the Supreme Court of the United States used the following language: “That the possession of the defendants does not bar the plaintiff’s action is a point too clear to admit of much controversy. It is a well-settled principle, that the Statute of Limitations does not run against the State. If a contrary rule were sanctioned, it would only be necessary for intruders upon the public lands to maintain [574]*574their possessions until the Statute of Limitations shall run; and then they would become invested with the title against the Government and all persons claiming under it. In this way the public domain would soon be appropriated by adventurers. Indeed it would be utterly impracticable, by the-use of any power within the reach of the Government, to prevent this result. It is only necessary, therefore, to state the case, in order to show the wisdom and propriety of the rule that the statute never operates against the Government.” (See also Gibson v. Choteau, 13 Wallace, 92.)

2. I have assumed thus far, that a perfect legal title to these premises was not in Sutter, the plaintiff’s grantor, but that, down to June 20th, 1866, this title was to be perfected by the Government of the United States, and that it then for the first time became perfected by the patent of that date. That this was the true condition of the title would seem plain. The Mexican grant, upon which the patent was founded, was .not a grant of any tract of land capable of identification, but was only a grant of a quantity of lane? which was not located, nor were its boundaries defined at the time of the cession of California to the United States by the Mexican Government. The quantity granted was eleven leagues of land, and this quantity was to be thereafter located within the exterior boundaries which were named in the grant, and which were of much greater extent than the quantity granted. It cannot be maintained that a perfect legal title for any portion of the premises passed to Sutter by the grant of 1841, unless it be at the same time maintained that such perfect legal title so acquired by him extended to the exterior lines mentioned in the grant itself—a proposition which finds no support in reason or authority, or in the practice of the Government in dealing with Mexican or Spanish claims for a quantity of land to be located within exterior lines, including a tract greater in extent than the quantity granted. It, therefore, became the political duty of the Government of the United States, under the treaty of cession and the law of nations, as being the successor of the Mexican authority in California, to satisfy the equitable title of Sutter, existing, at the [575]*575date of the cession, to a mere quantity of land, without distinctive location or identity; and this satisfaction was to be made, and, in this instance, was made by a relinquishment, upon the part of the United States, to the claimant of their interest in a distinct and defined tract of land within the exterior lines mentioned in the grant, and equal in its extent to the quantity originally granted.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Cal. 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardiner-v-miller-cal-1874.