Gardner v. San Gabriel Valley Bank

93 P. 900, 7 Cal. App. 106, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 39
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 11, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 422.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 93 P. 900 (Gardner v. San Gabriel Valley Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. San Gabriel Valley Bank, 93 P. 900, 7 Cal. App. 106, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 39 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

This is an action to quiet plaintiffs’ title to an easement, and to restrain defendant from interfering with the use by plaintiffs and their tenants of a stairway in the rear of defendant’s building, and the maintenance by said tenants of their professional and business signs in the passageway and entrance to said stairway, such right being claimed under an easement alleged to have been created by deed.

Judgment was for defendant and plaintiffs appeal from the judgment.

From the findings it appears that during the year 1886 one Chas. A. Gardner, who was the owner of a lot numbered 1 on a certain subdivision of lands situate in the city of Pasadena (said lot being located at the southeast corner of Colorado street and Fair Oaks avenue of that city), entered into an agreement to sell to Bates and Janes the north seventy-five feet of said lot. Bates and Janes, in September, 1886, conveyed to defendant their interest in the lot acquired under the agreement. On April 9, 1887, Gardner made a conveyance of the seventy-five feet to defendant by a deed, a copy of which is attached to the complaint and marked “Exhibit A” and contains the following reservation:

“Reserving the following specified rights in the granted premises to the grantor, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, against the grantee, its successors and assigns:
*108 “1. Whereas, the said grantee has erected on the premises hereby conveyed, a brick building with a stairway four feet and six inches wide at the south end thereof (being the south end of the premises hereby conveyed and facing on Fair Oaks avenue), it is agreed and understood that said stairway shall be perpetually maintained as shall give access therefrom to the second floor or story of the said brick building now owned by the party of the first part and said first party shall have the right to use said stairway wholly at the cost of the grantee for erection and maintenance thereof.
“And it is a condition of this conveyance that if said stairway shall cease to exist and shall not be restored immediately the grantor shall be entitled to build and maintain in the place and instead thereof a stairway of equal width and size, or less if he prefer, for his exclusive use until said destroyed stairway shall be restored by the grantee for use on the conditions now existing as to the present stairway.
“2. Provided, further, and upon condition that whenever said brick building of the grantor shall be built so as to have two or more stories, the owner thereof shall have the right of support therefrom in the adjoining wall of said bank building, so high as said bank building wall shall have been erected, such support to be made or obtained in good workmanlike manner without injury to the building used.”

Prior to the date of that deed, and while holding possession under the agreement, the defendant erected upon the said north seventy-five feet a two-story brick building, a part of the first floor of which was to be used for its banking business. At the south end of and within said building a stairway leading from Fair Oaks avenue to the second floor of the bank building was constructed. Before making the deed to the defendant, Gardner had built the one-story building, mentioned in the reservation in the deed, on the remaining portion of lot 1, the north wall of which building joined the south wall of the bank building.

On September 27, 1894, Gardner and his wife granted and conveyed to Katherine Gardner, one of the plaintiffs, and Edith M. Gardner, the south fifty feet of lot 1 with the one-story building thereon, and on April 1, 1904, Edith M. Gardner granted to the other plaintiff, Miriam Gardner, all her estate in said south fifty feet of lot 1. During the month of *109 July, 1904, plaintiffs erected a second story on their said one-story building, and constructed thereon five offices or rooms for rent to tenants, and caused an opening to be cut through the south wall of defendant’s building to serve as a passageway to the stairway in defendant’s building and since the completion of plaintiffs’ second story, their tenants have used defendant’s stairway and said opening as a way to and from said second story of plaintiffs’ building. Plaintiffs’ tenants placed signs in defendant’s stairway, indicating their offices and business, which were removed by defendant because the latter claimed that neither plaintiffs nor their tenants had any right to the use of said stairway for any purpose. Defendant also placed doors at the entrance of said stairway.

The court further finds: “That defendant has not at all times, up to the twenty-first day of. July, 1904, or at all (otherwise than as expressed in said deed ‘Exhibit A’), acquiesced and consented to the use by plaintiffs and their tenants of all the rights, privileges and easements so claimed by plaintiffs, or any of them.” That no use of said stairway was made by plaintiffs or their tenants prior to the erection of their said second story; and “That the plaintiffs are not and have not been since the deeds of conveyance to them as aforesaid, the owners of the right, privilege or easement of using said entrance to defendant’s bank building and said stairway and landing, for the purpose of reaching the second story of plaintiffs’ said building, or otherwise.”

Respondent contends that the finding that plaintiffs are not the owners of the easement is of an ultimate fact, and cannot be modified by the other findings which are characterized as findings of probative facts. (Smith v. Acker, 52 Cal. 217 ; Perry v. Quackenbush, 105 Cal. 299, [38 Pac. 740].)

It is true that ownership may be pleaded and found as an ultimate fact, but it is equally true that it may be pleaded as a conclusion of law, and may be determined by the court as such a conclusion and not a fact. (Levins v. Rovegno, 71 Cal. 273, [12 Pac. 161].) In a case where ownership is purely a question of fact it can, of course, be considered only upon a record bringing up the evidence from which the ultimate fact was deduced, or upon a judgment-roll from which it appears that ownership was found as an inference of fact *110 entirely from the other facts found. (Geer v. Sibley, 83 Cal. 4, [23 Pac. 220].) But it is also the case that, if the court must determine the ownership by the construction of a writing or the mere application of the proper legal principles to the facts already found by the court, it is a question of law and may be determined from the judgment-roll alone. (Savings & Loan Soc. v. Burnett, 106 Cal. 539, [39 Pac. 922].)

Whether a finding of ownership in a particular case be the finding of an ultimate fact or of a conclusion of law, then, must depend upon the issues to be tried. Plaintiffs claim a right of passage over defendant’s stairway by virtue of the reservation in “Exhibit A.” The answer admits whatever right was created in Charles A. Gardner by that instrument but denies that that deed granted to Gardner, his heirs and assigns, the rights and privileges which plaintiffs claim exist thereunder, or that plaintiffs succeeded to such rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 P. 900, 7 Cal. App. 106, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-san-gabriel-valley-bank-calctapp-1907.