Gazos Creek Mill & Lumber Co. v. Coburn

96 P. 359, 8 Cal. App. 150, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 223
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 21, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 410.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 96 P. 359 (Gazos Creek Mill & Lumber Co. v. Coburn) 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
Gazos Creek Mill & Lumber Co. v. Coburn, 96 P. 359, 8 Cal. App. 150, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 223 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

COOPER, P. J.

The complaint alleged that plaintiff is the owner and in possession of a right of way to construct and operate a wagon road over the route described in the complaint across the .lands of defendants; also the right to maintain a sawmill upon the lands of defendants adjacent to the described right of way; also the right to cut the growing timber situate upon the lands described in the complaint, and manufacture the same into lumber, railroad ties, posts, shingles, wood and other things; that the defendants claim some interest or rights in or to the said right of way, and the other rights claimed in the complaint, adverse to plaintiff, but that said claim of defendants is without right and wrongful. Judgment is prayed that defendants be compelled to set forth their claims; that such claims and rights may be determined, and that plaintiff’s title be quieted as against defendants.

*152 The defendants in their answer deny that plaintiff is, or ever was, the owner or in possession of the right of way described in the complaint, of the right to erect and maintain the sawmill, or of the right to take the timber and stumpage from defendants’ lands. They admit that they claim an adverse interest in said alleged easements for the wagon road and to construct a sawmill, and in the alleged rights set forth in the complaint. They aver affirmatively that defendant Co-burn is the owner “in fee absolute of the lands designated in the complaint, and the plaintiff has no easement, right or interest therein.” The pleadings are verified. The case was tried before the court, and at the conclusion of the evidence the court found that the plaintiff is the owner and in the possession of the right of way to construct a wagon road as set forth in the complaint, and of the right to construct, maintain and operate a sawmill upon the lands, and of the right to cut the timber and stumpage upon the said lands; that defendants claim an interest in and to the said right of way, the right to construct and maintain a sawmill, and the right to cut and manufacture the said growing timber. Judgment was accordingly entered “that all adverse claims of the defendants and each of them, and all persons claiming or to claim said premises or any part thereof adversely to plaintiff’s claims and rights as set forth in its complaint, through or under said defendants or either of them, are hereby adjudged and decreed invalid and groundless, and that plaintiff be, and it is hereby declared and adjudged to be, the true and lawful owner of all the property rights, privileges and benefits set forth and claimed in its complaint in and to the land hereinafter described, and every part and parcel thereof, and that the title of plaintiff thereto be and the same is hereby adjudged to be quieted against all claims, demands or pretensions of the defendants or either of them, who are hereby perpetually es-topped from setting up any claims thereto or to any part thereof. ’ ’

Defendants made a motion for a new trial, which was denied and this appeal is from the judgment and the order denying the motion for a new trial.

It is claimed by the defendants that the judgment, which declares and adjudges that the plaintiff is the owner of all the *153 rights and privileges set forth in the complaint, the right to construct the wagon road, the right to construct and operate the sawmill, the right to cut and take off the timber from the lands described, and “that the title of plaintiff thereto be and the same is hereby adjudged to be quieted against all claims, demands or pretensions of the defendants or either of them, who are hereby perpetually estopped from setting up any claim thereto or to any part thereof,” is too broad, and gives the plaintiff greater rights than are warranted by the evidence.

After careful consideration, we conclude that the contention of defendants in this regard is correct and must be sustained.

When the plaintiff sought the aid of a court of equity to prevent it from being harassed and annoyed by adverse claims to its easements and rights, it asked the court to protect and quiet its title against wrongful claims, and not against any legal rights of others. When it filed its complaint it asked that the alleged claims of defendants be adjudicated and determined. Thus all parties were before the court with their grievances and alleged rights and wrongs. The rights of the respective parties depended upon two certain contracts in writing, which it is necessary to set forth in order to fully understand the questions involved. The first one is as follows:

“This agreement entered into this 2nd day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and one, in Pescadero, San Mateo County, State of California,
“By and Between Loren Coburn and Miss Sitara S. Upton, parties of the first part, of the town of Pescadero, County of San Mateo, State of California, and D. W. Grover and C. L. Littlefield, of the City of Santa Cruz, County of Santa Cruz, State of California, parties of the second part,
“Witnessbth: Whereby the parties of the first part does by these presents agree to let the parties of the second part build a wagon road commencing on the Clark Ranch at a point at the mouth of the Gazos Gulch at the commencement of the woods of timber land on the Clark ranch, owned by Miss S. S. Upton; thence up the gulch going to and past the Gazos mill, now standing by the Gazos creek, up said gulch, and take and haul out from land of said Loren Cobum about forty thousand split railroad ties more or less, and sell said ties to the best advantage and highest price that said parties of the *154 second part can get for them, and take the proceeds of said sale and pay for building said wagon road before mentioned, and after paying for said wagon road to take what moneys there may be left and repair and put the sawmill standing on land of Loren Coburn in the Gazos creek gulch, in running order, build skid roads and start the mill up and go to sawing lumber. Said money received from sale of said railroad ties being money belonging to said Loren Coburn, and being used to improve the property of said Loren Coburn, and put it on a paying basis, viz., the following agreement, to wit, witnesseth:
“Whereby the parties of the first part being Loren Coburn and Miss S. S. Upton, do by these presents, bargain for themselves, their heirs and assigns, to sell to the parties of the second part, they being D. W. Grover and C. L. Littlefield, themselves, their heirs and assigns, the stumpage on all the land owned by them on the Gazos creek, being about four thousand acres more or less, all the timber, oak for wood, pine for wood, that won’t make lumber, tan-bark and the tan-bark wood after the bark is peeled from the trees, redwood for wood that won’t make lumber; also the timber used to make split railroad ties, split pickets, split posts, split shingles and sawed shingles, lumber measure in the following way, to wit: for clear and common lumber, one dollar per thousand feet, split ties, split posts, split pickets to be measured same as lumber by the thousand feet, split shakes, 1,000 feet lumber measure making 10,000 sawed shingles. The logs are to be scaled before sawing them at the mill, and the amount of feet sawed by scale measure to be kept on a book for that purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P. 359, 8 Cal. App. 150, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gazos-creek-mill-lumber-co-v-coburn-calctapp-1908.