Gibson v. River Farms Co.

121 P.2d 504, 49 Cal. App. 2d 278, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 804
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 22, 1942
DocketCiv. 6706
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 121 P.2d 504 (Gibson v. River Farms Co.) 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
Gibson v. River Farms Co., 121 P.2d 504, 49 Cal. App. 2d 278, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 804 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

THOMPSON, Acting P. J.

The defendant, River Farms Company, has appealed from a final judgment quieting title in plaintiff to land in Reclamation District 108, contrary to, and regardless of, a provision in the interlocutory decree in effect quieting title thereto in defendant, subject to the payment of all delinquent assessments, taxes, interest and penal *280 ties which were charged against the land or any redeemed portion thereof, within a specified time. The proceeds derived from crops raised on the land in 1938 were awarded to the defendant for the purpose of redeeming any portion of the land. The interlocutory decree specifically reserved jurisdiction to modify its terms at any time prior to the entry of a final judgment. An appeal from that interlocutory decree was perfected. The judgment was affirmed by this court October 29, 1938. (Gibson v. River Farms Co., 28 Cal. App. (2d) 757 [83 Pac. (2d) 966].) On account of that appeal, the time for payment by the defendant of delinquent assessments, taxes, interest and penalties was extended from time to time until September 11, 1939. On April 26, 1939, the defendant gave written notice exercising its option to redeem Tract 17A, and to apply thereon the proceeds of sales of crops in the possession of the referee, which on September 11, 1939, exceeded the amount necessary for that purpose, entitling the defendant to a final decree quieting title to said tract in its favor. On motion of the respondent and intervener Morris, a judge of the court in which the action was pending, other than the chancellor who tried the case, rendered a final decree quieting title to all of the land, including Tract 17A, in plaintiff, regardless of the previous extensions of time and in spite of defendant’s previous election to redeem Tract 17A in accordance with the terms of the interlocutory decree. The theory upon which the final decree was granted is that the previous extensions of time for performance of the conditions specified in the interlocutory decree constituted an unlawful attempt to materially change substantial terms of a decree over which the chancellor had lost jurisdiction, and that such orders were therefore ineffectual and void. From the last-mentioned final decree the defendant has appealed.

The problem to be determined on this appeal is whether a court of equity has authority to reserve in its interlocutory decree quieting title to real property the right to subsequently extend the time allowed therein for a party to perfect its title by conforming to a specified condition incorporated in the final decree, by the payment of ascertained delinquent assessments, taxes, interest and penalties attached thereto.

The defendant, River Farms Company of California, a corporation, owned 29 tracts of agricultural land in Reclamation District Number 108, consisting of 13,000 acres, subject to a bonded indebtedness of that district. The plaintiff, California *281 Gibson, was a trustee of Reclamation District Number 108. The defendant failed to pay reclamation assessments which were levied against the land in 1931. For failure to pay these assessments the land was sold and conveyed to plaintiff December 29, 1932, pursuant to the provisions of the statute. The district retained possession of the land until 1937. On account of delinquent county taxes, the land was subsequently-sold and conveyed to the State of California, July 2, 1937. Thereafter the land was leased by the State of California to the defendant, which reentered, took possession thereof in the fall of the last-mentioned year and farmed the entire tract in 1938. The Trustees of the Reclamation District brought suit against the defendant in 1936, to quiet title. The defendant answered that complaint, setting up the invalidity of the assessments under which the purported sales of property were made to the district. The defendant also affirmatively asked that title thereto be quieted in it. Judge Jones of Lake County, who tried that suit, adopted findings favorable to the defendant, holding that the proceedings preliminary to the sale, including the reclamation assessments, were void and that the sales were invalid. .In the exercise of its equitable authority, the chancellor rendered an interlocutory decree vesting title to the land in plaintiff, “subject, however, to defeasance” thereof by defendant’s payment of the delinquent assessments, taxes, interest and penalties on or before November 25, 1938. In effect, this constituted a decree quieting title to the several tracts of land in the defendant, conditioned upon its payment of all the assessments and tax obligations existing against the land, before the specified date. The decree then awarded to the defendant “the net proceeds of the 1938 crop (including pasturage) grown upon all the parcels of land described in said Exhibit ‘A’, which is received by said receiver,” for the purpose of fulfilling the conditions and accomplishing the defeasance. The decree authorized the defendant to redeem or perfect its title to all or to any one of said 29 tracts of land, and to apply the proceeds from the sales of crops produced in 1938 on the entire property, to the redemption of any one selected tract, if so desired. A receiver was appointed. The above-mentioned proceeds of sales were paid to and retained by the receiver. Jurisdiction to modify the decree in any authorized manner was reserved by the following language: “This court retains continuing jurisdiction *282 of this suit and of the interlocutory decree entered herein until the entry of final judgment herein. ’ ’

Upon motion, and on due notice of hearings thereof, the trial judge made five successive orders extending the time within which the defendant was authorized to pay said assessments, taxes, interest and penalties and to reclaim the property, the last one of which designated September 11, 1939, as the final date therefor. On that date the total amount of delinquent assessments, taxes, costs and penalties necessary to redeem or perfect title in the defendant to Tract 17A of the land in question was $63,886.93. It appears there was then net cash in the hands of the receiver, belonging to the defendant for the purpose of clearing its title to the whole or to any one tract of said land, the aggregate sum of $66,253.65 which included the sum of $6,157.51, earned in connection with said lands as federal soil conservation benefits, which had then been paid to the receiver.

April 26, 1939, the defendant served upon the trustees of the reclamation district and upon the receiver a written notice exercising its right to claim and to redeem Tract 17A by payment of all designated charges against it, by application of its funds in the hands of the receiver. This notice of election to redeem Tract 17A was served upon all interested parties and the necessary proceeds were demanded six and a half months before the expiration of the time fixed therefor by the last order of the court. Prior to the expiration of the time for redemption, the referee’s account was filed for settlement, showing there was a sum of money in his hands on September 11, 1939, available for the foregoing purpose which, added to the soil conservation benefits fund, which was subsequently paid, amounted to $66,926.77. That account was first disallowed because the referee neglected to take into account the proceeds of sales of crops produced from Tract 17A in the year 1939.

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Bluebook (online)
121 P.2d 504, 49 Cal. App. 2d 278, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibson-v-river-farms-co-calctapp-1942.