Gordon v. City of San Diego

41 P. 301, 108 Cal. 264, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 854
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1895
DocketNo. 19574
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 41 P. 301 (Gordon v. City of San Diego) 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
Gordon v. City of San Diego, 41 P. 301, 108 Cal. 264, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 854 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

Haynes, C.

This is a second appeal. Upon the former appeal the judgment against the city was reversed and a new trial ordered, and upon such new trial the plaintiff again obtained judgment.

The action is to quiet title to the east half of pueblo lot 1215, containing about forty-five acres, situate in said city. For a general statement of the facts, see the opinion rendered upon the first appeal, reported in 101 Cal. 522; 40 Am. St. Rep. 73. Only such different or additional facts as were developed upon the second trial need be stated here.

1. As affecting the validity of the deed to Whaley, it is now shown that, though the deed bears date February 27, 1869, it was not acknowledged until August 21,1869; and at the time it was acknowledged Schiller and Sloane, two of the trustees who were in office at the date of the deed, and who had joined in its execution, had ceased to be trustees.

A deed signed and delivered, except where a married woman is the grantor, is good, and operates to convey the title, though not acknowledged. The object of an acknowledgment is twofold: To entitle the instrument to be used as evidence without further proof, and to enable it to be recorded. (Fogarty v. Finlay, 10 Cal. 239; 70 Am. Dec. 714.) Estadillo, the president of the board of trustees at the date of the deed, was still a trustee at the time it was acknowledged, and as to him, at least, it was properly acknowledged. There is no question in the case, however, which makes it necessary or important to determine whether the acknowledgment by the trustees, whose term of office had expired, was authorized or not, and that question is therefore not considered.

It is contended by appellant, however, that the deed, was not delivered until at or after the date of its acknowledgment, and that as the resolution of the trustees adopted June 8, 1868, prescribing the “ only way in which pueblo lands will be granted,” was repealed after the date of the deed, and before the date of its acknowl[268]*268edgment, and consequently before its delivery, that there was no power to deliver the deed; or that, if it could then have been properly delivered, it could only be done by the trustees then in office.

If the deed was delivered at its date this contention cannot avail appellant. Counsel cite authorities, however, from seven or eight sister states to the proposition that, when the date of acknowledgment is different from the date of the deed, the court must presume that the deed was not delivered until after it was acknowledged.

It is not necessary to review these cases, or to question their correctness in the several jurisdictions in which they were decided. They merely state the presumption there indulged in the absence of proof; but here the presumption is declared by statute. Section 1055 of the Civil Code is as follows: “A grant duly executed is presumed to have been delivered at its date.” See, also, Treadwell v. Reynolds, 47 Cal. 171, where it was said “that the date found in the body of the deed is presumptively the date at which it was delivered is not questioned; that this presumption, however, is not conclusive, but that the true date of delivery may be proved aliunde, is also clear.”

In appellant’s brief it is stated: “In the case at bar there is no proof of when the Whaley deed was delivered, only that which arises from filing it for record.”

There is, therefore, nothing to overcome or affect the presumption declared by the statute.

2. Appellant further contends that upon the second trial it was shown that the recitals in the Whaley deed were untrue, and that the city never sold any portion of pueblo lot 1215 to Whaley or to Babcock.

This contention is based upon the fact that the minutes of the board of trustees contain no record of the sale to Whaley, nor of any meeting of the board held at •the date of the deed to him, nor of any resolution or order directing the execution of that deed.

It is not disputed that an election was duly held authorizing the sale of pueblo lands under the provisions [269]*269of the statute, and a resolution passed by the board of trustees on June 8, 1868, prescribing the way and terms upon which pueblo lands would be granted, was read in evidence. Beyond this it does not appear that the statute or charter of the city prescribed any special action, proceeding, or formality to be observed in making sales or conveyances of these lands. Of course, the price and the particular parcel of land to be conveyed was left to be determined whenever any one applied to purchase, and these matters required official action by the board of trustees. It was held, upon the former appeal, that “ the recitals in the deed, coupled with the law, are sufficient evidence to bind the parties and show that title passed by the deed”; the objection then being that there was no showing by the plaintiff that the city ever passed a resolution authorizing the sale or transfer of the property described in the deed—appellant then assuming that it was necessary for respondent to assume the burden of showing that such resolution was passed. Upon the second trial it simply appeared that no such resolution appeared of record. But parol evidence is admissible to prove facts omitted from the record unless the law expressly and imperatively requires all matters to appear of record, and makes the record the only evidence. (Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 4th ed., sec. 300; Bank of United States v. Dandridge, 12 Wheat. 64.)

Marcus Schiller, one of the trustees who executed the deed to Whaley, was examined as a witness, and, while he had little or no recollection of this particular matter, testified to the genuineness of the signatures of all the trustees, and that, “whenever we sold a piece of property and made a deed to it, it was ordered by the board of trustees.” It is true he also testified that a record was kept of these things by the secretary; but such omission, as we have seen, does not invalidate the action of the board. The court found “ that said several deeds and the execution thereof were authorized by the defendant,” and this finding, I think, is fully justified by the evidence.

[270]*2703. The deed to Whaley, through whom plaintiffs claim, was executed February 27, 1869, and purported to convey “the undivided one-half” of pueblo lot No. 1,215. On the next day after the execution and delivery of said deed to Whaley, the city, by the same trustees, conveyed to one Babcock “ the west half of the same pueblo lot.” Babcock's deed was first recorded.

It is claimed by respondents, as it was upon the former appeal, that, by the execution and delivery of the deed to Whaley, he and the city became tenants in common of said lot 1215; that by the conveyance to Babcock the city in effect made a partition of said lot, which, though not binding upon him, Whaley was at liberty to accept under or in analogy to section 764 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is quoted in the former opinion of Gordon v. City of San Diego, 101 Cal. 530; 40 Am. St. Rep. 79, where also several authorities are cited. Following these citations it was said: “All the authorities are to the effect that a sale by a tenant in common by specific bounds of a portion of the land in common is not binding upon his cotenant unless ratified by him. I fail to find in the record any evidence of ratification by Whaley, or those holding under him”.; and upon that ground alone the former judgment was reversed.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P. 301, 108 Cal. 264, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-v-city-of-san-diego-cal-1895.