Hayner v. Stanly

13 F. 217, 8 Sawy. 214, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 31, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 F. 217 (Hayner v. Stanly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayner v. Stanly, 13 F. 217, 8 Sawy. 214, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Sawyer, C. J.

The governor of California in 1836 granted to Nicholas Higuera a tract of land called “Entre Napa.” On November 13, 1847, before the transfer of .California to the United States, said Higuera and wife conveyed to Mateo Fallón a part of said land, described (as translated from the Spanish language, in which the conveyance was written) as “a certain quantity of land lying, being, and situate in the district of Sonoma, and territory of Upper California, in the valley of Napa, containing, more or less, one square mile of land in the place known as the ‘Rincon de los Carneros,’commencing at the wagon road, and ending at a point of the hill on the east.” Said Fallon conveyed the same land to Julius Martin, July 1,1850. Martin filed his petition for the confirmation of the grant, and his claim to the land so conveyed to him, with the board of land commissioners, under the 'act of 1851, on September 4, 1852. His claim was confirmed September 7,1856; and upon such decree of confirmation a patent of the United States was issued to him April 3, 1858, which patent embraced the lands in controversy. The title of said Fallon and Martin became vested in Edward Stanly prior to December, 1857. On February 7, 1852, Nicholas Higuera conveyed to one [219]*219Biva the lands granted to him as before stated, excepting from the conveyance all lands previously sold and conveyed. On February 11, 1853, Marta Frias de Higuera, deriving title under said grant through said Biva, presented a petition to the board of land commissioners for a confirmation of a claim to a portion of said land so granted to Higuera, which claim was, confirmed February 13, 1857, and a patent issued in pursuance of said confirmation on November 4, 1879, which patent embraces a portion of the lands in question. On February 13, 1858, and July 12, 1854, Joseph Green, deriving title under said grant through said Biva, presented his petition to said board for confirmation of a claim to a portion of said lands granted to Higuera, which claim was confirmed on February 11, 1857, and, in pursuance of said decree of confirmation, a patent was issued to said Green April 7, 1881, which patent embraces a portion of the land in controversy. On March 3, 1853, Edward Wilson, deriving title from said Biva under said grant, also presented a petition to said board for a confirmation of a claim to a portion of said land, which claim was confirmed March 20, 1857, and a patent in pursuance of said decree of confirmation was issued to said Wilson on April 8, 1881, •which patent also embraces a portion of the land in controversy. Eleven-twelfths of whatever title accrued, respectively, to said Marta Frias, Joseph Green, and Edward Wilson by virtue of said grant to said Higuera, and of said several conveyances from Higuera to Biva, and from said Biva, and from said proceedings and several patents, became vested in the plaintiff prior to the commencement of this action. On December 14, 1857, said Edward Stanly, who had before that date acquired the title of said Fallon and Martin, commenced an action in the district court Of the county of Napa against said Marta Frias, Joseph Green, and others,—all being the parties under whom plaintiff derives title through said several conveyances,— to recover all the same lands now in controversy. The plaintiff, Stanly, alleged title to the lands. The defendants denied the title of plaintiff, and upon trial of the issues formed the facts were found for the plaintiff, and judgment for the recovery of the land thereupon rendered for the plaintiff; and under said judgment the plaintiff was put in possession on March 30, 1859, from which time the said Edward Stanly and the defendant in this action, John A. Stanly, who derives title from said Edward, have been in exclusive adverse possession till the present time. The main question litigated, and upon which the case turned, was as to what land was embraced in said deed from Higuera to [220]*220Fallon—whether it embraced the land now in controversy. And it "was decided that it did.

Upon the foregoing facts appearing in the testimony, the plaintiff offered to prove what part of the land granted to Higuera was known as the “Bincon de los Carneros,” for the purpose of showing that the land confirmed to Martin, and patented to him, as being the land conveyed by Higuera to Fallon, and from Fallon to Martin, was erroneously located in the patent, and is not the land described in said deeds of conveyance.

The questions, therefore, arise: (1) Whether the point is res cCcljadicata in the said action of Stanly v. Green and others, and, on that ground, not open to further examination. (2) Whether the patent to Martin is not conclusive upon the defendants in an action at law. In my judgment, both must be answered in the affirmative. At the date of the commencement of said action by Stanly v. Green, neither patent had been issued, and the parties stood upon an equal footing as to the derivative title from Higuera; the grant to Higuera, under which both parties claimed, being admitted. The parties to the present action are the same, or in privity with, the parties to the former action. The pleadings as to title are substantially the same in both actions, except that the parties, have changed sides. The issues are substantially the same in matter, and form. In the former ease, as appears from the record, and the decision of the supreme court in evidence reported in 12 Cal. 159, the main question in issue fully litigated and determined, was as to what land was conveyed by Higuera to Fallon by the deed mentioned. It is precisely the same point which the plaintiff now seeks to contest by the evidence offered, and the evidence is precisely of the same kind and character as that introduced upon the same point in the former action. The defendants have fully and aptly pleaded the matter put in issue, litigated and determined in the former action by way of estoppel, and are in a position .to fully avail themselves of that defense. In my judgment, the former determination is conclusive within the rule as established by the great mass of authorities, and even within the narrowest generally-recognized limits of the rule. The deed from Higuera to Fallon was the title upon which the plaintiff relied to recover. Of necessity, the court was obliged to determine whether it embraced the lands in controversy or not; and it was determined that it did. That determination, and the judgment resting upon it, were affirmed by the supreme court. That was the issue, in fact, litigated and adjudged. [221]*221If the title under and the effect of that deed were not directly in issue, and determined in such sense as to be available as an estoppel against further litigation, it would be difficult to determine what the limitation of the rule is. I think the case clearly within the principle applied in Caperton v. Schmidt, 26 Cal. 479, 501; and certainly within the case of Marshall v. Shafter, 32 Cal. 176, wherein my views are fully expressed in the concurring opinion. Page 199. The former adjudication is also conclusive, under the decisions of the supreme court of the United States. Miles v. Caldwell, 2 Wall. 38; Sturdy v. Jackaway, 4 Wall. 176; Blanchard v. Brown, 3 Wall. 249; Campbell v. Rankin, 99 U. S. 263; Cromwell v. County of Sacramento, 94 U. S. 351.

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Bluebook (online)
13 F. 217, 8 Sawy. 214, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayner-v-stanly-uscirct-1882.