Hoag v. Pierce

28 Cal. 187
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 28 Cal. 187 (Hoag v. Pierce) 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
Hoag v. Pierce, 28 Cal. 187 (Cal. 1865).

Opinions

By the Court,

Currey, J.

In June, 1853, Meredith Meador, for the purpose of obtaining the right to hold and possess a certain tract of the public lands situated on the Sacramento River opposite the present town of Red Bluffs, under and in pursuance of the Act entitled “An Act prescribing the mode of maintaining and defending possessory actions on public lands in this State,” (Laws 1852, p. 158,) made an affidavit, describing the land, the possession and enjoyment of which he desired to secure, and stating therein that the description given was not intended to embrace more than one hundred and sixty acres, and that he had not taken up any other claim under said Act, and also to the best of his knowledge and belief there was no existing title or claim to the same. This affidavit was filed in the office of the proper county. The land was surveyed at the time' by his procurement by the County Surveyor, and was found to contain one hundred and fifty-four acres. Within ninety days thereafter, he put improvements on the land, partaking of the realty to the value of three hundred dollars, a part of which consisted of a dwelling house, which became occupied by himself and family within the ninety days. He continued to [189]*189reside on the premises until in the latter part of October, 1855, during which time he put improvements on the land, amounting in value to about two thousand dollars, and used ° the property for the purposes of husbandry. In October, 1855, he removed to another place, after which the premises were occupied by his tenants, until he sold and conveyed the same to Pierce, Church and Comstock, by deed bearing date the 17th day of January, 1S61, which was duly acknowledged and recorded in the same month. From the time of the execution of this conveyance to the time of the commencement of this action, Pierce, Church and Comstock were in the possession of the Meador tract, by the defendant, Keyes.

On the 29th of December, 1861, which was Sunday, the plaintiff and some four or five men in his employment went upon this tract of land at a point opposite Red Bluffs, taking with them a quantity of lumber, with which they constructed a fence on three sides of a piece of land of about an acre in extent. The fourth side of it was bounded by the Sacramento River. The plaintiff also commenced the erection of a house on the land, which he inclosed on one side, and partly on the other side. At the two ends it was left open, and it was also without a roof. This work was done between the hours of ten in the morning and two in the afternoon. One of the plaintiff’s workmen,- who was a witness on his behalf, testified that while the work was being performed the weather was wet and dismal, and another of them said it was a rainy day. Hear sundown of the same day the defendants came upon the ground, and found one Jordan at the house, whose furniture and provisions, according to his own account, consisted of a bed and two bottles of whiskey. The whiskey, he said, was provided by the plaintiff, in whose employment he was at the time. Pierce asked Jordan what he was doing there, and one of the defendants told him he had come to knock the house down, and then commenced the work of demolition. Upon this Jordan told them not to tear down the house until he could get his things out. The defendants then proceeded to remove the fence, and finished their work by throwing a por[190]*190tian of it and a portion of the house into the river." Jordan said the reason he did not prevent them was because they' were too strong for him. They made no threats, but Pierce said it was customary, when they tore down a house of that kind, to throw the man into the river and the house on top of him ; and that it was a good thing the plaintiff was not there; and he also said Comstock was armed. Keyes was in possession of the Meador tract at the time, under Church and the defendants Pierce and Comstock.

A fey days afterward the plaintiff commenced an action under the Act concerning forcible entries and unlawful detainers. His complaint contains the usual allegations in such cases, which are traversed by the defendants’ answers. The cause was tried in the County Court of Shasta County, and a verdict was found for the defendants, on which judgment was rendered. A motion was made for a new trial, which was denied, and the plaintiff has appealed.

The transcript of the record and statement contains two hundred and thirty-five printed octavo pages, when all that is necessary to present the case might well have been embodied in one sixth the space; but notwithstanding the unnecessarily imposed labor we have examined it and the fifty-nine points of error assigned; all of which, in our view of the case, are immaterial or otherwise invalid.

There can be no doubt of the admissibility of the evidence relating to the taking up by Meador in 1853 of the land called the Meador tract, and of his occupation and improvement of it, even though it were admitted that he failed to so comply with the Act of 1852 as to entitle him in his own right to all the benefits which a complete compliance therewith would have invested him. His possession of the land, for nearly eight years claiming the same, and his sale and conveyance of it to Pierce, Church and Comstock, and their subsequent occupation of it, invested them with the right as against any mere intruder upon it to the possession of the land. Their deed ' from Meador, with their actual occupation of a considerable portion of the land, extended their possession as against per[191]*191sons having no right or title from a source of paramount proprietorship,'to the whole of the Meador tract; and for the entry of the plaintiff and the ouster of them by him of the parcel of land particularly in controversy—had he remained in possession—might have had their action of ejectment. When the plaintiff entered upon the Meador tract, on the 29th of December, 1861, Pierce, Church and Comstock were in legal contemplation, in the actual possession of the land, within the doctrine of Hicks v. Coleman, 25 Cal. 122, and the cases there cited, and the entry thereon by the plaintiff was a trespass.

The grantees of Meador being in possession of the premises on the day of the plaintiff’s entry, it is proper next to inquire, did the plaintiff obtain such an actual peaceable possession of the parcel of land which he inclosed on that da.y as to give him a right to maintain this action against the defendants for retaking the possession and removing the fence and partly constructed house from the premises? If the possession of the plaintiff was not actual and of sufficiently long standing to become to a legal intent peaceable, then he was not in a condition to maintain his action. In Treat v. Stuart, 5 Cal. 113, the Court said: “ The plaintiff, in an action of forcible entry and unlawful detainer, must show an actual peaceable possession in himself at the time of the entry ;” and in House v. Keiser, 8 Cal. 500, which was an action brought under the Act concerning forcible entries and unlawful detainers, the Court said that “ a party who desires to avail himself of the summary remedy provided by this Act must bring himself clearly within its provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
28 Cal. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoag-v-pierce-cal-1865.