Hyde v. Redding

16 P. 380, 74 Cal. 493, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 778
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1888
DocketNo. 12245
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 16 P. 380 (Hyde v. Redding) 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
Hyde v. Redding, 16 P. 380, 74 Cal. 493, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 778 (Cal. 1888).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.

This is an appeal by defendant from a judgment of the superior court in and for the county of Santa Barbara, and from an order denying a new trial. The action was brought to determine the adverse claims of the defendant to certain lands and premises situated in the said county.

The plaintiff claims under two certificates of purchase from the state of California for the land in controversy, made and issued to one W. E. Greene on the 16th of November, 1868, and by mesne assignments from said Greene to himself.

The defendant claims under two certificates of purchase made and issued to M. Wolf and George Lee, respectively, which, as alleged, became vested through certain mesne assignments in the defendant.

The" particular adverse claim made by the defendant is (as stated in the complaint) under a judgment given and made by the district court of the first judicial district of the state of California, in and for the county of Santa Barbara, in a certain action brought by the people of the state of California against W. E. Greene and [495]*495others. This judgment is alleged to have been rendered without jurisdiction. It may be inferred from the language of the complaint that the judgment was one purporting to foreclose and annul the interest of Greene in the certificates of purchase above mentioned. The further allegation is made that the claim of the defendant is without right, and that the defendants have not any right, title, estate, or interest in the premises; that the certificates of purchase issued to Wolf and Lee, and by them assigned to the defendant, were unlawfully and improvidently issued, and constitute a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title, etc. Prayed, that the defendants may set forth the nature of their several claims, that the same may be determined; that the said judgment and certificates of purchase, hereinabove referred to, may be decreed null and void; and that the defendant may be forever debarred from asserting any claim whatsoever in or to said lands and premises, and for general relief.

The answer of the defendant appealing contained: 1. A general denial; 2. A plea of two judgments, such as mentioned and referred to in the complaint, as a bar to the plaintiff’s action; 3. A plea setting forth the rendition of the said judgments on November 21, 1872, and a plea of laches committed and permitted by the plaintiff in neglecting to allege or assert any rights therein until the filing of the complaint herein (which was on December 26, 1883); 4. An allegation that the defendant is the owner in fee of the premises in controversy, under patents issued by the state of California subsequent to the commencement of the action.

Upon these pleadings a trial was had. At the trial the defendant admitted that W. E. Greene made application to the state to purchase the lands in the complaint mentioned, and made the first payment required by law to be made, to wit, twenty per cent of the purchase-money and one year’s interest, and no more, and re[496]*496ceived certificates of purchase thereof. It was further admitted that the consideration for the assignment of each of the certificates mentioned was the sum of five dollars. Upon these admissions the plaintiff rested. Thereupon the defendant, to maintain the issues upon his part, introduced and offered in evidence the judgment rolls in the cases of the People etc. v. W. E. Greene et al. These judgment rolls are set forth at full length in the transcript. The judgments purport to foreclose the rights of defendants in those actions, and to annul the certificates of purchase under which such defendants claim.

The defendant further proved that copies of both of the judgments mentioned were filed in the office of the register of the state land-office prior to the purchase of the land by Wolf and Lee, the defendant’s assignors; that by certain probate proceedings in the estate of B. B. Bedding, deceased, and assignments, all the estate of said Bedding (claimed to be.derived by him from Wolf and Lee) had become vested in the defendant; that the said defendant had made valuable improvements upon the premises, to the amount and value of one thousand dollars; that he had paid taxes to the extent of one hundred dollars; that the defendant and his predecessors in interest had been in possession, and had paid all taxes levied upon said premises, and that the amount of the purchase-money and interest paid to acquire the land from the state was the sum of $1,550.

The court found according to the admissions of the parties, and in accordance with the allegations of the complainant. The superior court held in terms that the judgment alleged by the plaintiff to be void, and by the defendant to be valid, was void and of no effect.

1. It is contended by appellant that the action cannot be maintained, because, when it was commenced the defendant was in the actual adverse possession of the premises in controversy; that the plaintiff’s title, if any [497]*497he has, is a legal title, on which he can recover at law in “ejectment”; and that the legislature has no power to-deprive a party of his trial by jury, in cases where a jury trial was a right at the common law, by attempting to give the superior court, as a court of equity, jurisdiction of matter of purely legal cognizance.

But the superior court has jurisdiction to enforce a legal title to land, and the legislature may provide the-mode in which the jurisdiction may be employed. If, in an action brought under section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the plaintiff avers a legal title against a defendant in possession, the latter is perhaps entitled,, under the constitution, to a trial by jury of the issue at law thus presented. But section 738 provides that the issue (which might have been the subject upon action of ejectment) may be tried in a proceeding begun under-that section. That issue determined, the court—by virtue of the authority conferred by section 738 — may, in the same action, proceed to determine the adverse claims, set up by the defendant, and to decree that they be quieted. If the plaintiff shall prove a right to the possession by virtue of his legal title, the further rights of the parties are to be adjudicated as if the plaintiff had', been in possession at the commencement of the action. The appellant here cannot be heard to complain that the legal issue — as distinguished from the equitable-issues—was not tried by jury, since a trial°by jury-was expressly waived by a stipulation of the parties.. (Transcript, p. 22.)

The foregoing accords with what is said in People v. Center, 66 Cal. 561-563: “It may be said that if it appear the grantees or their assigns could not, under the-acts of the legislature, acquire an equity which a court of equity can enforce, the present suit should be dismissed, because the plaintiffs had a perfect remedy at law. Under our system a defendant in an action at law to recover lands, against whom judgment has passed, cannot sub[498]*498sequently, in a distinct suit, assert a legal right which ‘existed when the ejectment was commenced, nor subsequently claim relief based upon an equity which was pleaded by cross-complaint in the ejectment. So far the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, in the action of ejectment, is conclusive of the defendant’s rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P. 380, 74 Cal. 493, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hyde-v-redding-cal-1888.