Janke v. McMahon

133 P. 21, 21 Cal. App. 781, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 343
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1065.
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 133 P. 21 (Janke v. McMahon) 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
Janke v. McMahon, 133 P. 21, 21 Cal. App. 781, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 343 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action is to recover the possession of a narrow strip of land, nearly three feet in width and forty feet in depth, and to quiet plaintiff’s title thereto. The appeal is from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. It is admitted by appellant that the record title is in respondent but its normal effect is sought to be obviated by the claim of adverse possession. Plerein it is the contention that “nowhere does it appear that the plaintiff or her predecessors or any one of them had actual physical possession or ever occupied the disputed strip of land, the surface of the soil; on the contrary, the undisputed evidence is that neither the plaintiff nor any of her predecessors ever had such possession, but that the father of the defendant was continuously in the occupancy and exclusive possession of the disputed strip, since March 3, 1862, up to the time of his death, about 1890, and that thereafter, the defendant, a son and heir of the person so in possession, has continuously occupied and actually held possession of the disputed strip; that on the line between the disputed strip and plaintiff’s property there was constructed, about 1862, a building and fence and that the building and fence remained on said line without objection on the part of any one until the fire of April, 1906, and that immediately thereafter the defendant rebuilt the said building and fence and it was not until the latter part of 1907, long after defendant had made his improvements, that any claim to the disputed strip was made by plaintiff or any one else. ’ ’ It was conceded, however, at the trial that, by reason of his failure to pay the taxes, defendant’s possession had not ripened into a title by prescription, but it was asserted that the father became the owner by virtue of his possession of the disputed strip and the son had succeeded to the father’s in *784 terest. The character of the father’s possession is, therefore, the first question to be considered.

The evidence as to his occupancy of the land is brief and it may be well 'to exhibit it in full. It appears in the testimony of appellant as follows: “My father was in possession of this piece of property about forty-six years. He obtained possession of the property in dispute in 1862 and built on if one year afterward. He built a three-story house on it and this covered the land in dispute. There was a fence on the easterly side of the property that he had in Ms possession the same place as where the fence is now. There was a four-foot alleyway between the fence and the old house. The stairs ran into that alley-way from the back porch. The old house ran back sixty feet to where there was a back porch built coming down into this alleyway on the two feet ten inches that is in dispute. The stairs ran into that alleyway from the back porch. Neither Mrs. Janke, the plaintiff, nor her husband, to my knowledge, at any time had possession of any portion of that two feet ten and three-fourths inches, not since my father bought it. There was no agreement between my father or Mr. or Mrs. Janke with respect to the dividing line, but my father had the fence on it before Mrs. Janke’s house was ever built.”

It is thus to be seen that the only evidence of adverse possession consists of mere occupancy. The disputed strip'was inclosed with and as a part of the lot belonging to McMahon, Senior, and the back porch of his house partially rested upon said strip but there is no further basis for the claim of title. There is no evidence that he ever declared that he owned the land or -that he intended to retain it as against the holder of the legal title. In short, there is no showing, beyond the fact of possession already pointed out, of any act or declared purpose on the part of McMahon indicative of a claim of title. While during the period of his occupancy the statute did not, as it does now, require the payment of taxes, to vest title by adverse possession, it did exact, as it does now, that the possession must be for the statutory period under a claim of right in order to prevail over what we denominate the legal title.

Occupancy was, then as now, only one of the elements that constitute title by prescription and the rule of law has -ever *785 been.in this state that “In every action for the recovery of real property, or the possession thereof, the person establishing a legal title to the property is presumed to have been possessed thereof within the time required by law, and the occupation of the property by any other person is deemed to have been under and in subordination to the legal title unless it appears that the property has been held and possessed adversely to such legal title, for five years before the commencement of the action. ’ ’

In other words, the burden of proof is upon the person in possession and claiming against the holder of the legal title to show that his occupancy is hostile and not subordinate to the legal title. He must prove all the essential elements of adverse possession. (Sharp v. Daughney, 33 Cal. 505; De Frieze v. Quint, 94 Cal. 653, [28 Am. St. Rep. 151, 30 Pac. 1]; Ball v Kehl, 95 Cal. 606, [30 Pac. 780]; Baldwin v. Temple, 101 Cal. 396, [35 Pac. 1008]; 2 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law and Prac. 363.)

It is equally true that possession may be open and notorious and still not adverse. (Thompson v. Felton, 54 Cal. 547; Shiels v. Haley, 61 Cal. 157; Rix v. Horstmann, 93 Cal. 502, [29 Pac. 120] ; Baldwin v. Temple, 101 Cal. 396, [35 Pac. 1008]; Woodward v. Faris, 109 Cal. 12, [41 Pac. 781]; Peters v. Gracia, 110 Cal. 89, [42 Pac. 455].)

The reasonable and creditable inference, harmonizing with the presumption of law, is that McMahon, Senior, had no desire to appropriate land belonging to another and that he laid no claim to property that he did not own but that, through an honest mistake as to the location of the division line, or through inadvertence or carelessness, he included the said strip within his inclosure, holding himself in readiness to yield what a survey or other satisfactory evidence should legally exact of him.

We may suspect that he believed that his lot extended to the limits of the inclosure but such belief is not equivalent to a claim of title or right and therefore not sufficient to constitute an adverse possession. (Grube v. Wells, 34 Iowa, 148; Palmer v. Osborne, 115 Iowa, 715, [87 N. W. 712]; Hess v. Rudder, 117 Ala. 525, [67 Am. St. Rep. 182, 23 South. 136]; Woodward v. Faris, 109 Cal. 12, [41 Pac. 781].)

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Bluebook (online)
133 P. 21, 21 Cal. App. 781, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janke-v-mcmahon-calctapp-1913.