Jersey Farm Co. v. Atalanta Realty Co.

151 P. 547, 28 Cal. App. 128
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 23, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1613.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 P. 547 (Jersey Farm Co. v. Atalanta Realty Co.) 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
Jersey Farm Co. v. Atalanta Realty Co., 151 P. 547, 28 Cal. App. 128 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

LENNON, P. J.

The plaintiff in this action sought to quiet its title to certain easements consisting of: 1. The right to maintain and use a reclamation levee erected and situated on the land of the defendant; 2. The right to have surface and seepage water flow through drainage canals situated on the land of the defendant; and, 3. The right to maintain and use a pumping plant, also situated on the land of the defendant.

Plaintiff’s cause of action proceeds entirely upon the theory that its right to the claimed easements had its source in their *129 obvious and permanent user by the owner of the original tract upon which they were constructed and erected, and that upon the severance of the unity of title of the original tract such right by implication and operation of law vested in plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, and ultimately rested with the plaintiff.

The answer of the defendant, while denying the material allegations of plaintiff’s complaint, pleads the special defense of a release of the claimed easements solely as the result of a quitclaim deed made and executed after the severance of the unity of title by the owner of the dominant tenement, plaintiff's predecessor in interest, to the owner of the servient tenement, defendant’s predecessor in interest.

In its findings of fact the trial court declared that “said levee, canals, ditches and pump were constructed and installed as one general uniform system for the reclaiming and cultivating of said land, and were constructed and installed at groat expense; that said, or some other levee, canals, ditches, and pump constructed as one general system for reclaiming said land and cultivating the same, and the whole thereof are absolutely indispensable for the use and cultivation thereof.” The findings of the trial court, however, upon the issue of title to the claimed easements were made in favor of the defendant. Judgment was accordingly entered in favor of the defendant from wdiich, and from an order denying a new trial the plaintiff has appealed. Heretofore one phase of the case was presented to, and passed upon by the supreme court upon an appeal by the defendant from an order of the court below granting the plaintiff’s prayer for a preliminary injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with the repair and maintenance by the plaintiff of the levee, drainage canals, and pumping plant in controversy. (Jersey Farm Co. v. Atalanta Realty Co. 164 Cal. 412, [129 Pac. 593].) Upon that appeal the facts of the case -were, in all of their essential features, identical with the proven and practically undisputed facts of the case as adduced upon the trial in the court below, and therefore, we shall adopt the following statement of facts found in the opinion rendered by Mr. Justice Henshaw upon the first appeal as a statement in part of the facts of the case upon the present appeal. “There is in the county of Contra Costa a tract of land comprising over 3900 acres which in the state of nature is overflowed by the -waters of *130 the San Joaquin River. This land unreclaimed, is valueless, reclaimed, is very valuable. Years ago it was reclaimed by its then owner, the reclamation consisting of the construction of a levee around the exterior boundary of the tract, and the excavation of drainage canals conducting the water to the lowest part of the tract where a pumping plant was erected and the excess water pumped out of the canal and off the land. The levee, canals, ditches, and pumping plant were constructed, installed and operated as a single, indivisible system for reclaiming all of the land and they are still indispensable for its use and cultivation. In 1907 Nathan Fisher was the owner of the land. He made a deed of trust to Archibald Kains, trustee for the benefit of Myra E. Wright, beneficiary, to secure the payment of a sum of money owing by Fisher to Wright. The deed of trust contained a provision empowering Nathan Fisher or his grantee to demand reconveyance of any portion of the tract in lots of not less than fifty acres on the payment of a certain specified sum of money per acre. Herman Bendel by mesne conveyances succeeded to the title and rights of Fisher and tendering the requisite amount of money demanded from the trustee a re-conveyance of fifty acres. The fifty acres whose reconveyance was thus demanded was the lowest land of the tract. Upon it was established the pumping plant to which pumping plant by a main canal were conducted the surplus waters of the whole tract. The exterior protecting levee extended along the river frontage of this tract. The trustee refused to make the conveyance and Bendel brought suit to compel him to do so. A decree was given commanding the execution of the deed which the trustee thereupon executed. Subsequently Bendel conveyed this fifty acres to the defendant and appellant herein. Previous to the execution of the trustee’s deed to Bendel the trustee had executed under the terms of his trust a deed of all the rest of the tract to Myra E. Wright. To all the interest of Myra E. Wright in this plaintiff has succeeded. Defendant refused plaintiff admission to his lands for the purpose of maintaining and using the drainage canal, and maintaining and using the pumping plant to expel water from the drainage canal. Plaintiff insisted on his right to enter the land of appellant for these purposes.”

In addition to the facts just stated it further appeared upon the first appeal as it does upon the present appeal that *131 after the right of Bendel to redeem the land had been determined in his favor, the parties being desirous of ending the litigation in which they were involved, entered into negotiations for settlement of the controversy. Bendel and his attorneys' were not satisfied with the trustee’s deed hereinabove mentioned for various reasons, and all of the parties seemed to agree that a quitclaim deed from Myra E. Wright, the beneficiary 'under the .trust-deed, was necessary to effectually cancel her rights in the suit and to vest title in Bendel. Accordingly a quitclaim deed was thereupon executed by Myra E. Wright and the determination of this controversy depends primarily upon the legal effect of that instrument. The quitclaim deed recited that the grantor of the deed “remise,” “release,” and “quitclaim” to the grantee the lands in question. It was asserted by the defendant upon the appeal in the injunction proceeding, and it is reiterated here, that the quitclaim deed was to be construed by its terms, and by its terms alone, and that the effect of the recital of the words “remise,” “release” and “quitclaim” was to carry the title to the lands in the deed, and with it all inferior interest, and that those words operated as a release or extinction of the right of plaintiff’s predecessor in interest to the easements in controversy. Opposing this contention the plaintiff upon the first appeal insisted, as it now contends, that in construing the deed of quitclaim, evidence of the facts and circumstances under which the deed of quitclaim and release was executed were admissible to prove the intention of the parties to the deed. In the injunction proceeding the trial court permitted evidence of the surrounding facts and circumstances to explain the intention of the parties to the quitclaim deed, and the supreme court in commenting upon this ruling said, ‘ ‘ The court . . .

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Bluebook (online)
151 P. 547, 28 Cal. App. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jersey-farm-co-v-atalanta-realty-co-calctapp-1915.