Madden v. Hall

132 P. 291, 21 Cal. App. 541, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 275
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1076.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 132 P. 291 (Madden v. Hall) 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
Madden v. Hall, 132 P. 291, 21 Cal. App. 541, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 275 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action to quiet title claimed to have ripened by adverse possession. Plaintiff had judgment from which defendant appeals under the alternative method. The land involved is an eighty-acre tract, to wit: The S. W. % of the S. E. 14 of sec. 24 and the N. W. % of the N. E. 14 of see. 25, T. 43 N., R. 12 E., M. D. M., situated in Modoc County.

The court made the following findings:

III. That on February 11, 1893, a patent was issued by the United States to defendant and on that date defendant was the legal owner of the land involved and on that date and prior thereto “the said land and the whole thereof was unfenced, uninclosed and uncultivated wild land.”
• IV. That said land ‘ ‘ continued to be unfenced, uninclosed and uncultivated wild land until the spring of 1904” at which time plaintiff, “claiming to be the owner, entered into the actual possession of same” and, during the spring of 1904, plaintiff “inclosed said real estate and the whole thereof with *543 a substantial inelosure” describing the same, except a few hundred feet on the east side, where a natural rock barrier constituted the fence, and said inclosure Was maintained continuously to the comeneement of this action. Then follow findings that, during all this period from 1904 to the commencement of the action, to wit, from the spring of 1904 to September 9, 1910, plaintiff’s possession has been open, continuous, exclusive, and notorious and hostile to the whole world under claim of title and plaintiff has paid all taxes levied and assessed upon the property during said period.

The conclusion of law is that plaintiff is the owner of said land and defendant has no right, title, or interest therein.

It appears that, for some years prior to February 11, 1893, defendant had possession of the. land in question under the Desert Land Act and, on the day named, a patent issued to him. Plaintiff and her husband were neighbors of defendant also living on a farm two or three miles distant from said land. In 1892 defendant left Modoc County and moved to San Joaquin County and did not return to Modoc County until 1910 except on one occasion not long after he first left when he remained but a short time. He testified that when he left Modoc County he left the land “in charge of Mr. Madden—John Madden” (plaintiff’s husband). He was asked to state the circumstances under which he placed Mr. Madden in charge. “Well, we was, you might say, good friends, or” (the witness was interrupted by an objection from plaintiff’s counsel which was overruled). “Well, the reason I left it was because I had nobody else to leave it with, and I wanted to leave it with a responsible man, and thought he was. Q. What arrangements did you make with Mr. Madden at that time, if any? A. He was to have the use of the land; he was to go in there and get wood and posts; he was to get wood and posts for looking after the land.” Part of the land was rock and trees grew on it. He testified that Madden was to look after the land, “see that the taxes were paid and let me know. He was to write to me and I was to send him the money to pay up the taxes whenever they came due.” The witness produced a receipt, signed by John Madden, as follows:

*544 “Alturas, Cal., Dec. 8th, 1893.
“Received from Geo. W. Hall sixty-two & 5/100 dollars.
Credited on note.................................$54.10
Taxes 1892, 5.25; taxes 1893, 2.70.................. 7.95
$62.05
“$62.05 John Madden. ’ ’

He testified that the $54.10 was a credit on a note held by one Stewart; that he owed Madden nothing then or at any time. Plaintiff, as a witness, testified that she understood that her husband had a note and mortgage of Madden’s, in 1893 or 1894, but no such indebtedness was shown and Hall testified that the only mortgage he had made was one to Stewart and did not embrace the land in question. There is no denial of the facts stated by Hall as to Madden’s agency or other of the above facts testified to by him. Hall’s absence from Modoc County during the succeeding years is not explained and no communication with the Maddens is shown after December, 1893.

In 1902 an action was brought against Madden and judgment obtained December 1, 1902, which was levied on certain property and, for some unexplained reason, including the land in question. At the sale plaintiff became the purchaser of all the property levied upen for six hundred dollars, and on January 24, 1903, a sheriff’s certificate of sale was issued to her. On June 29, 1903, the court made an order, on her motion, in the action, canceling the certificate of sale issued to plaintiff and ordering the sheriff to return to her the six hundred dollars, which was done and, of course, this certificate ceased to confer any, even color of title, or right in plaintiff. She claims to have initiated her adverse possession in 1903 by virtue of this execution sale in the action against Madden. She filed an affidavit in that action, dated February 6, 1903, as the wife of John Madden, defendant in the action, and representing that she was authorized to appear for him as his attorney in fact and protect his interests at said sale and requested the land to be sold in one body. She took no steps toward taking possession of the land or fencing, cultivating or making improvements or otherwise showing adverse possession until in the spring of 1904 and what was done was done exclusively by one James Campbell. She testified: *545 “I had Mr. Campbell fence it, I think in the year 1904. . . . I told him if he would fence that eighty acres I would give him the benefit he derived from it. . . . He cleared a number of acres and put in grain and some alfalfa. I think it has been cultivated since 1904 or 1905. I don’t know just exactly. Q. I will ask you to state now whether or not you have claimed that land ever since 1903? A. I have. Q. State whether you have claimed it openly? A. I have claimed it openly if the occasion called for it. Q. You made no concealment of it? A. No, sir. I spoke of it generally as my land. Q. Has anybody else during that time ever claimed it? A. Not to my knowledge.” She testified to having paid the taxes and it sufficiently appeared that she did pay all the taxes levied and assessed on the land after 1903 and up to and including the year 1909. The foregoing is the substance of her testimony.

James Campbell testified that he fenced the land in question for plaintiff in 1904—“fenced it for the use of it.” His description of the fence shows that it was sufficient compliance with the law so far as the character of the structure itself is concerned. The work he did on the land, its cultivation by him and the use he made of the land not susceptible of cultivation, would also seem sufficient. His occupancy was for plaintiff and continued from 1904 to the commencement of the action in 1910. He testified that after defendant left the county he understood that the land belonged to the Madden estate. “Q. When was the first time you understood it belonged to Madden? A. About the time I went to work for Mr. Madden about fifteen years ago—1896 I think it was. Q. They claimed the land at that time ? A.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P. 291, 21 Cal. App. 541, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madden-v-hall-calctapp-1913.