Mann v. Mann

91 P. 994, 152 Cal. 23, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 307
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 19, 1907
DocketSac. No. 1406.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 91 P. 994 (Mann v. Mann) 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
Mann v. Mann, 91 P. 994, 152 Cal. 23, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 307 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

This action was brought to recover possession of a parcel of land situate in Tuolumne County. The plaintiff recovered judgment declaring that he was the owner and entitled to possession of the premises. The defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The land in question is a portion of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15, township 1 north, range 14 east. On February 1, 1882, a United States patent was issued to Thomas Sayre for certain land which included said northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15. Adjoining this forty-acre tract on the south lies lot 2 of said section 15, for which, on May 20, 1882, a patent was issued by the government of the United States to Sarah A. Mann. The defendants are the successors in interest of Sarah A. Mann, while plaintiff claims to be the successor in interest of Thomas Sayre. For many years prior to the issuance of either of the patents above mentioned, a county road, known as the Woods Crossing and Campo Seco road, had run, and still runs, diagonally through lot number 2 and through the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15, leaving a triangular piece of lot 2 lying to the north of the road, and a piece of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15, similar in shape, south of said county road. The latter is the parcel in controversy. The respective patentees of these adjoining tracts had been in occupation of the same before they received their patents. *25 About the year 1873, the Sayre tract was inclosed with a fence. The Mann tract was inclosed with a fence in the year 1884. In inclosing each of these tracts the owners built their respective fences upon the lines of the county road,— that is to say, Thomas Sayre built his fence along the northerly line of the Woods Crossing and Campo Seco road, thus inclosing the portion of lot 2 lying to the north of that road, and the occupant of the Mann tract built a fence along the southerly line of the road, inclosing a portion of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15 within said fence. Thomas Sayre and his successors have during all of the intervening years included within their inclosure, and occupied and used, the portion of lot 2 which lies north of the county road, and the defendants and their predecessors have, during all of these years, included within their inclosure, and occupied and used, the portion of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15 which lies south of the road. On August 29, 1903, Ann O’Donnell, who had succeeded to the interest of Thomas Sayre in the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15, conveyed to the plaintiff the strip of land in controversy.

By showing that the property in dispute was a part of the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 15, patented to Thomas Sayre, and that he was the grantee of the successor in interest of Sayre, the plaintiff made out a prima facie case of title in himself.

The defendants pleaded in their answer that they were the owners of lot 2 in section 15, and that for more than twenty-five years the Woods Crossing and Campo Seco road had been recognized and acquiesced in by the defendants, their grantors and predecessors in interest, and by their coterminous owners, and by all other persons, as being the common dividing line between the Mann tract (including lot 2) and the lands of the adjoining owners; that about twenty-five years ago the said county road was fixed upon and established by the defendants’ grantors and predecessors in interest and by their coterminous owners as being the common boundary line between the said Mann tract and the lands of the contiguous owners thereof; that said lands were inclosed and fenced according to said boundary line so fixed and established, and that said inclosures and fences have ever *26 since been maintained upon said common dividing line; that the lands involved in this controversy are included within the inclosures and fences of the Mann tract and made a part thereof.

In the cross-complaint substantially the same facts are alleged, together with the further fact that during all of said times the defendants and their grantors have occupied said lands and premises and claimed the same as their own, and during all of said time have paid all taxes which were levied and assessed upon said premises. The cross-complaint prays that the defendants’ title be quieted against any claim of the plaintiff. The findings of the court were against the affirmative defense set up and against the allegations of the cross-complaint. . The court found that the dividing line between the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 12, and lot 2 in said section 15, is a certain line as surveyed in 1884 or 1885 and established by iron pins driven in the ground. It found, further, that the county road above referred to has never been recognized or acquiesced in by the coterminous owners as being the common dividing line between the lands owned by defendants and the lands of the adjoining owners; that in the year 1884 a fence inclosing the property in dispute had been erected, but said fence did not fix or establish the boundary line between said lot 2 and said northeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said section 15. There is also a finding against the plea of adverse possession.

The main contention of the appellants is that these findings are contrary to the evidence. It is urged that the testimony of several witnesses shows without conflict that prior to the erection of the fences two agreements had been made between Sarah A. Mann, the owner of lot 2, and the then owners of the adjoining premises, whereby the said county road was agreed upon as the boundary of the respective parcels of land. The defendants rely upon the rule, declared by repeated decisions of this court, that “where coterminous proprietors of land in good faith agree upon, fix, and establish a boundary line between their respective tracts of land, in which they acquiesce, and under which they occupy, for a period equal to that fixed by the statute of limitations, the line as thus established is binding upon them.” (Cooper v. *27 Vierra, 59 Cal. 283; White v. Spreckels, 75 Cal. 616, [17 Pac. 715]; Helm v. Wilson, 76 Cal. 485, [18 Pac. 604]; Dierssen v. Nelson, 138 Cal. 398, [71 Pac. 456].) But this rule is subject to the limitation that the agreement must be for the purpose of settling some uncertainty or dispute as to -the real boundary. This qualification was fully explained in Lewis v. Ogram, 149 Cal. 505, [117 Am. St. Rep. 151, 87 Pac. 60], where Shaw, J., in speaking of an agreement which purported to fix a boundary between adjoining parcels of land, said: “Such an agreement, necessarily, is not valid for any other purpose than that of settling an uncertainty in regard to the common boundary. If adjoining owners agree on a division line, knowing that it is not the true line, and with the purpose of thereby transferring from one of them to the other a body of land which they know his true line does not embrace, the agreement will not be enforced.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P. 994, 152 Cal. 23, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mann-v-mann-cal-1907.