McBrown v. Dalton

11 P. 583, 70 Cal. 89, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 732
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 29, 1886
DocketNo. 9286
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 11 P. 583 (McBrown v. Dalton) 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
McBrown v. Dalton, 11 P. 583, 70 Cal. 89, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 732 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

McKee, J.

This case arises out of an original action in equity brought by the plaintiff agaiust the defendants to compel a conveyance of the legal title to certain land and premises, which it is claimed they have received and hold in trust for him.

It appears by the complaint in the case that in the year 1865 the plaintiff was the owner of an undivided three-ninths interest in a ranch known as the “Bojorquez ranch,” containing about twenty-five thousand acres; that in that year he sold and conveyed to the defendants “all his right, title, and interest” therein, except a specific portion, described by metes and bounds, which was then in his exclusive possession; that at the time of the sale the defendants stipulated, by an instrument in writing, that this portion should be allotted and set apart to him by the final decree of the court, in which there was then pending an action for the partition of the ranch; and that by the final decree rendered in that action the land thus reserved was in fact allotted and set apart for the defendants in this action, but they refuse to execute their trust by conveying it to him.

The defendants by their answer specifically deny the allegations of the complaint.

But it was proved on the trial of the cause, and the court below finds, that on the 19th of May, 1860, Horace Gates was the owner of an undivided one-ninth interest in the Bojorquez ranch, and commenced an action against several hundred persons named in the complaint in the action as defendants and tenants in common of the ranch, for partition of. the same among them according to their respective interests; that one of these defendants was the present plaintiff, McBrown; that on the 31st of May, 1860, McBrown filed his answer to the complaint, in which he set forth that he was the owner in fee-simple absolute of an undivided three ninths of the ranch, derived by direct and mesne conveyances from the original owner,-and that other persons, who were par[91]*91ties defendants in the action, and were in possession of portions of the ranch, claiming interests therein by deeds from the same source of title, had no right or title adverse to him; and that the deeds under which they asserted their rights were ineffectual and void as to him.

After this answer was filed, McBrown and certain of the tenants in common, and defendants in the partition suit, about forty persons, including the defendants in this action, on the 1st of September, 1865, entered into an agreement for the formation of a land league to buy in for the use and benefit of the members of the league the undivided interests in the ranch claimed by “ Horace Gates and other persons.”

Under that agreement a league was organized, known as the “Bojorquez League,” and the defendants in this action were appointed and acted as the executive committee of the league to make purchases. In that capacity the defendants purchased and acquired undivided interests in the ranch from Horace Gates and the plaintiff, McBrown. The purchase from McBrown was made on the 14th of March, 1865. On that day McBrown by deed conveyed to the defendants a portion of his interest in the ranch by the following description:—

“All his right, title, and interest, in law or equity, in possession or expectancy, in the ranch, .... reserving, saving, and excepting all that portion of said rancho lying and being in the southwest corner of said rancho, now in the possession of the said John McBrown, and more particularly described as follows, to wit: Commencing at the southwest corner of said rancho, and running thence easterly along and on the southwesterly boundary line of said rancho to the southeast corner of the said rancho; thence northerly along the easterly line of said rancho eight chains to the line of the Clark and Casanueva tract (so called); thence westerly along said line to the southwest corner of said Clark and Casanueva tract; thence northerly along the westerly line of said [92]*92tract to the northeast corner of John McBrown’s fence or a point on said line easterly therefrom; thence westerly along and with the line of said fence to the fence inclosing the Potrero tract (so called); thence southerly along and round the Potrero fence to the intersection of John McBrown’s fence with the Potrero fence; thence westerly along and in the same direction of said fence to the westerly line of said rancho; thence southerly along the westerly line of said rancho to the place of beginning.”

Contemporaneously with the execution of the deed, the defendants executed and delivered to McBrown an instrument in writing which recited that, “in consideration of said deed, we consent and agree that he, the said McBrown, shall have set off to him in any decree of partition of said ranch . . . . that portion of the ranch reserved by said deed, .... and we will use our influence^ to secure the same to him, as the part reserved by him out of the interest which he held in the ranch before his deed to us.”

After the defendants had in that manner acquired title from McBrown, they had themselves substituted in the partition suit as representatives of the interest thus acquired; and they filed an answer in which they alleged that at the date of the deed McBrown owned an undivided three ninths of the ranch, derived by deeds from three of the heirs at law of the original owner of the ranch, less certain interests which had been conveyed to other parties by his grantors before he had acquired their rights, and less certain interests conveyed by McBrown himself after he had acquired his rights; and that all the interest which he had in the ranch at the date of the deed vested in them, except the interest reserved in the tract described in the deed; and they asked that they be adjudged owners in fee of the said undivided three ninths, less the interest therein, conveyed before and after McBrown acquired his rights, and less the quantity [93]*93of the interest remaining in him in the tract reserved in the deed under which they claimed from him, and that the same be set apart to them, quantity and quality relatively considered.

As a defendant in the partition suit, McBrown himself continued to represent the interest in the ranch which remained in him after his deed to the defendants.

Upon the trial of the issues in the partition suit, the court found that Bartolomé Bojorquez was the original owner of the Bojorquez ranch; that in 1851 he conveyed an undivided one-ninth interest in the ranch to each of his eight children, reserving an undivided ninth to himself; that Gates, the plaintiff in the action, derived title to an undivided one ninth thereof; that McBrown, the plaintiff in this action, derived title to an undivided three ninths thereof, of which he transferred by deed to W. P. Bullard an undivided one hundred and sixty-third interest, to L. A. Marshall an undivided one hundred and fifty-fifth interest, and to Dalton, Denman, Railsback, Martin, and Meacham, defendants in this action, by the deed of the 14th of October, 1865, an undivided seven thousand eight hundred and eighty-seven seventy-five thousand two hundred and sixty-fifths interest in the ranch, reserving to himself whatever interest remained in him as described in the deed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 P. 583, 70 Cal. 89, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbrown-v-dalton-cal-1886.