McLeran v. Benton

14 P. 879, 73 Cal. 329, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 673
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 1, 1887
DocketNo. 9220
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 14 P. 879 (McLeran v. Benton) 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
McLeran v. Benton, 14 P. 879, 73 Cal. 329, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 673 (Cal. 1887).

Opinion

Paterson, J.

This action was commenced twenty-five years ago, and has been before this court several times on appeal. The tracts of land in controversy are of great value, and are popularly known as “ Woodward's Garden," “ Benton’s Church," and “ Judson and Shepard's Acid Factory." The property is within the exterior limits of the territory described in the Van Ness ordinance, and the principal questions involved relate to the title conferred by that ordinance, and to defendants’ plea of the statute of limitations. After the second decision by this court (43 Cal. 473), the defendants filed in the court below an amended answer, setting up more fully the facts upon which they relied in their affirmative defense.

Inasmuch as the appellant places great reliance upon [337]*337the decisions on the former appeals, it becomes necessary for us to review the matters adjudicated, and ascertain to what extent the law of the case has been established. It is said that because the lease was regarded and treated at the first and second trials, and on the former appeals, as valid by all the parties, and by this court, the objection made at the last trial and on this appeal, that it is invalid because not acknowledged by Mrs. Foley, cannot be considered; that it must now be regarded as a valid lease. The fact is, as stated, that the lease was at the first and second trials regarded as valid, and creating a term for years, and was so treated by this court on appeal. (31 Cal. 29; 43 Cal. 468.)

At the last trial, however, the lease was objected to, and held to be void as a lease for a term of years, but was introduced and considered in evidence only “to show the character of Comerford’s holding; to show a recognition of tenancy on the part of Comerford creating a tenancy at will; and to illustrate the possession that was taken subject to it.”

We do not think that the decisions upon this question on the former appeals have become the law of the case. The evidence, and the purposes for which the pretended lease was introduced, present a different question on this appeal. It is only where the evidence is the same that the doctrine contended for by appellant applies. It is doubtless true, as a general proposition, that a previous ruling of the appellate court upon a matter directly in issue is, as to all subsequent proceedings, a final adjudication, and becomes the law of the case, from which the court ought not to depart, nor allow the parties to be relieved. But when such a ruling relates to a matter of fact, the principle can be invoked only when the fact appears again to theappellate court underthesame circumstances in respect to which it was originally considered. (Mitchell v. Davis, 23 Cal. 381; Trinity County v. McCam[338]*338mon, 25 Cal. 121; Leese v. Clark, 20 Cal. 418; Nieto v. Carpenter, 21 Cal. 483.)

In our opinion, therefore, the court below was not bound to consider the lease as a valid lease for a term of years; and that it created simply a tenancy at will we have no doubt. (Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, secs. 19, 112.)

It is further contended that the decree and sale, followed by a deed from the commissioners to Eleonora, executed March 28, 1851, were void as to the children of Jacob Harmon, deceased, because they had not been made parties to the action after the death of their father, and therefore, that Eleonora and the children were tenants in common.

On the second appeal it was said: “The decision on the former appeal, Ewald v. Corbett, would be destitute of all basis if the estate of Jacob Harrpon would not descend, or could not be distributed, under the statute regulating common property”; and it was in effect decided that the commissioners’ deed o'f March 28, 1851, was void, and the fact that the defendants and others effected their purchase from Mrs. Foley in good faith was immaterial, the papers which the parties executed having shown that the premises were a portion of the Harmon estate, in which the children of Mrs. Foley had an interest, which Mrs. Foley had not competent power to convey. Under that decision, we must hold that “the undivided half of the premises,— that is to say, the undivided half of the interest therein which Harmon and wife held immediately preceding his death, — vested in Eleonora, either by virtue of the decree of divorce or the statute of this state providing for the distribution of the common property upon the dissolution of the community by the death of the husband; and the remaining half vested in their two children; that the right and interest in the premises, acquired or held by Harmon by virtue .of his possession, conceding they were the lands of [339]*339the pueblo or the city, would descend to his heirs, if not devised by him, and that the same might be distributed under the statute relating to common property.” It would seem to follow, therefore, that Eleonora and the children were tenants in common at the time the lease to Comerford was delivered (43 Cal. 476); and that if they had been in possession of the property on January 1, 1855, and remained until June 20, 1855, they would have received the Van Ness ordinance title. The same result probably would have followed had Comerford remained in possession under the lease until June 20, 1855. If we assume this to be true, then up to the time of the assignment by Comerford of his interest in the lease to Brannan and others, December, 1853, the rights of Mrs. Foley and the children in the premises would be fully preserved. This brings us to the inquiry—a most important one so far as Mrs. Foley’s interest is concerned at least—as to the legal effect of Comerford’s assignment to Brannan and others. By the terms of the instrument it was provided “that, whereas T. 0. Larkin .... and Samuel Brannan have become the owners, by purchase, of the within-described premises; now therefore, in consideration of the sum of five thousand dollars to me paid, .... I do by these presents assign, transfer, and surrender to said .... and Bran-nan all my right, title, and interest in the said premises, under and by virtue of the within lease.” What right, title, or interest did Comerford hold by virtue of the lease which could be transferred by him? Tie was a mere tenant at will, and could not assign the remainder of the term named in the lease. A tenancy at will is not assignable. If a tenant at will attempt to underlet or surrender, he thereby determines his will, and relinquishes the estate. (Cooper v. Adams, 6 Cush. 90; Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, secs. 62, 83.) Without the consent of Mrs. Foley, Brannan and others would be merely tenants at sufferance, and liable to an action of [340]*340trespass against them. (Reckhow v. Shank, 43 N. Y. 451.)

The tenant at sufferance has merely a naked possession; stands in no privity to the landlord; is not liable for rents, unless expressly made so by statute; nor is he entitled to notice to quit. The landlord may put an end to the tenancy when he thinks proper, and may, under certain circumstances, treat the one in possession as an intruder or trespasser. (Hauxhurst v. Lobree, 38 Cal. 563; Meier v. Thiemann, 15 Mo. App. 307; Taylor’s Landlord and Tenant, sec. 65.) The relation of Bran-nan and others to the Foleys, therefore, depended upon the understanding and oral agreement of all the parties, and there is no question as to what that agreement was.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P. 879, 73 Cal. 329, 1887 Cal. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleran-v-benton-cal-1887.