McMillan v. O'Brien

29 P.2d 183, 219 Cal. 775, 91 A.L.R. 383, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 632
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 30, 1934
DocketDocket No. S.F. 14820.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 183 (McMillan v. O'Brien) 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
McMillan v. O'Brien, 29 P.2d 183, 219 Cal. 775, 91 A.L.R. 383, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 632 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

Action to quiet title. The suit was instituted by plaintiff to quiet title to a narrow strip of real property located on the north side of Geary Street between Kearny Street and Grant Avenue in San Francisco, having a frontage of inches on Geary Street and a depth of 122 feet 6 inches. Defendant’s answer contained the usual formal denials, and in addition contained a second count in the alternative which is the real basis of the controversy of the parties. This count alleges that defendant and defendant’s predecessors in ipterest have paid taxes which were duly assessed to them by the county assessor upon said strip of real property for the fiscal years commencing 1907-1908 up to and including the fiscal year of 1928-1929, and prays that if it be determined that plaintiff is the true owner of the property that defendant have judgment against the plaintiff in the sum of $1232.35, the total amount of taxes erroneously paid by defendant and his predecessors in interest, together with interest from the date of the respective payments of said taxes to the date of the entry of said judgment, and that in default of the payment of said amount, the defendant’s lien upon said property for the payment of said taxes and interest be foreclosed. The judgment of the trial court was in favor of the plaintiff, and a decree was made and entered quieting plaintiff’s title free and clear of all encumbrances. It wTas expressly decreed that defendant had not any right, title, claim or interest or estate whatever in said property, and was forever barred from asserting any claim thereto.

The facts of the case which were presented upon a written stipulation entered into by both parties are simple. Plaintiff McMillan and defendant O’Brien are the owners of two adjoining lots having a frontage on Geary Street. Plaintiff *777 owns the east lot and defendant owns. the west lot. The ownership of the 9'1/4-iIlch strip involved herein depends upon the location of the boundary line between the two lots. In 1903 W. W. Young, predecessor in interest of the defendant O'Brien, brought an action to quiet title to this disputed strip and to determine the boundary line between the two lots against T. Z. Blakeman, the owner of the east lot, and predecessor in interest of the plaintiff McMillan. In 1908, by a decision of the Supreme Court of this state, reported in 153 Cal. 477 [95 Pac. 888], it was finally determined that the disputed strip belonged to T. Z. Blakeman. This decision was based upon the ground that although the deed to T. Z. Blakeman, which described his lot by metes and bounds, did not include said disputed strip, nevertheless there had been an oral agreement between the owners of said lots locating said boundary line, and by said agreement the strip of land became included in the description of the property owned by Blakeman. Thereafter the lot belonging to W. W. Young passed by devise or descent to Ella Young, Edith Young, Francis Churchill Williams and Francis Churchill Williams, Jr., then to Edith Wakefield Huntington by grant deed for a consideration, and then to defendant O’Brien by grant deed for a good and valuable consideration. The lot of T. Z. Blakeman passed by descent or devise to plaintiff McMillan. The question of the ownership of the property having been definitely decided in the case of Young v. Blakeman, 153 Cal. 477 [95 Pac. 888], as set out in said stipulation, there can be no doubt that the plaintiff McMillan, as the successor in interest of T. Z. Blakeman, is the legal owner of said disputed strip of land and as such owner is entitled to have her title quieted. Despite the settlement of the boundary dispute in Blakeman’s favor, it is admitted by stipulation that during the period of time commencing in 1907, prior to the final determination of the controversy regarding ownership, down to and including the year 1929, the taxes upon said property were paid by the successors in interest of Young. It is expressly stipulated that said property appeared upon the records of the assessor of the city and county of San Francisco, and of the tax collector of the city and county of San Francisco, as follows: During the fiscal years commencing 1907-1908 and ending 1921-1922, said property appeared on said records as be *778 longing to Ella F. Young, Edith Young, Francis Churchill Williams and Francis Churchill Williams, Jr., and an amount aggregating $662.09 was paid by them in taxes; during the fiscal years commencing 1922-1923 and ending 1925-1926 said property appeared on the records as belonging to Edith Wakefield, and an amount aggregating $329.16 was paid by her in taxes; and during the fiscal years commencing 1926-1927 and ending 1928-1929 said property appeared on said records as belonging to defendant O'Brien and he paid an amount aggregating $241.12 as taxes. None of the amounts paid as taxes have ever been repaid to the parties making such payments. It is also stipulated that at all of the said times said defendant and his predecessors in interest believed that said property belonged to them at the respective times above set forth and on account of said belief paid the taxes levied by the city and county of San Francisco on said property. It is also expressly stipulated that said taxes so paid by defendant and his predecessors in interest were paid without the request, consent or knowledge of plaintiff, or her predecessor in interest, T. Z. Blake-man, and that neither of them had notice of the payment of said taxes.

No explanation is given of the reason why the property continued to be assessed for some twelve years erroneously to the successors of W. W. Young. However, it is apparent from the decision in Young v. Blakeman, supra, that as the agreed boundary line fell outside the property described in the deed to Blakeman’s east lot, that it fell within the property described in the deed to Young’s west lot, and it may be surmised that subsequent to the decision the assessment was not changed by the successors of Young, and therefore this 9^-ineh strip continued to be assessed as being contained in the description of the property embraced in Young’s deed to his lot. (The diagram of the property herein involved as set out in the decision of Young v. Blakeman, supra, shows the reasonableness of this explanation.) Whatever may have been the reason for such erroneous assessment over this period of years, it is apparent that the ownership of this strip was in fact a matter of record and that any inquiry into its ownership would have immediately shown that plaintiff McMillan or her predecessor in interest, Blakeman, was the true owner. The question therefore is *779 presented: Is a person who pays taxes on property which in fact belongs to another—and which appears of record as belonging to that other—in the honest but mistaken belief that the land belongs to him, entitled to any relief or reimbursement upon discovery of the true ownership as against the owner of the property who has not paid any taxes upon the property?

It is the general rule that there can be no recovery for a voluntary payment of the debt of a third party without request and with no promise of repayment by the party whose debt is paid, and it was apparently upon the theory that the defendant was a mere volunteer that the trial court refused him any relief.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 183, 219 Cal. 775, 91 A.L.R. 383, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmillan-v-obrien-cal-1934.