Mora v. Nunez

10 F. 634, 7 Sawy. 455, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2316
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1882
StatusPublished

This text of 10 F. 634 (Mora v. Nunez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mora v. Nunez, 10 F. 634, 7 Sawy. 455, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2316 (uscirct 1882).

Opinion

Sawyer, C. J.

This is an action to recover the lands known as the Mission Eancho of Ban Fernando, situate in Los Angeles county. The plaintiff, in his complaint, seeks to recover the entire rancho, containing upwards of 121,000 acres. But the defendant, by supplemental answer, alleges that the plaintiff, subsequent to the commencement of the action,. parted with his title to a large portion of the rancho, the title to which has become vested in the defendant; and the proofs are admitted to be sufficient to sustain the supplemental answer as to the lands described in it. The contest is, therefore, now limited to certain small parcels of land, containing in the aggregate about 76-acres, embracing the church and appendages and lands claimed to belong thereto, covered by a patent issued to Arch[635]*635bishop Alemany. The title to these parcels rests, firstly, upon an execution sale; and, secondly, upon a patent to Archbishop Alemany.

In June, 1861, the district attorney oí San Joaquin county brought an action in the fifth judicial district in said county of San Joaquin against An-dreas Pico, a resident of Los Angeles county, for certain delinquent taxes levied against said Pico for two fiscal years, ending in March, 1859 and 1860, in the county of San Joaquin, upon lands known as the Moquelemos grant, situated in said county. He prayed judgment for $2,671, with costs and charges; that the said land and improvements he decreed to bo sold to satisfy the taxes and charges; and for such other and further relief as might be just and equitable.

This action is expressly stated in the complaint to be brought in pursuance of an act of the legislature of the stale entitled “An act to legalize and provide Cor the collection of delinquent taxes in the counties of this state,” approved May 17,1861. This act legalizes the taxes for the fiscal years ending March 1, 1859, and March 1,1860; and in case they cannot otherwise be collected, provides for collecting them by suit in a prescribed form. The complaint is drawn and the suit prosecuted in accordance with the provisions of tiie act. The defendant Pico, having been served with the summons, ap-' peared and demurred. The demurrer having been overruled, in due time, on December 26, 1861, a personal judgment, in default of an answer, was rendered against Pico for $3,389.55 and costs. There was no decree for a sale of tiie lands upon which the taxes were levied, and upon which they were a lien. Ho transcript of this judgment was ever filed in Los Angeles county, nor was there any record of a lieu of any kind made in that county. On April 29, 1862, an execution in the ordinary form, upon a personal money judgment at law, issued to the sheriff of Los Angeles county, commanding him to satisfy the execution out of the personal properly, if sufficient could he found; and if sufficient could not be found, then out of the real property “ belonging to him, Pico, on the day when the said, judgment was docketed in the county aforesaid, or at any. time thereafter.” There is some ambiguity as to which cotuii,y, San Joaquin or Los Angeles, this clause refers.

The sheriff’s return certified that “he served the said writ of execution by levying on” all the right, title, and interest of Pico in the rancho San Fernando, in Los Angeles county, but he does not state wliat acts ho peformed to constitute the levy. The return also shows that on June 9,1862, he did “ sell the lands and premises above mentioned and described to Thadeas Amat, he being the highest bidder for the same, to-wit, for the sum of $2,000.” The lands described and sold embraced upwards of 121,000 acres. The published notice of sale, annexed to the return, is that I “ shall expose for sale, at public auction, for cash, to the highest bidder;” and the sheriff’s deed recites that lie did “ sell the promises at public auction, * * * at which sale the said premises were struck off and sold to Thadeas Amat for the sum of $2,000, the said Thadeas Amat being- the highest bidder, and that being the highest sum bidden, and the whole price paid for the same.”

[636]*636The foregoing are the facts upon which the title under the execution sale rests. The title under the patent rests upon the following facts:

Joseph Sadoe Alemany, Catholic bishop of the diocese of Monterey, on February 19,1853, filed his petition with the commissioners to ascertain and settle land titles in California under the act of congress of 1851, in which he claimed the confirmation to him and his successors of certain church property described “to be held by him in trust for the religious purposes and uses to which the same have been respectively appropriated,” said property consisting of “ church edifices, houses for the use of the clergy and those employed in the services of the church, church-yards, burial grounds, gardens, orchards, and vineyards, with'the necessary buildings thereon and appurtenancesalleging that the same had been recognized as the property of said church by the laws of Mexico in force at the time of the cession of California to the United States. The occupation by the church is claimed in the petition to have commenced some time in the last century. On December 18,1855, the board of land commissioners confirmed the claim to lands “ at the mission of San Fernando,” described in the decree as follows: “ The church and the buildings adjoining thereto in a quadrangular form, and the house connected with the same by a yard at the south-west corner of said quadrangle, which are known as the church and mission buildings of the mission of San Fernando, situated in the county of Los Angeles, together with the land on which the same are erected, and the curtilages and appurtenances thereto belonging, and the cemetery enclosed with an adobe wall adjoining said church.” This decree became final, by dismissal of the appeal, March 15,1858.
A survey and plat were made, filed, and certified August 6, 1861, in pursuance of the act of 1860; and a patent issued to said Bishop Alemany, May 13, 1862, embracing eight parcels of land described in the plat and survey, and being the same several parcels particularly described in the third supplemental answer filed in this case. They embraced the orchards and vineyards used by the mission at a little distance from the church building. The plaintiff has such right of possession as is conferred by said patent.
On October 7, 1852, Eulogio de Oelis filed his petition with the said board of land commission praying a confirmation to him of the mission of San Fernando rancho, his title being a “deed of grant” made to him on June 17, 1846, by Pio Pico, governor of California. This petition included the lands hereinbefore mentioned patented to Bishop Alemany. The claim was confirmed July 3,1855, and the decree became final, by dismissal of the appeal. March 15,1858. The description in the decree of confirmation is as follows: “The land of which confirmation is hereby given is called the ex-mission of San Fernando, situate in the county of Los Angeles, and to be located as the boundaries are known and recognized on the seventeenth day of June, 1846.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F. 634, 7 Sawy. 455, 1882 U.S. App. LEXIS 2316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mora-v-nunez-uscirct-1882.