Nemo v. Farrington

94 P. 874, 7 Cal. App. 443, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 352
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 20, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 413.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 94 P. 874 (Nemo v. Farrington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nemo v. Farrington, 94 P. 874, 7 Cal. App. 443, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 352 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action was brought to quiet title. Defendants Lizzie Kincaid and Rosanna Farrington filed an an *445 swer and cross-complaint putting in issue the title of plaintiff and setting up a chain of title culminating in said Eosanna Farrington and asking that her title be quieted as against any claim of plaintiff.

Both parties insist upon title by “adverse possession.” Plaintiff also claims by virtue of a judgment in ejectment rendered in favor of plaintiff’s grantor against the said Eosanna Farrington. The latter also claims the record title by mesne conveyances from the grantee of a tax deed.

1. The evidence shows that on December 1, 1879, a complaint was filed in the district court for San Joaquin county by Alfred Fairbanks, plaintiff’s grantor, against Patrick and Eosanna Farrington in which it was alleged that plaintiff was, on or about the fifth day of November, 1879, ever since has been and now is the owner in fee of the property here in controversy and entitled to the possession thereof; and that said defendants, on November 5, 1879, unlawfully entered into possession of said property and still withhold it. The value of the rents was also set out and the prayer followed the allegations of the complaint. The defendants answered denying all the allegations of said complaint. The action was tried December 23,1885. Findings were waived and 1 ‘ judgment was rendered for the plaintiff as prayed for for the possession of said premises and for the sum of $377.00 rents and costs.” Under a writ issued upon said judgment the sheriff ejected said" defendants from said premises on July 6, 1886, and delivered possession to the plaintiff in said action.

It is claimed by respondent that the foregoing judgment “determined all claims of ownership that defendants therein had to the premises prior to the time of the rendition of said judgment and being adverse to them was also adverse to all the defendants herein, as Lizzie Farrington Kincaid, under her deed of August 13, 1884, took only such title as was adjudged in said action to be void.”

The answer of appellants is that during the pendency of said action and more than one year before the judgment was rendered the said defendants transferred the property to their daughter, the said Lizzie F. Kincaid, who seventeen years thereafter conveyed it back to said Eosanna Farrington and that the contention of respondent cannot be maintained for the reason that “the plaintiff in that action of ejectment did *446 not make such grantee a defendant in the action and he filed no lis pendens to prevent a valid transfer during the pendency of the action; . . . hence it was error to admit such judgment in evidence as it was not between the same parties or their privies (Leroy v. Rogers, 30 Cal. 229, [89 Am. Dec. 88] ; Shay v. McNamera, 54 Cal. 170) ; and furthermore, the title to the property in question was not adjudicated, as the judgment was for rents and possession only, and hence the judgment-roll was not admissible for the purpose of proving title. (Mahoney v. Van Winkle, 33 Cal. 448 ; Burns v. Hodgdon, 64 Cal. 72, [28 Pac. 61].)”

The record is silent as to whether a lis "pendens was filed in the former action or whether it was received in evidence in the trial of the ease at bar. No objection was made to the judgment on the ground that a lis pendens had not been filed or that plaintiff at the time of offering said judgment had not shown that it was filed at the proper time. The record shows that the defendants objected on the ground that the same was “incompetent, irrelevant, immaterial and not rebuttal and was not an action between the same parties or that owned the property at the time of the decree.”

There is nothing in any of the assignments of “insufficiency of the evidence” to indicate that the said judgment was not binding upon Lizzie F. Kincaid by reason of the failure of plaintiff to file a notice of the pendency of the action and the bill of exceptions herein does not in any manner purport to give all the evidence or proceedings at the trial. ■

The burden is undoubtedly upon appellants to show error, as the presumptions are in favor of the judgment of the court below. It must be assumed, therefore, in the absence of anything in the record justifying a contrary inference, that the preliminary proof showing the admissibility of the judgment was made. (Estate of Dean, 149 Cal. 495, [87 Pac. 13].) The conclusion follows that said Lizzie F. Kincaid, under whom Rosanna Farrington now claims, had constructive notice of the pendency of said action and was bound by the judgment rendered therein. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1908, subd. 2.)

■ The second point of appellants is equally untenable. The title was directly put in issue by the pleadings, the right to possession was based upon it and it is clear that the judg *447 ment of the court in favor of plaintiff was the result of the determination that plaintiff was the owner of the property.

Section 1911 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “That only is deemed to have been adjudged in a former judgment which appears upon its face to have been so adjudged, or which was actually and necessarily included therein or necessary thereto.” It is manifest that as the pleadings were framed it was necessary for the court to find the ownership in order to determine the right to the possession. The judgment rendered upon the merits creates an estoppel in favor of the prevailing party as against the other, which can be successfully invoked in any subsequent proceedings between the parties and privies in reference to the questions necessarily determined. We think it must be held, therefore, that appellants are estopped from asserting ownership of said property on said December 23, 1885, on the part of both or either of them, or from denying that on said date the title was in said Fairbanks to whose interest plaintiff succeeded three months thereafter, to wit, March 22, 1886.

The cases cited by appellants are entirely different from the ease at bar. The scope of Mahoney v. Van Winkle, is seen in the following quotation: “But it is insisted further that the defendant cannot go behind the judgment in the ejectment suit brought against him by Mahoney. The answer to the objection is obvious. The thing forbidden is not attempted here. A new event has happened since Mahoney v. Green was tried and adjudged; and the legal effect of the event is to confer upon the defendant a present right of possession; a right which he did not have at the beginning of the ejectment nor at its conclusion.”

The decision in Burns v. Hodgdon is based upon the ground that “The right, title and claim now set up by the plaintiffs herein are not the same which were tried and determined in said suit brought by said Hodgdon, but the plaintiffs here have title to said premises and a right to the possession thereof, which were not tried nor determined, nor within any of the issues involved in said suit brought by Wadsworth Hodgdon.”

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Bluebook (online)
94 P. 874, 7 Cal. App. 443, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nemo-v-farrington-calctapp-1908.