Orange Cove Water Co. v. Sampson

248 P. 526, 78 Cal. App. 334, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1926
DocketDocket No. 3060.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 248 P. 526 (Orange Cove Water Co. v. Sampson) 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
Orange Cove Water Co. v. Sampson, 248 P. 526, 78 Cal. App. 334, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action to quiet the alleged title of the plaintiff to a right of way in, over, and upon lot 13 of certain real property of the defendants (specifically described in the complaint), for the construction and maintenance thereon of pipe-lines to be used in connection with and as a part of a system inaugurated by plaintiff for the transportation of water for irrigation and domestic purposes “over, through and across” said lot 13 and other real property immediately contiguous thereto. The complaint also prayed for the issuance of a temporary writ of injunction enjoining defendants and their agents, servants, and employees from in any manner interfering with or preventing plaintiff from laying, constructing, and maintaining pipelines upon, over, through, and across said real property. A temporary injunction as prayed for was granted.

Issue was joined upon the question of plaintiff’s ownership of the right referred to, the trial was by the court, sitting without the advisory aid of a jury, and judgment passed for plaintiff, decreeing that it (plaintiff) was the owner of said right of way or easement and that the temporary injunction be made permanent.

The appeal is by the defendants from said judgment and is supported by a record made up in conformity to section 953a of the Code of Civil Procedure.

The facts, generally stated, are: By a decree in partition entered in the superior court of Tulare County, on the seventeenth day of February, 1887, between the heirs of one Hugh Hamilton, deceased, James L. Hamilton became the owner of certain lands embraced within and constituting what is designated and known as “Hamilton Colony,” in said count)7. Said James L. Hamilton (to be hereinafter referred to as Hamilton), on the eighth day of December, *337 1910, entered into a written contract with W. W. Collins, W. D. Collins, B. H. Bendheim, and the appellant, Arthur F. Sampson, whereby he agreed to sell and the other parties agreed to buy a certain portion of the land in said colony, including said lot 13, it being provided in said contract that the purchase price ($5,644.80) should be paid, after the payment of $1,411.20 “upon the execution and delivery of the agreement,” in installments of a like sum in December of each of the years 1911, 1912, and 1913. Immediately upon the execution of said contract the purchasers jointly took possession of the lands and proceeded to plant the same to orange and other trees, and Bendheim, W. W. Collins, the defendant A. F. Sampson, and for a limited period W. D. Collins, from the time of the taking by them of the possession of the lands until a date in 1911—a period of about three years—worked or operated the same “as one body, known as the ‘C. B. S. Company,’ a fictitious name,” testified W. W. Collins. Subsequently, W. W. Collins, Bendheim, and A. F. Sampson agreed to and did purchase the equitable interest of W. D. Collins in the contract of December 8, 1910, and further agreed to the making of a new .contract in accord with the result of such purchase, but embracing, as W. W. Collins testified, “practically the same terms and conditions as were contained in the original written agreement.” Accordingly, a written contract was prepared, and, although bearing the same date as the original contract (December 8,-1910), was not executed until September 18, 1911. This contract differed from the original in these particulars only: The name of W. D. Collins was eliminated therefrom as one of the vendees, or, in other words, he was not a party thereto, and the individual interests in the lands and the precise liability, respectively, of W. W. Collins, Bendheim, and said Sampson were and are defined. After the substituted contract was executed by the various parties (now quoting from the Appellants’ Opening Brief, which contains an accurate statement of the facts of the controversy), “a deed, dated August 21, 1911, was executed by James L. Hamilton and his wife, conveying the lands covered by the contract of sale, in the proportions agreed upon in the substituted contract, to Sampson, Bendheim and W. W. Collins. This deed was executed September 18, 1911, and was delivered to the First National Bank of *338 Visalia, together with the substituted contract and certain escrow instructions which directed the delivery of the deed upon the terms of the contract being fully complied with. The escrow instructions were dated September 18, 1911, and are indorsed as received by the cashier of the bank on that date. The record does not show the exact date the final payments were made and the deed delivered, but it does show that both these steps took place and the deed was recorded on August 5, 1914.

“On September 22, 1913, Sampson, Bendheim and W. W. Collins mutually agreed that the land which they jointly held should be partitioned and divided, and pursuant to this agreement W. W. Collins and B. H. Bendheim executed and delivered to the appellant Sampson a bargain and sale deed to that part of the land known as lot 13. This deed was dated September 22, 1913, and was executed and delivered the following day. It will thus be seen that the title of the appellant Sampson was initiated on December 8, 1910, and finally culminated on August 5, 1914—he and his associates being in possession of the property during all of that time.

“The Orange Cove Water Company was organized in 1911 by the same parties, to-wit: W. W. Collins, W. D. Collins, B. H. Bendheim and the appellant Arthur F. Sampson for the purpose of supplying water to the same land which they had jointly contracted to purchase, and including Lot 13. These parties were the stockholders and W. W. Collins was President, and B. H. Bendheim was Secretary. The system of the company has been supplying water to these lands since the spring of 1911.

“On September 15 and 18, 1911, Sampson, Bendheim, W. D. Collins and W. W. Collins executed a group of deeds to the water company conveying various rights of way over the land, which rights of way are not involved in this action. These deeds were all drawn by the same attorney (E. C. Farnsworth), acknowledged, before the same notary public, and recorded on the same date by the same person (W. W. Collins). They are as follows:

“A. Deed from Bendheim, Sampson, W. W. Collins and W. D. Collins, as individuals and as co-partners doing business under the firm name of C. B. S. Citrus Company, to Orange Cove Water Company conveying right of way for *339 existing pipe line across lots 9, 12 and 13 to Southwest corner of lot 15; thence East, to boundary line between lots 13 and 14.

“B. Deed from Sampson to Orange Cove Water Company conveying rights of way for pipe line along' lines of lots 15, 7 and West half (%) of lot 4.

“C. Deed from Bendheim to.Orange Cove Water Company" conveying rights of way for existing pipe line over specifically described property.

“D. Deed from W. W. Collins to Orange Cove Water Company conveying rights of way for existing pipe line over specifically described property.

“E. Deed from W. D. Collins to Orange Cove Water Company conveying rights of way for existing pipe line over certain specifically described property.

“F. Deed from Bendheim, Sampson, W. W. Collins and W. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 P. 526, 78 Cal. App. 334, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-cove-water-co-v-sampson-calctapp-1926.