Orena v. Newlove

94 P. 628, 153 Cal. 136, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 428
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1908
DocketL.A. No. 1926.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 P. 628 (Orena v. Newlove) 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
Orena v. Newlove, 94 P. 628, 153 Cal. 136, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 428 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an action to quiet title, the complaint. containing the usual allegations of ownership by plaintiffs and of assertion by defendants of an invalid adverse claim of an estate and interest in the demanded premises. The land in dispute is a portion of the Los Alamos Rancho in Santa Barbara County, which was patented by the United States in September, 1872 to Jose Antonio de la Guerra —the Mexican grantee—in conformity to the plat and field-notes of a survey made by a United States surveyor in 1860. The plaintiffs deraign title by devise and mesne conveyances from the devisee of De la Guerra. The defendants, at the commencement of the action, were in possession of the land, claiming under mesne conveyances from Jose Antonio Feliz, to whom De la Guerra made a conveyance by bargain and sale deed in August, 1867, of a portion of the grant as surveyed in 1860, and afterwards patented. If this deed described the disputed tract, it belongs to the defendants. The superior court found in favor of the defendants upon this point, and also sustained their pleas of laches, and title by prescription. From the judgment entered upon these findings, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial, the plaintiffs have appealed.

*140 In view of our conclusion that the trial judge correctly construed the deed from De la Guerra to Feliz, as including in its description the tract in dispute, we shall not have occasion here to consider the elaborate argument of counsel upon the question of laches and limitations.

Los Alamos was a grant of eleven leagues, containing, according to the field-notes and plat of the patent survey, 48,803 acres. It was laid off in the general form of a pentagon with a southern side, bounded by a line approximately east and west, and with the apex of the opposite salient angle pointing to the north. Three of its five sides (the south, the west, and the northwest), were defined by straight lines, the other two by broken lines. The initial point of the survey was at the southeast corner, and the first course was north 2y2 degrees east, 231.38 chains. The station at the end of each course was marked by a post, and the posts were lettered and numbered consecutively A. 1, A. 2, A. 3, and so on to the point of beginning. The post at the northern apex was marked A. 15 (Alamos 15) and the straight line connecting that station with post A. 16 at the northern end of the west side of the grant constituted, and has always constituted, the northwestern boundary of the rancho. But there was a mistake in the field-notes and plat of the survey as returned and approved in 1860 as to the length and true course of this northwestern boundary, and to that mistake all the uncertainty in the deed from De la Guerra to Feliz is due. The course given in the field-notes and marked on the plat of the patent survey is south 50% degrees west, whereas it is in fact south 55 degrees 51 minutes west, and the real distance is 387 chains instead of 380.15 chains, as stated in the field-notes. The field-notes nevertheless do correctly place the posts, A. 15 and A. 16, as they were set and as they have since remained, so that there has never been any real uncertainty as to the true location of the northwestern boundary of the rancho.

The land in controversy is an elongated triangle containing four hundred and forty-six acres, having its apex at post. A. 15 and lying between the true northwestern boundary of the rancho and the mistaken course (south 50% degrees west) given in the field-notes of the line from post A. 15 to post A. 16. The grounds of the controversy arise out of *141 the terms employed in the deed from De la Guerra to Feliz to describe the tract conveyed, which, while they call for the western (meaning the northwestern) boundary of the rancho as the northwestern boundary of said tract, give a course to that boimdary, and a length to the southern boundary which leave out the tract in controversy, and include the exact number of acres (two thousand nine hundred and forty-five) mentioned in the deed, which is less by four hundred and forty-six acres than the quantity included if we disregard the calls for courses, distances, and quantity, in favor of the call for the western boundary of the rancho. This was done by the superior court in construing the deed, and this is the error alleged by the plaintiffs in support of their appeal.

We do not think that the superior court erred in its construction of the deed. We are convinced to begin with, aside from any considerations based upon technical rules of construction, that the real intention of both grantor and grantee was that the northwestern boundary of the rancho should be the northwestern boundary of the tract conveyed ; or, in other words, that the grantor had no intention of reserving to himself a narrow strip of worthless land in the shape of the outline of a church spire between the land conveyed to Feliz on one side, and government land on the other. The circumstances of the transaction and the situation of the parties afford a perfect explanation of the employment in the deed of terms of description, which, if literally followed, would defeat their real intention. The description contained in the deed was based upon a so-called survey of the tract to be conveyed made by the county surveyor of Santa Barbara for the grantee, Feliz, which was one of a series of similar surveys made and recorded in the surveyor’s office by which the northern and eastern portion of the Los Alamos Rancho was subdivided for the same purpose, it may be presumed, as that disclosed in the present instance—for the purpose, that is to say, of furnishing a convenient description of the tracts to be conveyed. They were, in fact, not surveys at all, but mere subdivisions marked by lines drawn to scale on a plat of the rancho made in conformity to the field-notes of the patent survey, including the erroneous calls for course and distance of the north *142 western boundary—the line from A. 15 to A. 16. They were numbered on the plat from east to west as survey No. 357-358-359 and 360, the last being the Feliz survey. To make this so-called survey, No. 360, nothing was done except by applying a scale to the plat of the rancho, to mark a point on the western boundary of survey No. 359, 135 chains south of post A. 13 of the patent survey, and to draw a line due west from this point to the straight line connecting the posts A. 15 and A. 16. The area included within these lines and the lines connecting A. 13 and A. 14, A. 14 and A. 15, and the line marking the western boundary of county survey 359 became county survey 360. The length and direction of all these lines except those extending from the initial point to the intersection of the northwestern boundary and from' that point to post A. 15 were correctly given, but these two being computed upon the false datum of the course of the line A. 15-A. 16 were too short to include the land in controversy. To be specific, the length of the south line as marked on the plat was 273.72 chains to the intersection of the platted boundary; whereas the actual distance on that line to the true boundary is 321.14 chains. The length of the line from said intersection to post A. 15 is given as 301.31 chains, while from the intersection of the south line and the true boundary the distance is 330.08 chains.

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Bluebook (online)
94 P. 628, 153 Cal. 136, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orena-v-newlove-cal-1908.