Packard v. Moss

8 P. 818, 68 Cal. 123, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 762
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1885
DocketNo. 8551
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 8 P. 818 (Packard v. Moss) 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
Packard v. Moss, 8 P. 818, 68 Cal. 123, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 762 (Cal. 1885).

Opinion

Searls, C.

The judgment and order denying a new trial in this cause were affirmed upon the authority of Packard v. Johnson, No. 8850, by Department One, in an opinion filed September 11, 1884. (3 W. C. R. 763, 769.) [125]*125Upon petition of counsel for appellant, a hearing in Bank was ordered in each of the two causes. The facts being essentially the same in both cases, reference is herein made to the former opinion, which was prepared in Packard v. Johnson.

We think the conclusions reached in the former decision, with a single exception, are so manifestly proper as to call for no comment.

The exception to which we refer, and on account of which we suppose a hearing in Bank was ordered, relates to the question raised upon the plea of the statute of limitations.

It was, as we infer from the record, the dominant question upon the trial, and its proper solution is not without difficulties.

The instructions of the court to the jury are clear and explicit, and involved a correct exposition of the law touching the question of ouster and adverse possession.

In the former opinion it was said: “In the case at bar "the question of ouster and of adverse holding for five years after the ouster were questions of fact, and there was evidence at the trial in the court below to sustain the finding of the jury upon that issue.”

We understand appellant to attack this position, not upon the ground that the instructions of the court were improper as abstracts propositions of law, but upon the theory that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain the legal propositions. His contention is that the evidence fails to show an adverse possession in defendant. The facts essential to an understanding of the case may be stated in brief as follows: W. K. Melville purchased from the state of California and paid in full for 320 acres of swamp and overflowed lands, situate in San Joaquin County. The purchase was made under the act of the legislature of the state of California, providing for the sale and reclamation of the swamp and overflowed lands of the state, approved April 21, 1858. ~

[126]*126On the 13th of August, 1858, Melville received a certificate of purchase of the land in question, in the usual form, under which he was entitled to ask for and demand a patent, when thereafter the lands should be confirmed and certified to the state by the general government.

On the 26th of April, 1859, Melville assigned to Alvin G. Ward, who thereafter and on the 15th of November, 1859, assigned to plaintiff and one A. J. Sanor.

The land in question was listed and certified over to the state of California by the United States government on the thirty-first day of December, 1866, pursuant to the act of Congress of September 28, 1850.

On the twenty-fifth day of March, 1859, one William E. Cocke recovered judgment by default against Melville in the District Court of San Joaquin County, upon which execution issued and was levied upon the property in question, which was in due time sold, purchased by Cocke, and not having been redeemed, the latter received a sheriff’s deed, and on the twenty-fourth day of September, 1860, conveyed by quit claim deed to A. J. Sanor. Sanor and wife conveyed to defendant Moss, by deed dated December 5, 1864. The certificate, assignment, and several deeds mentioned were recorded in the proper county.

The judgment in Cocke v. Melville was entered by the clerk of the court, upon a default taken while a demurrer by defendant to complaint was on file and undetermined, and the judgment, execution, and sheriff’s deed were admitted in evidence, not as proving title, but as evidence that the grantor of defendant entered upon the land in question under color of title, and in aid of defendant’s plea of adverse possession and the statute of limitations.

The first question presented is, Did the sheriff’s deed to Cocke give color of title? Color of title is defined to be an apparent title, founded upon a written instrument, such as a deed, levy of execution, decree of court, or the like. (3 Wait’s Act. and Def. 17; 35 Ill. 394.)

[127]*127To give color, the conveyance must be good in form, contain a description of the property, profess to convey the title, and be duly executed. (La Frombois v. Jackson, 8 Cow. 589.)

Containing these requirements, it will give color of title, although in fact invalid and insufficient to pass the title, or actually void, or voidable. (Ewing v. Burnet, 11 Pet. 41; Murray v. Shanklin, 4 Dev. & B. 289.)

It will not do to say that a deed is, for reasons not apparent on its face, void, and therefore cannot give color of title, for color of title is not, and does not profess to he, title at all; color of title is that which is a title in appearance, but not in reality. (Wright v. Mattison, 18 How. 50.)

“ One of the very essentials of color of title is that it shall be raised by an instrument which appears to convey a title, but in reality conveys none; and it would seem almost ridiculous that it could be of any sort of importance, for the purpose of acquiring title under such a conveyance, whether the grantee acted in good faith in obtaining it or not.” (Wood on Limitations, 530, 531.)

The sheriff’s deed to Cocke purported on it face to convey the title to the latter, contained a description of the property, and was properly executed.

At least, it is not urged that the sheriff’s deed is in other than the usual form. As a foundation of title, it is worthless, by reason of the void judgment in which it had its inception. We are not, however, considering it as a medium for the conveyance of title. An adverse claimant of land is a wrong-doer, and as such is treated and known to the law, until, by the lapse of years, his acts, before tortious, are consecrated by time and dignified as lawful.

A deed which gives color of title simply measures and fixes the limit, the extent of a wrongful possession, and while it continues wrongful, may be used against the wrong-doer as evidence of the extent of his wrongful [128]*128possession; and when by five years acquiescence the wrongful acts of possession come to be recognized as lawful, the deed which before fixed the extent of the wrong stands as a landmark to bound the right acquired.

Before, it defined the limits to which an unlawful possession extended. After five years of adverse possession, the occupancy having become valid, the boundaries which before marked the wrongful possession remain as indices of the extent of the right.

Any deed, though unrecorded, purporting to convey title, no matter on what founded, is color of title. (Lea v. Polk Copper Co., 21 How. 493; Dickenson v. Breeden, 30 Ill. 279; Hanna v. Renfro, 32 Miss. 125.)

A sheriff’s deed, without proof of the judgment and execution, is sufficient to give color of title. (La Frombois v. Jackson, 8 Cow. 589.)

In Minot v. Brooks, 16 N. H. 374, it was held that an' unrecorded quitclaim deed of all a grantor’s title under a collector’s deed, though the collector’s deed conveyed no interest, is color of title.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P. 818, 68 Cal. 123, 1885 Cal. LEXIS 762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packard-v-moss-cal-1885.