Preston v. Hirsch

90 P. 965, 5 Cal. App. 485, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 294
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 364.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 90 P. 965 (Preston v. Hirsch) 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
Preston v. Hirsch, 90 P. 965, 5 Cal. App. 485, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 294 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action to quiet title. Plaintiff had judgment, from which defendant appeals on bill of exceptions.

Plaintiff deraigns title from the government by patent to his immediate predecessor and a deed from the patentee to him. Appellant relies wholly upon his tax title. The levy was made for the year 1890-91. It was stipulated by counsel for plaintiff that the assessment, for which the attempted sale was made, was regular, and that all proceedings in relation to the delinquent tax list were duly and regularly done and made, and also all proceedings in regard to said levy, assessments and delinquency were regular up to the time of the issuance of the tax collector’s certificate of sale of the same. Defendant thereupon offered in evidence the following records in the order named: 1. The tax collector’s certificate of sale to the state; 2..His deed to the state; 3. The controller’s notice to the tax collector directing the sale of the property at auction; 4. Affidavit of publication of controller’s notice; 5. The deed by the tax collector to defendant. Plaintiff objected to the certificate of sale as irrelevant, incompetent and immaterial because not a certificate under the law. Particularly it was objected that no money was paid by anyone at the sale or at the date of the sale as required by section 3776 of the Political Code as it read in 1890 and 1891; also, that the certificate does not state the year of the assessment, but *487 leaves the date blank, as it reads: “Said property was assessed in the year 18—, ... to T. Barnhart,” etc., also, that the-law then in force did not provide for the payment of any money and no money was paid, and hence no valid certificate could be made because the prerequisite facts as contained in the statute were not and could not be complied with. It was agreed “between the court and counsel that the final admissibility of said certificate should be argued in briefs to be submitted in court,” and the evidence went in subject to the future ruling of the court. Defendant next offered in evidence the tax collector’s deed. Plaintiff objected to its introduction on the grounds: 1. That it had not been shown either by the deed or other evidence that the thirty days’ notice required to be given by the purchaser to the party on whose land the taxes have been assessed, as required by section 3785 of the Political Code as amended in 1891, has been given; 2. That no proof has been made that any notice of any kind has been served as required by said section 3785; 3. That the deed does not recite what the certificate of sale recites as to the time when the state would be entitled to a deed; i. e., “the date when the state would be entitled to a deed and the date of the certificate of sale are not one and the same as stated in the deed”; 4. The language of the certificate and in the deed is not the same and does not mean the same; in short, “the language of the deed is that the state would be entitled to a deed the very day the certificate is dated”; 5. “The deed does not recite the facts contained in the certificate which the Political Code, section 3786, required.” The court reserved its ruling as before. The authorization for the sale issued by the controller was admitted to have been filed January 2, 1903, and in due form. The affidavit of publication of notice of sale was objected to on the ground that it does not contain a correct estimate of the minimn-m price at which the land must .be sold, as required by section 3897 of the Political Code; that the auditor neglected to include in his estimate what are called penalties, and hence the amount at which the land was advertised to be sold was too small to comply with the provisions of said section. The ruling of the court was reserved as in the preceding offers. No point was made that the authorization of the controller, after being received, was not published. The *488 deed of the tax collector to defendant was then offered in •evidence, to which plaintiff objected on the grounds: 1. That there is no certificate of sale to support the deed to the state; that there was no notice given as required by section 3785; that the deed could not recite the facts as contained in the certificate “because no such deed or certificate was validly in existence”; 2. That the deed purported to recite that the certificate of sale stated the land to have been assessed in the year 1890, whereas the certificate does not recite that fact; 3. That the deed states the purchase price less than the amount of the delinquent taxes, costs, penalties and accrued expenses, as required by section 3897.

1. At the close of the evidence the cause was submitted, and thereafter the court, in making its decision, sustained the reserved objections without giving any reason in support of its ruling. Defendant claims that this was prejudicial error. (Citing Mayo v. Marzeaux, 38 Cal. 445, and Martin v. Lloyd, 94 Cal. 204, [29 Pac. 491].) In these cases the supreme court strongly condemns the practice of suspending the rulings upon evidence, and especially advises that where the evidence is rejected at some subsequent period in the trial it is the duty of the court to give its reasons for the ruling. (Raymond v. Glover, 122 Cal. 471, [55 Pac. 398].) A case might be presented where the postponement of the decision would deprive the losing party of the opportunity to supply the evidence through unobjectionable means, and if this should clearly appear the ruling might be prejudicial error, if an early and timely ruling had been requested and denied. In the present instance, however, the objections were specific, and defendant was fully apprised of the grounds, and presumably counsel had the opportunity to place their views touching the objection before the court. Furthermore, the evidence was matter of official' record, and could be supplied in no other way than that resorted to. Defendant could not, therefore, have been injured by the delay in ruling upon the evidence. It may be added that reserved rulings are generally reserved with the consent of both parties, which was the case here, and no court would decline to make rulings whenever it was shown to it that further delay might prejudice the rights of one or both of the parties. It i.s quite unusual for trial courts to state their reasons for rulings in admitting or *489 refusing evidence; and the instance would have to be peculiarly exceptional where, of the omission to give a reason for a ruling, prejudicial .error could be predicated.

2. Plaintiff offered in evidence a certified copy of a copy of a United States patent to George Lynch, plaintiff’s grantor. Defendant objected to its introduction upon various grounds, among them that there was no showing that the original could not be produced. It appears that a copy of the patent duly certified to be such copy by the commissioner of the general land office was recorded in the county of Mendocino on September 24, 1903. The document offered in evidence was a copy of this record duly certified by the county recorder. The copy of the patent thus recorded “shall have prima facie the same force and effect as the original, for title or for evidence, until said original letters patent be recorded.” (Civ. Code, sec. 1160.) The copy of this record certified by the recording officer is prima facie evidence. (Code Civ. Proc., sec.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 965, 5 Cal. App. 485, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 294, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/preston-v-hirsch-calctapp-1907.