Rodriguez v. La Cueva Ranch Co.

134 P. 228, 17 N.M. 246
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 14, 1912
DocketNo. 1438
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 134 P. 228 (Rodriguez v. La Cueva Ranch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriguez v. La Cueva Ranch Co., 134 P. 228, 17 N.M. 246 (N.M. 1912).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

PARKER,, J.

This is an action to quiet title to a tract of land in the Mora Grant. This was a Mexican Grant to Carmen Arce and seventy-five others, and was confirmed by act of Congress on June 21st, 1860, and was patented by the United States on August 15th, 1876. In 1877 a suit for partition of the grant was instituted by Stephen B. Elkins et al. against the said Carmen Arce et al., in which suit, having acquired the interests of certain of the original grantees of said grant, as well as certain allotments of strips of land held in severalty therein, appellant intervened, and on Majr 26th, 1894, secured a decree partitioning to it in severalty, a large tract of land, which includes the tract in dispute. Appellees answered the complaint in the present case, and alleged that in 1884 their ancestors, grantors and predecessors in interest were the owners in fee simple of the land in dispute, and were in the adverse possession of the same, and have been such since about the year 186&; that appellant in 1884 commenced two suits against them, one suit to restrain threatened trespass, and one action for damages for past alleged trespass' upon said land; that shortly after the commencement of said actions, an agreement and contract was entered into between the parties to the same, fixing the boundaries between the contending parties, and for the dismissal of the said actions;-that appellant thereupon built a fence upon the agreed line, and there maintained the same until 1904, when it attempted to enclose the lands in dispute; that neither appellees nor their predecessors in interest were ever made parties to the partition suit, and, at the time of the institution of the same, and of the decree of partition to appellant, appellees and their predecessors in interest were in adverse possession of the land in dispute, claiming title in fee simple. and so continued up to the bringing of the present action, except as such possession was interfered with by appellant. A demurrer to the answer was interposed, and Overruled, and thereupon appellant replied to the answer denying the possession of the predecessors in interest of appellees prior to 1884; admitting the filing of the two actions •against appellees for trespass; denying the execution of the contract of 1884 fixing the boundary; admitting the ■erection of the fence, on the line claimed to be the agreed line by appellees, and its maintenance until 1904; denying the ownership by appellees of the disputed land; •denying that appellees had not been served with process in the partition proceeding; alleging the contract fixing ‘boundaries, if it was made, was. made without authority ■of appellant; and alleging that if executed, the contract was intended as a temporary adjustment of the line only until the title could be established in the partition pro-needing.

It was stipulated that appellees were not made parties to the partition proceeding by name or otherwise, unless by the designation of “unknown claimants,” and that they were not served with process unless affected by the published notice.

The court found that appellees or their predecessors in interest had been in the actual possession of portions ■of the strips claimed by them ever since 1860, and in 1884 were in possession of the same when the contract fixing the boundary was entered into. It further found that appellant constructed its fence upon the agreed line, and maintained the same until 1904, when it built the new fence enclosing the land in dispute. It also found that at the time of the bringing of the partition proceeding, appellees and their predecessors in interest were in the open and notorious possession of certain portions of the lands therein involved.

1 Appellant relies for its recovery upon the decree in the partition proceeding and urges that this decree vested in it a new, different, and outstanding title, originating from a different source from that which it had prior to the' decree, and that therefore the contract fixing the boundaries was not available against such title. This contention is palpably unsound.

A decree of partition does not create or manufacture a title, nor divest the title of one not actually or constructively a party to the suit. It operates by way of estoppel and prevents any of the parties from relitigating any of the issues presented for decision. Thus in McBrown v. Dalton, 70 Cal. 89, 94, it is said:

“But the judgment conferred no new. or additional title upon the parties; it ascertained, awarded and alloted to each his interest. Thereby the common possession which each had in the ranch before the rendition of the judgment, became several and distinct; the unity of possession was severed and each became entitled by the judgment to'the exclusive possession of that part of the ranch which was alloted to him.”

In Traver v. Baker, 15 Fed. 186, it is said:

“This partition was not an exchange of distinct parcels of land owned in entirety by either party, but a separation of undivided interests in a tract theretofore owned by the parties in common. The portions or parcels then ascertained and set apart in severalty to the children-of Nancy, were, in contemplation of law, the very three-fifths which, they had from the United States under the donation act after the death of their mother, and in like contemplation the remaining two-fifths were the very portions of the premises which the heirs of Lonsdale inherited from him, subject, however, to the legal effect’ of the acts done and suffered by him concerning the same. Neither was the character or origin of the estate or title of the parties changed or affected by this decree and partition.”

In Wade v. Deray, 50 Cal. 86, it is said:

“It is well settled that a decree or judgment in partition has no other effect than to sever the unity of possession, and does not vest in either of the co-tenants any new or additional title. After the partition each had precisely the same title which he had before; but that which before was a joint ‘possession was converted into a several one.’ ”

In the latter case two of the tenants in common' conveyed by deed to a third person all their right, title and interest in and to a particular portion of the general tract. Subsequently all of the tenants in common agreed to an amicable partition of the general tract amongst themselves, and upon the particular parcel to be set apart to each of them, and for the purpose of carrying the partition into effect, they all conveyed to a third person who was to reconvey in. severalty the particular parcel agreed to be set apart to him, which was done. Thereupon the two tenants in common who had conveyed to the third person brought suit in ejectment against their grantee, claiming, as is claimed by appellant in this case, that the-title which they received through the medium of the partition was a new and outstanding title, and that therefore it could be maintained against their former grantee The court said:

“In my opinion Estefana has acquired no new interest or title through the deed from Wright which she can assert against her grantee, Deray.” It would seem that this case is directly in point, and answers every argument advanced by appellant in support of the proposition now under discussion. See also, Utterback et al. v. Terhune, 75 Ind. 363; Haddon v. Hemingway, 39 Mich. 615; McBain v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 P. 228, 17 N.M. 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-v-la-cueva-ranch-co-nm-1912.