Saner v. Knight

260 P. 942, 86 Cal. App. 347, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 173
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 25, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3305.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 P. 942 (Saner v. Knight) 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
Saner v. Knight, 260 P. 942, 86 Cal. App. 347, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 173 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BURROUGHS, J., pro tem.

This action was brought under the provisions of section 749 of the Code of Civil Procedure to determine all adverse claims to the land described iff the complaint. The action was originally entitled “Irene Saner, Plaintiff, vs. N. A. Knight, and All Persons Unknown, etc., Defendants.” There was no appearance by any person claiming to be a defendant and on September 8, 1924, upon the evidence presented by the plaintiff, the court entered its judgment in favor of the plaintiff as to all of *349 the said land. On May 18, 1925, after appropriate proceedings for that purpose, Noah C. Crewdson appeared in the action and filed an answer denying plaintiff’s ownership to the easterly fifty feet of lot 12 of block 1 of Thomas’ New Addition to the town of Woodbridge, said parcel of land being a portion of the land described in plaintiff’s complaint. He also filed a cross-complaint alleging ownership by prescription of said easterly half of lot 12 and asking that his title thereto be quieted as against the said plaintiff. The issue thus raised was tried by the court and findings and judgment entered in favor of the said defendant and cross-complainant. This is an appeal by the plaintiff from said judgment and from the order denying her motion for a new trial.

The court made the following finding of fact: “That said defendant and cross-complainant, Noah C. Crewdson, has, by himself and his predecessors in interest, been in the actual, exclusive and adverse possession of the real property described in his cross-complaint herein, continuously for twenty years prior to the filing of the plaintiff’s complaint herein, to and including the present time, claiming to own the same in fee against the whole world.”

It is appellant’s contention that the foregoing finding is not warranted by the “law or the evidence.” However, an examination of the record discloses the fact that this finding is not only warranted, but the little evidence there is to the contrary is so palpably weak that it can hardly be said to raise a conflict.

The facts are that lots 8, 10, and 12 of block 1 of Thomas’ New Addition to the town of Woodbridge are located in the northeasterly corner of said block 1, said block lying adjacent to Indiana Street on the north and Orange Street on the east. It is not disputed that lot 8 of said block is owned by the defendant and cross-complainant Crewdson. It has a frontage on Orange Street.

Lot 10 is owned by the plaintiff and lies to the west of and adjoining lot 8. Lot 12 is an irregular shaped tract of land lying to the north of, and is directly in front of and adjoining, both lots 8 and 10. Lot 12 extends to Indiana Street on the north and Orange Street on the east. The westerly half of said lot 12 has been for many years past, and now is, used in connection with lot 10 owned by *350 the plaintiff,—in fact, plaintiff’s house is partly on the westerly half of lot 12 and partly on lot 10, and it is not disputed that this portion of lot 12 belongs to the plaintiff. The easterly fifty feet of said lot 12 has been, and now is, used in connection with lot 8. The house of the cross-complainant is situated partly on lot 8 and partly on the easterly fifty feet of lot 12.

It was stipulated by both parties that said lot 12 had not been assessed nor any taxes levied thereon for more than twenty years prior to the filing of the complaint in this action.

The testimony shows that at least as early as 1905 there was a line fence between lots 8 and 10 and that it extended across lot 12 to Indiana Street, and thence along Indiana Street in an easterly direction to Orange Street and southerly along the latter street to an old bam on the back of lot 8. It is true that at times this fence was broken down in places and was not kept in very good repair, but nevertheless it existed and was sufficient at all times to show that lot 8 and the easterly fifty feet of' lot 12 were in one inclosure.

The evidence also discloses that the easterly fifty feet of said lot 12 has been used continuously since 1904 in connection with and as a part of lot 8; that the children of the people who occupied the house on lot 8 used it for a playground and that a Chinaman who occupied the house for about three years used the lot as a place for drying almonds, and that after the cross-complainant had purchased the property early in the year 1921, he employed a man named Davis, whose wife was then the owner of lot 10, to plow and level the easterly fifty feet of lot 12. Said cross-complainant also renewed the fence between lots 8 and 10 and dividing lot 12, and around the exterior boundary of lot 8 and the easterly fifty feet of lot 12, and planted fruit trees on all of said land. This was all done with the knowledge of the owner and the occupants of lot 10 and without any objection o.n their part. When Mrs. Davis, the owner of lot 10, conveyed it to plaintiff, who is her daughter, lot 12 was not described in the deed and according to the testimony of the plaintiff the latter did not know of the existence of lot 12, she believing that lot 10 extended to Indiana Street. When cross-complainant Crewdson bought the *351 property described in his cross-complaint from Mrs. Kyber, his predecessor in interest, Mr®. Kyber told him lot 8 extended to Indiana Street.

As against this testimony there are some contradictions as to the fence having been in existence at the times testified to by the cross-complainant and his witnesses. There is also some testimony that occasionally Davis, the father of the plaintiff, who for a short time was engaged in street sprinkling, parked his sprinkling wagon on the east half of lot 12; that at times he staked his milk cows thereon, and occasionally cut some grass there. Davis also testified that he plowed and leveled the easterly portion of lot 12, but the evidence is satisfying that this was done under the employment of the cross-complainant, who paid him for the work.

The plaintiff was asked on cross-examination when she discovered that there was such a piece of land as lot 12 in block 1. She replied that it was three years previous when she wanted to sell it, discovering it then from the abstract of title, and thereafter commenced this action to quiet her title thereto. After obtaining the original judgment in this action plaintiff, on November 9, 1924, wrote a letter to the cross-complainant demanding that he remove his fences from lot 12 and stating to him “you are no longer in possession of it.” This was the first intimation she ever gave the cross-complainant that she claimed any title to the land in dispute, and it was a clear recognition of the cross-complainant’s possession.

The evidence is overwhelming that the plaintiff’s claim to this land was an afterthought based upon her discovery that there was such a piece of land as lot 12, and her claim to that portion of the Crewdson land as lies within the latter’s inclosure is without merit.

It is further contended on behalf of appellant that the judgment is erroneous because in extending to cross-complainant Crewdson the benefit of adverse title the court was compelled" to tack successive adverse possessions and that no priority of title was shown to exist between said cross-complainant and the former adverse occupants.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 942, 86 Cal. App. 347, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saner-v-knight-calctapp-1927.