Schenk v. Evoy

24 Cal. 104
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 24 Cal. 104 (Schenk v. Evoy) 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
Schenk v. Evoy, 24 Cal. 104 (Cal. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court, Shafter, J.

[109]*109Appeal from judgment in ejectment, and from order overruling motion for new trial.

Among other questions presented by the record, we are required to determine the legal effect of a deed executed by Frisbie and De Zaldo to Adolphus Germon, March 13th, 1856. Through sundry mesne conveyances, all the rights of Germon acquired by this deed passed to and became vested in Augustus Schenk, one of the appellants, on the 11th day of November, 1857. The following description of the premises conveyed is found in all of the deeds referred to :

“ Have granted, bargained, and sold, aliened, remised, released, conveyed, and confirmed, and by these presents do bargain, sell, alien, remise, release, convey, and confirm, unto the said party of the second part, and to his heirs and assigns forever, all that piece or parcel of land described as follows: Situate upon the western side of San Pablo Creek, in a valley known as the 1 Crazito Valley,’ which is a part of the tract of land known as the Sobrante claim, and situated in Contra Costa County, and State of California, bounded and described as follows: Having for the eastern boundary thereof a line following the course of San Pablo Creek, as it now runs, through the centre thereof from the northern to the southern extremity of said valley, and extending back westward from said line so as to include one thousand (1000) acres of land, and no more, on the western side of said valley; said land to be laid out, as near as possible, in a square form; all the lines) except the first mentioned line, to be straight, conforming with the cardinal points by true meridian.”

The appellants contend:

1. That the deed from Frisbie and De Zaldo to Germon, of March 13th, 1856, conveyed to the grantee one thousand acres of land, together with the absolute right of locating the same at any place in the Cruzito Valley, on the western side of San Pablo Creek.
2. That the calls of the deed referred to identified the land with sufficient certainty to enable a surveyor to survey it [110]*110correctly; and it is claimed as a fact that the land was so surveyed by the procurement of Schenk, in 1859 or 1860.
3. That the deed, being for a valuable and sufficient consideration, raises the presumption that the grantors were in possession, and that they, at the date of their execution of said deed, gave possession of the particular one thousand acres in controversy to the grantee Germon.

Where a deed is of a given quantity of land, parcel of a larger tract, and the deed fails to locate the quantity so conveyed by a sufficient description, the grantee, on delivering of the deed, becomes interested in all the lands embraced within the larger area, as tenant in common with his grantor; and as such tenant, the grantee can claim a partition under proceedings instituted for that purpose, or, alternatively, a partition may be made by amicable agreement between the parties. The grantee has no right to locate the quantity called for by his deed on any portion of the larger area, as against the will of his grantor, unless such right is conferred upon him by some stipulation to that effect in the deed.

These principles are fully recognized in Jackson ex. dem. Gamsey v. Livingston, 7 Wendell, 136. The plaintiff claimed to recover a certain lot known as No. 6, part of a tract of fifteen thousand three hundred and sixty acres of land granted to Malaehi Treat and William W. Norris by letters patent. The plaintiff claimed under the jiatentees by a deed calling for six hundred acres, to be surveyed or taken off the aforesaid tract by the grantee at his election; the grantee elected to take the lands in controversy. It was held by the Court, that by the deed the grantee became tenant in common with the owners of the fifteen thousand three hundred and sixty acres, and that an election on his part to take Lot No. 6, followed up by possession, operated as a parol partition.

The judgment for the plaintiff was affirmed in the Court of Errors. Chancellor Kent, who delivered the opinion, in discussing the question, remarked as follows: “ The title to the undivided six hundred acres j>assed immediately to the grantees under the deed, with the right to elect in which part [111]*111of the tract it should be located as soon as the patent was allotted. The testimony shows that the grantee exercised the right of election, and took possession of the six hundred acre lot as early as 1793. This location, in conformity with the provisions of the deed itself, rendered that certain and definite which was before uncertain, and gave a good legal title to the lot.” (14 Wendell, 619.)

The doctrine of the foregoing cases was recognized in Sick v. O'Donnel, 3 Cal. 63.

But it is claimed for the appellants that inasmuch as the deed shows a money consideration of three thousand dollars paid, it is to be presumed that Frisbie and De Zaldo put Germon in possession of the one thousand acres sued for at the time when the deed was delivered, March 13th, 1856. The counsel for appellants has presented no authorities in support of this position, nor has he adduced any principle on the ground of which its correctness can be vindicated. There is obviously no necessary nor is there any natural or customary connection between the payment found and the segregation in dispute. The two facts may have transpired at the same point of time—March 13th, 1856—but the mere payment of the purchase money at that date has no appreciable tendency to prove that they did.

The appellants further insist that the calls of the deed in question identify the land with sufficient certainty to enable a surveyor to survey it correctly. In other words, it is claimed that the deed- is a deed by metes and bounds, and took effect as such from the moment of delivery.

In aid of this conclusion, reference is made to extraneous facts presented in the record.

Cruzito Valley is seven or eight miles long, and runs, in its general course, north and south. The one thousand acres called for by the déed lies in the valley, and on the west side of San Pablo Creek; and by the deed, they are to be laid out “ as nearly as possible in a square form,” the eastern side of the square resting upon the creek, “as it runs through the [112]*112centre of the valleythe other sides of the square “to be straight, conforming with the cardinal points by true meridian.”

We shall here assume the facts which the testimony of the surveyor, Whitaker, tended to prove. He surveyed the one thousand acres, claimed in the complaint, in 1859 or 1860, and his survey was according to the calls mentioned in the deed; but the land, according to his testimony on cross-examination, “ could, perhaps, as well have been located to answer the calls of the deed at any other place on the west side of San Pablo Creek, within a distance of six or eight miles from one end of the valley to the other, as at the place where it was located.”

If the stream was perfectly straight, then five perfect squares of a thousand acres each might have been erected on the western side of the creek on the 13th of March, 1856, each square having the stream for its eastern boundary.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Cal. 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schenk-v-evoy-cal-1864.