Scott v. Warden

296 P. 95, 111 Cal. App. 587, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1165
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 1931
DocketDocket No. 4238.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 296 P. 95 (Scott v. Warden) 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
Scott v. Warden, 296 P. 95, 111 Cal. App. 587, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1165 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

MR, JUSTICE THOMPSON (R. L.) Delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree quieting title to an unimproved lot at Hermosa Beach, valued at $600.

In February, 1922, Sarah W. Hughes and A. S. Hughes, husband and wife, owned lot 89, Walter Ransome Company’s Venable Place of Los Angeles County according to the map of that tract recorded in book 9 of maps, page 150, Los Angeles records. February 6, 1922, the plaintiff purchased that lot from these owners, on contract, for $600. The deed of conveyance was not executed. Upon refusal to convey the property pursuant to contract, a suit for specific performance was commenced by the plaintiff in November, 1923. The allegations of the complaint were controverted. The action was tried. On January 22, 1925, a decree was rendered in favor of the plaintiff directing a conveyance of the property. This decree provided that in the event the defendants failed or refuged to execute and deliver a deed of conveyance to the lot within thirty days from the date thereof, the clerk of the court “is hereby constituted a commissioner of this court to make a good and sufficient deed in compliance with this judgment and deliver the same to the plaintiff herein”. This deed was not executed or delivered. But the decree remains in full force and effect.

Based upon this decree the plaintiff instituted this suit to quiet title. The complaint contains two counts. The first is founded upon a claim of ownership based upon record title. The second alleges title by adverse possession. The defendant Carrie W. Peterson denies the allegations of the complaint and affirmatively asserts she is the owner of the lot and is entitled to the possession thereof, praying that the title be quieted in her.

At the trial the plaintiff made an ineffectual effort to prove adverse possession. The evidence as to this issue will not support the findings and judgment. The plaintiff never actually occupied the property. No improvements *590 were made. The evidence as to the payment of taxes for the statutory period is unsatisfactory and we think insufficient.

The evidence of plaintiff’s record title consists solely of the decree against the former owners, Sarah W. Hughes and A. S. Hughes, directing them to execute and deliver to the plaintiff a deed' of conveyance to the lot in question. Upon this decree the plaintiff relies.

The only evidence of title in the defendant Peterson consists of a void tax deed executed April 22, 1924, by the tax collector of the city of Hermosa Beach. This deed was executed to Julia P. Warden, who purchased the lot at a tax sale for delinquent municipal improvement assessments for electric lighting equipment authorized and installed pursuant to the provisions of the Municipal Improvement Act of June 6, 1913. (Stats. 1913, p. 421.) Warden executed a quitclaim deed to defendant Peterson November 10, 1926.

The court found that this delinquent assessment deed was void and that it conveyed no title to the appellant. The court further found that the plaintiff was the owner and entitled to the possession of the lot in question, both as the record owner of the title and also by virtue of adverse possession. A decree was accordingly entered in favor of the plaintiff quieting the title in her. From this judgment the defendant Peterson has appealed.

It must be conceded there is no substantial evidence to support the findings and judgment on the theory of adverse possession. To support a claim of title by adverse possession five elements must concur: (1) Actual, open and notorious occupancy of the land by the claimant, (2) acts and conduct on his part hostile to the real owner’s title, (3) open and notorious claim of title, (4) continuous and uninterrupted occupancy accompanied by acts and a claim of title adverse to that of the real owner for the ■ statutory period of five years, and (5) payment of all taxes levied or assessed against the land during the statutory period of five years. (1 Cal. Jur. 522, sec. 22; 1 R. C. L. 700, sec. 13.) No presumption of adverse possession prevails in the present case for the reason that the lot was unimproved. It was not protected by a substantial inclosure. It was not cultivated. These elements are necessary to create a presumption of possession. (Sec. 325, *591 Code Civ. Proc.) The mere clearing of old cans, debris and weeds from the land on one occasion will not suffice to furnish evidence of cultivation or improvements such as the statute requires. The issue as to adverse possession was therefore not sustained.

The evidence is adequate to support the findings to the effect that the appellant’s tax deed is void and that her claim of an interest in the real property by virtue thereof is without merit. This tax deed, which was admitted in evidence over the objection of the plaintiff, appears on its face to be void. It is in conflict with the statute authorizing the improvements, for which the assessment was levied, the nonpayment of which led to the sale and execution of the tax deed. December 5, 1922, the city council of Hermosa Beach adopted a resolution authorizing that city to levy assessments upon the property .included therein for the construction of electric lighting apparatus and equipment for municipal purposes pursuant to the Statutes of 1913, page 421. This statute authorizes municipalities to install and equip appliances with which to serve the inhabitants with water, electricity or gas for public utility purposes, “provided, however, that the maintenance of appliances or the furnishing of electric current, gas or other illuminating agent, shall be for a period stated in the resolution of intention, but not exceeding two years”. In violation of the foregoing limitation of authority of the city council to provide for the “furnishing of electric current . . . for a period . . . not exceeding two years”, the appellant’s deed on its face shows that “The Board of Trustees of said City of Hermosa Beach . . . did on the 5th day of December, 1922, duly pass and adopt a resolution ... to order the necessary posts, wires and appliances to be installed, and electric current to be furnished for the period of twenty years, for lighting of Lighting District No. Two in said City of Hermosa Beach. ...” This authorization is in violation of the express limitation of the statute. The terms of the deed which clearly show this -violation of the statute render it void.

All provisions relating to the sale of property for delinquent taxes or assessments are in invitum. Every essential step of the statutory proceedings leading to the execution of the tax deed must be strictly followed or the *592 instrument will be rendered void. (Numitor Gold Min. Co. v. Katzer, 83 Cal. App. 161 [256 Pac. 464] ; 24 Cal. Jur. 324, sec. 296.) In the present case no evidence was adduced as to the regularity of the proceedings required by statute leading to the sale of the property for delinquent assessments. Regardless of this omission, the deed appears upon its face to be void. The appellant is therefore left with no evidence of title whatever.

The appellant complains because the decree quieting title in the plaintiff, was not rendered subject to the repayment of the small sum of money which she claims to have paid for the tax deed which she received.

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Bluebook (online)
296 P. 95, 111 Cal. App. 587, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 1165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-warden-calctapp-1931.