Sevier v. Locher

222 Cal. App. 3d 1082, 272 Cal. Rptr. 287, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 866
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 13, 1990
DocketA047029
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 222 Cal. App. 3d 1082 (Sevier v. Locher) 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
Sevier v. Locher, 222 Cal. App. 3d 1082, 272 Cal. Rptr. 287, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 866 (Cal. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

Opinion

KING, J.

In this case we hold that a transfer of title to real property after

the prescriptive period for adverse possession of the property has begun does not interrupt or terminate the running of the prescription period. Adverse possession refers to occupation or use of land adverse to legal title, not to a particular holder of legal title.

On June 21, 1988, Ronald and Nancy Sevier filed a complaint to quiet title in which they alleged that on November 4, 1986, they acquired by grant deed a parcel of real property and an easement over a strip of land running along the edge of that property to the street. The land belonged to Lawrence and Constance Locher who used it as a driveway to their property directly behind the Seviers’. The Lochers cross-complained to quiet title and extinguish the easement by adverse possession.

The trial court found the Seviers’ roadway right-of-way was extinguished by adverse possession but their utility easement over the property survived.

I

An easement obtained by grant may be extinguished by adverse possession by the owner of the servient tenement. (Masin v. La Marche *1085 (1982) 136 Cal.App.3d 687, 693 [186 Cal.Rptr. 619].) “The elements necessary to establish title by adverse possession are tax payment and open and notorious use or possession that is continuous and uninterrupted, hostile to the true owner and under a claim of title,” for five years. (Gilardi v. Hallam (1981) 30 Cal.3d 317, 321 [178 Cal.Rptr. 624, 636 P.2d 588], citations omitted.) The five-year prescriptive period begins to run when a cause of action accrues, that is, when the owner is deprived of possession. (Sorensen v. Costa (1948) 32 Cal.2d 453, 460 [196 P.2d 900].)

The Seviers’ primary contention is that the Lochers did not occupy the easement adversely to them for the required period since they had not owned the property for five years. The trial court found “the five year prescriptive period does not commence again upon the sale to plaintiff of the subject property,” citing Le Roy v. Rogers (1866) 30 Cal. 229 and Masin v. La Marche, supra, 136 Cal.App.3d 687.

In Le Roy, the prescriptive period had already run before a mortgage was executed and foreclosed, and the premises sold by the sheriff, conveyed to the assignee of the mortagee and thence to the plaintiff. (Le Roy v. Rogers, supra, 30 Cal. at p. 232.) Affirming the trial court’s finding of adverse possession against the plaintiff, the court explained, “It will not be contended that a right of action accrues successively to each of the several purchasers of the same parcel of land, in the sense in which that term is used in statutes of limitation, as against the person in adverse possession, at the time of the first purchase. Were it so, it would be in the power of any one to avoid the statute by simply conveying the land during the running or after the expiration of the five years.” (Id. at p. 235.)

The Seviers maintain that Le Roy is inapplicable to them because they acquired an “independent title” rather than stepping into the shoes of one whose title was already subject to a claim of adverse possession. On the contrary, like the plaintiff in Le Roy who took the mortgagor’s estate as if it had been directly conveyed (30 Cal. at p. 236), the Seviers acquired their grantors’ title against which the prescriptive period was already running. That title did not, in the words of the Le Roy court, “then first spr[i]ng into being,” nor was it “derived from a title then existing, but that did not confer the right of entry.” (Id. at p. 235.) 1

The issue in Masin was whether adverse possession was continuous from 1972 or began in 1975. The court quoted from Zimmer v. Dykstra (1974) 39 *1086 Cal.App.3d 422, 432 [114 Cal.Rptr. 380]: “ ‘ “An interruption of an adverse use results only from an act of one against whom the use is adverse. The act may consist in either, (1) bringing and pursuing to judgment legal proceedings in which the use is determined to be without legal justification, or (2) producing a cessation of the use without the aid of legal proceedings.” [Citation.]’ ” (Masin v. La Marche, supra, 136 Cal.App.3d at p. 694, italics added.) The court affirmed the trial court’s finding that plaintiffs’ access easement had been extinguished by adverse possession, where neither plaintiffs “nor their predecessors in interest” acted to stop defendants’ adverse use. (Id. at pp. 694-695.) Since plaintiffs did not acquire the property until 1978, it was evidently assumed the change in ownership did not interrupt or wipe out the prescriptive period.

The cases the Seviers cite are all based on inapplicable rules of law. The first was enunciated in Jefferson v. Wendt (1877) 51 Cal. 573, and relied upon in Leonard v. Flynn (1891) 89 Cal. 535, 542 [26 P. 1097], Comstock v. Finn (1936) 13 Cal.App.2d 151, 157 [56 P.2d 957], and Laubisch v. Roberdo (1954) 43 Cal.2d 702, 706-707 [277 P.2d 9]: “ ‘[T]he statute of limitations does not commence running against a purchaser of land at a sheriff’s sale until the sheriff’s deed has been delivered’ ” to the purchaser. Neither the Seviers nor their predecessors in interest acquired such an “independent title” (see fn. 1, ante).

A second rule was summarized in Laubisch v. Roberdo, supra, 43 Cal.2d at page 706, citing Comstock v. Finn, supra, 13 Cal.App.2d at page 157: “A mortgagor or his grantee in possession of mortgaged property may not set up the statute of limitations against the mortgagee; the possession of the mortgagor is presumed to be amicable and in subordination to the mortgage.” There is nothing analogous to the mortgagor-mortgagee relationship in this case. Nor are the facts at all similar to those in Missionary Society v. Bank of America (1936) 15 Cal.App.2d 682, 684 [59 P.2d 1060], which held that “a life tenant, as such, cannot through his possession establish an adverse title as against a remainderman, for the reason that the latter may not assert a right of possession or attack the other’s possession until after the termination of the life estate.” (See fn. 1, ante.)

It is noteworthy that in Leonard v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Romanowicz v. Starr CA1/5
California Court of Appeal, 2024
Mimbres Hot Springs Ranch, Inc. v. Vargas
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2023
Mimbres Hot Springs Ranch v. Vargas
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2023
Bailey v. Citibank, N.A.
California Court of Appeal, 2021
Valles v. Kim CA2/3
California Court of Appeal, 2020
McLear-Gary v. Scott
California Court of Appeal, 2018
McLear-Gary v. Scott
235 Cal. Rptr. 3d 443 (California Court of Appeals, 5th District, 2018)
Vieira Enterprises, Inc. v. McCoy
8 Cal. App. 5th 1057 (California Court of Appeal, 2017)
Desmet v. Martindale CA2/3
California Court of Appeal, 2014
Kaut v. Kelsey CA1/4
California Court of Appeal, 2014
Soroush-Azar v. Palmer CA4/1
California Court of Appeal, 2013
Visco v. Wallace CA2/5
California Court of Appeal, 2013
Sabino Town & Country Estates Ass'n v. Carr
920 P.2d 26 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1996)
In Re Marriage of Dick
15 Cal. App. 4th 144 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
222 Cal. App. 3d 1082, 272 Cal. Rptr. 287, 1990 Cal. App. LEXIS 866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sevier-v-locher-calctapp-1990.