Smith v. Barrick

182 P. 56, 41 Cal. App. 28, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 334
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1891.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 182 P. 56 (Smith v. Barrick) 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
Smith v. Barrick, 182 P. 56, 41 Cal. App. 28, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 334 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BUCK, P. J., pro tem.

This is an action to quiet title brought by the successor in interest of an heir against the other heirs and the administrator. Plaintiff claims to have acquired ownership by adverse possession and the suit was commenced under the provisions of section 749 of the Code of Civil Procedure. But by the dismissal of the action against all of the defendants except the original heirs and the administrator, the suit has become in fact an action to quiet title. (Faxon v. All Persons, 166 Cal. 707, 712, [L. R. A. 1916B, 1209, 137 Pac. 919].) Judgment was given in favor of plaintiff upon the ground that plaintiff and his predecessors had acquired title by adverse possession against the defendant heirs, and also against the administrator. From' this judgment all of the defendants appeal. The facts upon which the trial court based its findings and decree are substantially as follows: On September 4, 1876, the ancestor from whom all parties deraigned title, Henry Reece, died intestate in the county of Nevada, leaving as his sole heirs his widow, Amanda "Reece, and three children, the'defendants *30 herein, aged respectively twelve, six, and three years, the youngest of whom did not become of age until 189-1. With the exception of some personal property of the value of $447, the deceased left no other property except the quarter-section of land in controversy of the value, at that time, of $250. The property was the community property of himself and wife. On October 9, 1876, letters of administration were issued to his widow, Amanda Reece. But she took no, other proceedings in the estate than to publish the notice to creditors and cause an inventory and appraisement to be made of the property. She died in 1887, and in 1915 letters of administration on the estate were issued to C. W. Barrick, who is made a defendant in his capacity as such administrator. On "January 18, 1878, Amanda Reece made a deed of quitclaim to one A. S. Waldo, by which she did “remise, release, and forever quitclaim unto the party of the second part and to his heirs and assigns” the property in controversy. This deed was recorded in the records of Nevada County, July 3, 1880. Waldo was a son-in-law of Amanda 'Reece and had actual knowledge of the family interest in the land. At about the time she made the deed to Waldo, Amanda Reece and her three children moved from the land in Nevada County to Auburn, in Placer County, where they lived for a period of five years and then moved to Ukiah, in Mendocino County, a distance of about four hundred miles from Nevada County. It does not appear that any of the defendants ever returned to or visited the premises or ever received any income from the property, nor did their mother ever talk to them “about this property,” and they never heard about it until the year 1913, when they were asked to give a quitclaim deed of their interest in it. After he obtained the quitclaim deed to. the property in 1878, A.-S. Waldo “put some stock'on it and put a man there to take care of the stock. ’ ’ He did not live on the property himself. The property was under fence and was cultivated and no one ever objected to- his possession at the time. He leased the property to a third person and collected the rent for the whole of it and paid taxes on it. On April 11, 1881, Waldo, by a grant, bargain, and sale deed which was recorded on April 231, 1881, conveyed the property to John Davis, who took possession of the land, cultivated it, and pastured it, re *31 paired and built fences and built a dwelling-house thereon and occupied it until June, 1900, when by his deed, which was also duly recorded, John Davis conveyed the property to his son, Samuel Davis, who made his home on the property a part of the time and also leased it to third parties and received all the rents and profits therefrom. On July 9, 1908, Samuel Davis, by his deed of grant, bargain, and sale, which was also recorded, conveyed the property to Henry C. Worrall, who remained in possession of the property seven or eight years, and during all that time paid the taxes on the property and farmed and pastured it. Also, on July 9, 1908, Henry C. Worrall gave a mortgage of all of the property to Samuel Davis as security for the payment of the sum of one thousand two hundred dollars, and on August 9, 1912, Worrall mortgaged all of the property to- one Edith B. Poulson as security for the payment of the sum of six hundred dollars; that both of these mortgages were recorded soon after being executed. Ever since 1890 the property has been assessed in the names of the foregoing record title holders thereof and all of the taxes have been paid.

[1] From the foregoing it appears that at the time of the death of their father in 1876 the defendants herein became vested with title to the property in question as cotenants in ownership with their mother, the mother owning an undivided one-half interest therein and each of the three heirs an undivided one-sixth interest therein. As stated in the case of Phelps v. Grady, 168 Cal. 73, at page 75, [141 Pac. 927]: ‘ Title to the real estate of the deceased intestate vests immediately in his heirs, of a testate in his devisees. That title they may convey without administration, and this they may do whether they be domestic or foreign heirs or devisees —true, the title thus conveyed is not a perfect title, in that the title will always be subject to the right of possession in a local administrator for the payment of claims of legal creditors. But with this defect, the heirs who have voluntarily parted with their title are not concerned and cannot find any fault—no case cited by the appellant denies the power of the heirs or devisees so to convey their title. Indeed, such a denial would 'be in the face of our express statutory law. All that such cases as In re Pina, 112 Cal. 14, [44 Pac. 332], Turner v. McDonald, 76 Cal. 177, [9 Am. St. Rep. 189, [18 Pac. 262], Estate of Strong, 119 Cal. 633, [51 Pac. 1078], *32 Blair v. Hazzard, 158 Cal. 721, [112 Pac. 298], declare upon this matter is that the title thus conveyed is still subject to administration, and is therefore and in this sense only not perfect.” [2] Now, if an heir can convey his interest by deed, it follows that he can likewise lose it by the adverse possession of another under the statute. But the person who takes it by such adverse possession under the statute takes it subject to administration in the same manner that a grantee would. In fact, title by adverse possession at common law was based upon the fictitious assumption of a pre-existing lost grant. (Bryan v. Tormey, 3 Cal. Unrep. 85, 88, [21 Pac. 725].)

[3] Therefore, there is no rule of law which prevents a tenant in common who has acquired his title by descent from being divested of his title through adverse possession 'by his cotenant during the pendency of proceedings in administration: Our supreme court, in the case of Cooley v. Miller & Lux, 156 Cal. 510, at page 515, [105 Pac. 981, 983], declares the rule as follows: “In Bath v. Valdez, 70 Cal. 360, [11 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 56, 41 Cal. App. 28, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-barrick-calctapp-1919.