Sweetland v. Hill
This text of 9 Cal. 556 (Sweetland v. Hill) 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.
Opinion
This was an action of ejectment for lands in Nevada county. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, and a new trial being refused, an appeal is taken.
Upon an examination of the record, we are unable to perceive any error affecting the right of defendants. The testimony as to the acceptance, by one of the defendants, of a deed from the [557]*557plaintiff to a different piece of land, was irrelevant, but can not have affected the verdict, which must have been the same if no such testimony had been introduced.
The point that the verdict is against the evidence, is not sup- ■ ported by the record. The evidence contained in the statement not only fully sustains the verdict, but is such as renders it morally certain that a different verdict could not be returned by an impartial and intelligent jury.
It appears plaintiff claimed the possessory right to one hundred and sixty acres of land in Nevada county, a portion of which he had actually enclosed, and occupied continuously from. 1853.
A short time before defendant’s entry, plaintiff caused the fence around the land to be removed, for the purpose of constructing a better fence of different materials. That before that time plaintiff had instituted a suit against one Froe, to recover a portion of the tract outside the enclosure; that he failed in the action, the judgment of the Court confining his possession to the actual enclosure; defendants being informed of this decision at the time plaintiff was removing the old enclosure, and before the construction of the new had been commenced, at once entered upon the land, and have continued in possession ever since.
This entry was with the full notice of plaintiff’s rights. There is, in the evidence, no pretext for the supposition that plaintiff intended to abandon his possession; on the contrary, such intention is clearly disproved.
Judgment affirmed.
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9 Cal. 556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sweetland-v-hill-cal-1858.