Weller v. Brown

143 P. 251, 25 Cal. App. 216, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 152
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 28, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1244.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 143 P. 251 (Weller v. Brown) 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
Weller v. Brown, 143 P. 251, 25 Cal. App. 216, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 152 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

On June 15, 1906, respondent, Louisa M. Brown, (wife of her codefendant), being the owner of a tract of land in Port Bragg, Mendocino County, conveyed to appellant by a grant deed a strip sixty feet wide extending across the entire width of her tract and leaving her with a parcel adjoining it on each side, all three parcels fronting on *217 Main Street. The deed was in the usual form purporting to convey the absolute title, except that it contained the following clause: “It is hereby mutually agreed between the parties of the first part and the party of the second part that the above described land is to be used as a public street and not as a lot for building purposes."

An action was brought by plaintiff to quiet his title to this strip and a judgment was rendered in his favor in the superior court of said Mendocino County, but this was reversed by the supreme court and the cause remanded for a new trial. (Weller v. Brown, 160 Cal. 515, [117 Pac. 517].) Before the action was tried again plaintiff amended his complaint, alleging that by reason of a mistake as to the legal effect of the language of said deed it did not correctly express the intention of the parties to the contract, in that it was no part of the agreement that the respondents should have any interest in the land conveyed by them.

By stipulation, the original answer of the respondents was considered as their answer to the amended complaint and it was further agreed that any additional allegations in the amended complaint should be deemed denied.

Afterwards the court found: “III. That the said plaintiff agreed to pay to the said defendants and the said defendants agreed to accept the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars in gold coin of the United States for said lot, and plaintiff agreed not to use said lot for building purposes, but that he would buy it and pay for it and hold it until the city needed it for a street, and when said city repaid Mm the consideration he was to pay defendants for the land, he would convey it to said city for a public street and that no other or further agreement was made between plaintiff and the defendants herein in relation to said land.

“IV. . . . That plaintiff did not then or there or at any other time or place claim to be acting for, by or on behalf of the public, nor did he take said deed from the defendant Louisa M. Brown for the land in controversy with the understanding or agreement, whether duly or regularly made or otherwise, that the said land in controversy should be or become a public street or highway for public use or travel unless and until the city repaid plaintiff the consideration he paid defendants therefor, or that the same should be or become an easement appurtenant to the remaining lands so owned by *218 said defendant Louisa M. Brown, whether for the purpose of ingress or egress thereto or therefrom, unless the facts found in paragraph III hereof taken in connection with the situation of the land in controversy as herein found reserved to defendant Louisa M. Brown such rights as a matter of law; that the right to travel or use said land in controversy is not necessary but is convenient for the use or occupation by said defendant Louisa M. Brown of the lands she owns that adjoin the land in controversy.

“V. That at the time of the execution of said deed and thence up to the 7th day of August, 1911, the plaintiff supposed and believed that the said deed expressed the true agreement of the parties thereto, as set out in paragraph III of these findings, but that on said last mentioned day the supreme court of the state of California decided that the language of said deed, as a matter of law, reserved to the said defendants all of the rights in the lot thereby conveyed which they would have were it a public street; that it was never agreed between the parties to said deed that the defendants or either of them should reserve all or any of the rights in said lot which they would have were it a public street, and that the reservation of such rights was inserted in said deed by mistake as to the true legal meaning of the clause thereof in this paragraph above quoted, and that therefore the said deed did not and does not express the true agreement of the parties thereto; unless the facts found in paragraph III hereof taken in connection with the situation of the land in controversy as herein found reserved to defendant Louisa M. Brown such rights as a matter of law.

“VI. That the failure of said deed to express the true agreement of the parties arose from a mistake as to the legal effect of the language contained in said deed and quoted in paragraph V of these findings; that plaintiff at the time of accepting said deed and at all times up to August 7, 1911, supposed that he knew and understood the legal effect of the language used in said deed and that such legal effect was to express the true agreement of the parties as set forth in paragraph III of these findings; that the defendants did not make the same mistake as to the legal effect of said deed as did said plaintiff, but that they and each of them knew of plaintiff's said misapprehension of the law as to such legal effect at the time of executing said deed, but that said defendants did not *219 nor did either of them at that time or at any other time, rectify plaintiff’s said misapprehension of the law.

“VII. That plaintiff was at the time of the commencement of this action, ever since has been and now is the owner, seized in fee, in the possession and entitled to the possession, of all of the lot of land described in paragraph III of these findings, subject to the right of the defendant Louisa M. Brown by virtue of the said deed; that the public at large has no right to travel over or to use the said land in controversy or any part thereof as or for a public street or highway.”

As conclusions of law the court found: “That plaintiff is entitled to a decree of this court reforming the said deed so as to express the true intention of the parties thereto by striking therefrom the words ‘is to be used as a public street and not as a lot for building purposes,’ and by inserting in lieu thereof the words ‘is not to be used as a lot for building purposes, but is to be held by the party of the second part until the city of Fort Bragg needs it for a street, and when said city repays said party of the second part the sum of four hundred and fifty dollars, said party of the second part will and shall convey the land hereby conveyed to said city for a public street,’ and that said reformation should take effect as of the date of said deed.

“That the defendant Louisa M. Brown is entitled to judgment that she is the owner of an easement for a right of way over the land described in paragraph III of these findings with the right to ingress and egress thereon, being the same rights that she would have in said land in controversy if the same were a public street, and that said easement is appurtenant to the remaining lands of the said defendant.

‘ ‘ That the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment declaring that he is the owner and seized in fee, in the possession and entitled to the possession, of all the land in paragraph III of the findings of fact described, subject to the said right and easement of the said defendant Louisa M. Brown therein, as hereinabove set forth. ’ ’

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

Related

National Computer Rental, Ltd. v. Bergen Brunswig Corp.
59 Cal. App. 3d 58 (California Court of Appeal, 1976)
Whiting v. Squeglia
232 P. 986 (California Court of Appeal, 1924)
J. I. Case Threshing MacHine Co. v. Copren Bros.
187 P. 772 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Muzio v. Erickson
182 P. 974 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 P. 251, 25 Cal. App. 216, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weller-v-brown-calctapp-1914.