White v. McManus

230 P. 472, 69 Cal. App. 50, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 29, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4291.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 230 P. 472 (White v. McManus) 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
White v. McManus, 230 P. 472, 69 Cal. App. 50, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 156 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

This is an action to quiet title in which there was a cross-complaint. It is stated in one of the briefs, however, that the pleading mentioned was interposed merely for the purpose of bringing in a new party, and, indeed, that alone could have been its purpose, for a cross-complaint is not ordinarily necessary in an action to quiet title, every defendant relying upon his own title being under his answer an actor whose endeavor is to establish his title (Wilson v. Madison, 55 Cal. 5; Bulwer Con. Min. Co. v. Standard Con. Min. Co., 83 Cal. 589 [23 Pac. 1102]; Booth v. Stow, 38 Cal. App. 191 [175 Pac. 705]), and the word ordinarily is used by us advisedly, for special circumstances may appear in such an action which will make a cross-pleading necessary (Winter v. McMillan, 87 Cal. 256 [22 Am. St. Rep. 243, 25 Pac. 407]; Islais Water Co. v. Allen, 132 Cal. 432 [64 Pac. 713]), but no such circumstances occur in the present instance. We do not regard these remarks as .having any real effect upon the controversy before us, but they are interposed for the purpose of dismissing from consideration various fugitive statements in the briefs, and of clearly narrowing the points involved to the compass they properly occupy, whether, in truth, the cross-complaint be regarded or whether it be not regarded as an actual factor *52 in the case. On the trial of the action judgment went for plaintiff, quieting her title in severalty to the property in controversy. Defendant Pearl M. McManus alone appeals.

The property involved in the action consists of lots 1 and 4 in a certain block in Palm Springs, according to the map of that town recorded in 1887. These lots, along with other property, were formerly owned by four men, Campbell, Adams, Miller, and McCallum, all of whom, apparently, had departed this life long before the commencement of the present action. The affairs of these men have never been settled, for the reason, it is said in one of the briefs, that the only papers relating to their business were destroyed in the San Francisco fire of 1906. At any rate, and whatever the cause for the circumstance, their respective interests in the lots in question, at the time those interests subsisted, were not ascertained at the trial. On May 18, 1914, respondent took from a successor of Campbell a grant deed to the two lots, which purported to convey the entire title to them. This deed was placed of record on June 6th of the same year. On May 21, 1914, three days after the grant deed to respondent, appellant took from a successor of McCallum a quitclaim deed to both lots. This latter instrument was recorded on July 24th of that year. Thus rested the record showing as to the title of respondent and appellant in 1914, and thus it has rested ever since, but for the decree in the present action. At the trial it was stipulated that on June 1, 1888, the title to the lots was vested in Campbell, Adams, Miller, and McCallum, “but that their respective interests thereto are not disclosed and cannot be determined by the official records on file” in the county recorder’s office, and that on December 15, 1921, the interest held by Campbell on June 1, 1888, was “vested of record” in respondent, and the interest held by McCallum on that date was “vested of record” in appellant. The only significance attending the use of the date December 15, 1921, in the stipulation appears to lie in the fact that the paper was dated and the trial of the cause was commenced on that day. The complaint was filed on March 24, 1921.

For reasons which will appear in the sequel it becomes necessary to determine whether under the respective deeds to them respondent and appellant were tenants in *53 common in the property, and,' as respondent was a successor to Campbell and appellant a successor to McCallum, the status of the two parties litigant under the deeds depends upon the status of Campbell and McCallum. Therefore, were these latter two, or, rather, were they, together with Adams and Miller, tenants in ■ common 1 We thus restate the question for the reason that we have referred only to Campbell and McCallum as being mentioned in the stipulation, while the truth is that both Adams and Miller were by that paper put in the same category with the other two, the rights of some of the parties to the action who are not parties to this appeal having descended from Adams and Miller. Respondent argues, on this head, only the question of which we have made a somewhat summary disposition, that is, she says that she and appellant were not tenants in common of record, although she admits that the four predecessors in interest of all the parties were so related in the title to the property. This ground appears to us to be untenable. It is manifest to us, as we have already observed, that if the four predecessors were tenants in common, so also were respondent and appellant—the record successors to two of them.

The admission of respondent that the four men were owners in common is contained in this statement: “From the stipulation on file in the case at bar, it might be said that on June 1st, 1888, according to the records, Campbell, Adams, Miller, and McCallum were tenants in common of a large amount of land in the Palm Springs Section.” We understand the ten last words of this passage as not insinuating that the men were not owners in common of lots 1 and 4, for no property except those lots was mentioned in the stipulation, nor contemplated by its terms. We are not content to leave the question whether the four men were cotenants to rest upon the admission of respondent, as the point is one of at least some difficulty, and something should be said upon it. The stipulation entered into at the trial was to the effect that the title to the lots was vested in the four, but that their respective interests therein could not be determined from the records. This language would appear to mean that the right of each of the men in the property was of equal solemnity, but that they may have had title *54 respectively either to undivided one-fourth interests or to undivided interests figured in some proportion, as, for instance, that one may have had title to an undivided one-half and each of the others to an undivided one-sixth. This view seems to be demanded by the fact that the word “interest” is used in connection with the terms “title,” and “vested.” In other words, we take the stipulation to mean that each of the four men had an interest in a title ■which was vested in all of them together. Not only does this conclusion appear to be required upon principle and from the language employed in the stipulation, but it is supported by the provisions of section 686 of the Civil Code, which brings us even nearer to our goal and which reads, in part: “Every interest created in favor of several persons in their own right is an interest in common, unless acquired by them in partnership, for partnership purposes, or unless declared in its creation to be a joint interest, ... or unless acquired as community property.” While this section was apparently enacted as a guide to the construction of instruments creating

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 P. 472, 69 Cal. App. 50, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-mcmanus-calctapp-1924.