Wright v. Roseberry

22 P. 336, 81 Cal. 87, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 988
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1889
DocketNo. 12811
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 22 P. 336 (Wright v. Roseberry) 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.

Bluebook
Wright v. Roseberry, 22 P. 336, 81 Cal. 87, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 988 (Cal. 1889).

Opinion

Hayne, C.

Ejectment. The plaintiff was nonsuited at the trial, and appeals from, the' judgment upon a bill of exceptions. The question is, whether the plaintiff’s evidence was sufficient to make a prima facie case. His evidence consisted of two certificates of purchase and certain other documentary evidence tending to show that the land was swamp-land, and certain testimony in relation to said certificates. The case has been before the supreme court of the United States, and that court held that the documents made a prima facie case for the plaintiff. (Wright v. Roseberry, 121 U. S. 517.) That decision is conclusive in favor of the plaintiff, unless there is some material circumstance which was not presented to or considered by the court. The respondents contend that it now appears that the certificates had been surrendered and canceled, and that they are therefore no longer evidence of title. The certificates were produced at the trial by the surveyor-general, who testified that they had been surrendered when the application for the patent was made, and were then in his office; that patents had been issued for a portion of the land; and that a notice of indorsement had been made upon each certificate as follows: On certificate No. 1,659 the following: “Southwest quarter of southeast quarter of section 24, patented to Tierry Wright, April 14, 1884”; and on certificate No. 1,660 the following: “Southwest half and northwest quarter of section 36, patented to Tierry Wright, April 14, 1884.” The witness testified that patents were issued for the portions designated in said indorsements, and were for part of the lands “described in the certificates.” And the descriptions in the certificates show the number of the township, range, and meridian. The receipts upon the certificates show that the principal and interest thereon had been fully paid [89]*89up. It will be observed that this evidence presents two cases, viz., one in which no patent had been issued, and the other in which a patent had been issued.

1. As to the land for which no patent has been issued, we thinlc that the certificates made a prima facie case. The indorsement does not constitute a material alteration. It does not purport to change the tenor or character of the instrument, but was a mere minute or memorandum of subsequent action. Such memorandum does not purport to be a cancellation of the certificate, and was not so, unless such a consequence results as a matter of law from the transaction appearing from the memorandum, viz., from the surrender of the certificates and the issuance of patents for a portion of the land described therein. The mere surrender of a certificate of purchase does not destroy its validity as evidence of title. The law requires that it shall be surrendered before a patent can issue. (Pol. Code, sec. 3519; Duncan v. Gardner, 46 Cal. 25.) And it cannot have been the intention that the holder should lose anything by complying with the law. The surrender is not absolute, but is for a certain purpose only; and upon such surrender (and until the patent has issued) the officer is the custodian of the document for the benefit of the person entitled. It is not impossible that the officer may be negligent, or some mistake or inadvertence may occur through which a considerable period may elapse before the patent is issued. And if, during such a period, a stranger should intrude or be in possession, the owner of the certificate has the same right to have such person ejected that he had before his evidence of title was surrendered. It affirmatively appears that the surrender here was for the purpose of obtaining a patent; and therefore the surrender did not of itself destroy the effect of the certificate as evidence of ownership. Nor do we think that, if the certificate is otherwise valid, the fact that the officer has issued a patent for a portion of the land operates to de[90]*90stroy the certificate as to the remaining portion. We have not been referred by counsel to any provision of law which would work such a result; and the record-does . not show why the patent was not issued for the whole tract. It may be that the non-action of the officer as to the omitted portion was mere inadvertence or was the result of a clerical error; or it may be that the omission was owing tp an erroneous view of the law on the part of the officer.' In such case, it might be considerable time before the error could be corrected; and we do not think that in the mean time the land is open to occupation by the public. If strangers intrude upon it, and the certificate be in fact valid, the owner should not be deprived of his recourse to the courts for redress by the error or inadvertence of the officer. If the certificate be in fact invalid for any reason, such invalidity can be shown in such suit; but if it be otherwise valid, the mere fact that patents have been issued for a portion of the land does not destroy the' effect of the certificate as evidence of ownership. • In the present instance no reason for holding the certificate .invalid (other than the foregoing) is shown. If there were any such reason, it should have been made to appear.

2. When a patent has been issued for the land called for by a certificate of purchase, the latter is superseded by the patent, and becomes functus officio. In this view, the plaintiff’s certificate was no longer evidence of ownership of the portion for which a patent had issued; but wé think that, so far as this portion was concerned, the plaintiff made aprima facie case by the above-mentioned ’proof of his patents. As above stated, the surveyor-general distinctly testified that patents had been issued,-as noted in the indorsements upon the certificates, for part of-the land “ described in the certificates”; • and taking his testimony in connection with said indorsements and certificates, the time when, the land for which, and the person-to whom- the patents were issued sufficiently ap[91]*91pear. This, indeed, was not shown.by the best evidence. But it is settled that if a party permits his adversary to prove his casé by secondary evidence, he cannot after-wards object that better evidence should have been produced. The secondary evidence is, under such circumstances, sufficient. (Goode v. Smith, 13 Cal. 84; St. John v. Kidd, 26 Cal. 270; Janson v. Brooks, 29 Cal. 223; Rewrick v. Goldstone, 48 Cal. 555; Frink v. Alsip, 49 Cal. 103.)

There is a statement towards the close of the bill of exceptions that “all of the documentary evidence was objected to by the defendants, and each of them, upon the grounds of irrelevancy, incompetency, and immateriality.” This does not show whether said objections were made at the time the evidence was offered, or towards, the close of the trial. From the place in the bill of exceptions where the objection is inserted, the latter inference might perhaps be drawn. If such' is the proper construction of the record, the objections were too late; for it is a familiar rule of practice that the party must make his objections to evidence at the time it is offered. If, therefore, the record is to be construed as showing that the objections were not made until towards the close of the trial, they were too late, and the case stands as if no objections were made.

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Bluebook (online)
22 P. 336, 81 Cal. 87, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-roseberry-cal-1889.