Yuba Investment Co. v. Yuba Consolidated Gold Fields

248 P. 672, 199 Cal. 203, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 258
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 6, 1926
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3500.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 248 P. 672 (Yuba Investment Co. v. Yuba Consolidated Gold Fields) 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
Yuba Investment Co. v. Yuba Consolidated Gold Fields, 248 P. 672, 199 Cal. 203, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 258 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an action to quiet title. Both the plaintiff and the defendant deraign title through a common source. Judgment in favor of plaintiff at a former trial was reversed (Yuba Inv. Co. v. Yuba Consol. G. Fields, 184 Cal. 469 [194 Pac. 19]). Upon a retrial judgment was again rendered in favor of the plaintiff 'from which the defendant appeals, presenting the record in a bill of exceptions.

By Act of Congress of March 1, 1893, the California Debris Commission was created. The purpose of its creation among other things was to make examinations and surveys along the tributaries of the Sacramento River in order that the storage of mining and other debris might be provided for. During the year 1900 the commission desired to acquire certain lands in Yuba County owned by James O’Brien and others for a settling basin to clear the waters *205 of the Yuba River of detritus caused by hydraulic mine dredging and to prevent the detritus from finally reaching the Sacramento River and obstructing its navigable channel. To that end O’Brien, under date of December 6, 1901, executed a deed of conveyance to the United States of America of certain lands in Townships 15 and 16 north, Range 5 east, M. D. B. & M. The deed described the lands in three parts. The lands first described are called the South Settling Basin and include the lands in controversy located in sections 4, 5 and 8 in Township 15 and are 1,000 acres and more in area. The lands secondly described comprise some 800 acres lying between the official banks of the Yuba River and are called the North Settling Basin. The lands thirdly described comprise and are called “Dredging Ground” or the “442 acre tract.” For a more extended outline of the terms of said deed reference is made to the opinion of this court on the former appeal. The lands in controversy were acquired by the federal government for the purpose of establishing a settling basin, but as time went on the plans of the federal authorities were changed and the said lands were not used for that purpose. For the reason ','that said lands were no longer needed by the federal government for the purpose intended or for any purpose they were offered for sale and were described in a deed dated October 30, 1911, purporting to convey the same from the United States to the defendant Yuba Consolidated Gold Fields, a corporation.

J A deed dated April 10, 1912, described and purported to convey the said lands from James O’Brien to the plaintiff (Yuba Investment Company, a corporation. On April 12, 1912, this action was commenced. The litigation involves mainly the construction of the deed from O’Brien to the United States dated December 6, 1901. As the pleadings were framed and the proof offered on the first trial the plaintiff proceeded on the theory that it was the owner of said lands in fee simple under the deed of grant from O’Brien dated April 10, 1912; that the deed of December 6, 1901, from O’Brien to the United States conveyed to the latter an easement only; that as the purpose for which the easement was created had not been accomplished, and as the plan of establishing a settling basin on said lands had been abandoned, the easement no longer existed. In order to *206 prove its case on that theory the plaintiff produced evidence of circumstances surrounding and transactions leading up to the execution of said deed as tending to show that it was the intention of the parties that the fee was not to be conveyed but an easement only created. This proof was necessarily offered and received on the supposition that the deed was ambiguous or uncertain in its terms and required judicial construction and the aid of extrinsic evidence to ascertain the intention of the parties. The theory advanced on behalf of the defendant was that the title to the land in fee simple was transferred by O’Brien to the United States; that the original deed was plain and certain and that parol evidence was inadmissible for the purpose of limiting or qualifying the estate thereby created and that as the grantee of the United States the defendant was possessed of the title in fee. At the former trial the defendant objected to the introduction of evidence of circumstances surrounding and negotiations leading up to the execution of the original deed. The court overruled the objection and in the light of the evidence thus admitted the court rendered its judgment to the effect that the plaintiff was the owner in fee simple of the lands in question; that the deed of December 6, 1901, intended to and did confer upon the United States and that the United States intended to an did acquire only the right to an easement to use and the privilege of using said real property for the purpose of constructing thereon and using the same as a settling basin, and that the defendant had no right, title or interest in said real estate except the right to deposit thereon detritus resulting from dredging operations on the 442-acre tract as provided for in said deed.

On the former appeal this court decided, in accordance with the defendant’s contention, that the deed from O’Brien to the United States conveyed the fee and that parol evidence was inadmissible to explain its terms or aid in its interpretation for the reason that its provisions were clear, plain and unambiguous. It was also decided on conflicting claims of the parties that the reservations in that deed of the precious metals in the lands therein described necessarily included the incidental right on the part of the plaintiff to extract such precious metals and to such possession of the premises as was necessary to the full enjoyment of that right so long as its exercise did not interfere with the plans and *207 purposes of the United States. It was also decided that although under the deed the defendant had the right to deposit on the lands of the plaintiff the detritus resulting from dredging operations on the 442-acre tract, the said right of deposit was limited to the reasonable necessities of the defendant in connection with its dredging operations on that tract. It was also decided that the defendant’s claim for compensation for the rents and profits of the lands in question as alleged in its cross-complaint was without merit for the reason that it had not been shown that the United States or its grantee, the defendant herein, had ever demanded possession as a prerequisite to its right to compensation.

In preparation for the second trial the plaintiff amended its complaint to conform to the determinations of this court on the former appeal. The defendant amended its answer and filed an amended and supplemental cross-complaint in which it again set forth its claim for rents and profits from the twelfth day of April, 1912, and alleged that any demand on its part for the possession of the premises or for the rents and profits thereof would have been refused by the plaintiff and would have been useless.

iOn the second trial the court adhered closely to what it deemed to be the law of the case as established on the former appeal. It ruled that by reason thereof the only issue for determination on the retrial was whether the servitude existing in favor of the defendant to deposit detritus from its dredge mining operations on the 442-acre tract should still be imposed upon the lands in controversy, in view of the holding of this court that the defendant was limited in the imposition of said servitude to its reasonable requirements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
248 P. 672, 199 Cal. 203, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuba-investment-co-v-yuba-consolidated-gold-fields-cal-1926.