Ward v. Parkford
Before: Sturtevant
STURTEVANT, J.
The plaintiff commenced an action to quiet title against a large number of defendants. One of the defendants, E. A. Parksford, appeared and answered. In his answer he denied the material allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint and set forth a special defense in which he pleaded certain facts which he claimed would constitute an equitable estoppel that would preclude the plaintiff from any recovery. Still later the defendant Parkford filed a cross-complaint. The plaintiff answered the cross-complaint and a trial was had in the trial court on all of the issues so made by the pleadings. The court made findings on the material allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint and the answer thereto and it made findings on some of the issues presented by the other affirmative allegations made in the above-mentioned pleadings of the defendant Parkford. A judgment was entered in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff and from that judgment the plaintiff has appealed.
In his brief the appellant contends (1) that John S. Baker, his assignor, acquired title to the property in dispute by adverse possession acquired under a written instrument consisting of a certificate of sale made by the tax collector of the irrigation district in which the land in dispute was located; (2) that there was no evidence to support the finding that a trust relation existed between the plaintiff and the defendant so that the plaintiff could acquire no title to said property adverse to that of the defendant; and (3) that the tax deed produced by the defendant was void and conveyed no title; and in this behalf he specifies six different infirmities in said deed. When the respondent’s brief came in it contained a reply to the first and second point and made no reply to the third point for the reason that the appellant must recover, if at all, by reason of the strength of his own title and not by reason of a weakness in the title of his adversary. In replying to the first point made by the appellant the respondent is at some pains to show (1) that the appel
[320]
lant’s assignor never had the property inclosed by a fence for the period o‘f five consecutive years; and (2) that the appellant’s assignor never, for five consecutive years, plowed and pastured, or plowed or pastured the land in dispute. In his reply brief the appellant states that he does not contend that he or his assignor had the land inclosed with a fence in such a manner as to give the appellant’s assignor or the appellant title to the land. However, the appellant strenuously contends that the witness Baker testified to a set of facts showing that he held the adverse possession by plowing or pasturing the land. In this connection he cites particularly that portion of the transcript which reads as follows: “Q. And when would you say you first plowed lot 83 after you got your deed from Koontz ? A. I know I plowed it in ’94. Q. In 1894. And what with reference to each year thereafter and up to what time? A. Sometimes there was quite a voluntary crop and I pastured it and next year I would plow it again. Q. And that continued for how long? A. For ten or twelve years. Q. That is for ten or twelve years after 1894 you continued to either pasture the land or plow it? A. Yes, sir. . . . Q. And during all that time you claimed it as your property? A. Certainly.” The passages cited by the appellant are the strongest and clearest passages supporting or tending to support his claim that we can find in the transcript. However, the few lines quoted are excerpts culled from an examination that covered approximately 125 pages of the transcript. To nearly every other question propounded to him the witness gave an evasive answer. As quoted, he claimed to have obtained his deed from the tax collector in 1893, and that commencing with 1894, for ten or twelve years he continued to either pasture the land or plow it. That would lay the foundation for the action as being from 1894 to 1904 or 1906. In reply to a direct question on the subject he testified that he plowed the land twice. He plowed it in the spring and later he plowed it in the fall of the same year. In answer to another direct question he stated that he plowed the land years before the boom in 1886. Asked if he 'plowed it about 1884 and 1885, he testified that it was probably 1885, he couldn’t tell—he was tangled up a little about it. At no place in the testimony except as quoted above did the witness designate any cer
More from California Court of Appeal
- People v. Hill (1998)
- In Re Autumn H. (1994)
- Nwosu v. Uba (2004)
- In Re Casey D. (1999)
- Santisas v. Goodin (1998)
- Cahill v. San Diego Gas & Electric Co. (2011)
- People v. Rivera (2015)
- People v. Barnett (1998)
- People v. Serrano (2012)
- Benach v. County of Los Angeles (2007)