Hicks v. Whiteside
Before: Crocker
Synopsis
A declaration of location, under the Possessory Act of this State, described the tract of land as being in Township 21; and also gave the names of the land-claims adjoining it on its different sides. The tract was in Township 22: held, that this mistake did not vitiate the declaration, and that it was admissible in evidence.
A., a witness for plaintiff, when cross-examined, was asked questions by defendant, which, on plaintiff’s objection, were erroneously ruled out by the Court. Defendant afterwards called the same witness, and asked the same questions, which were answered without objection: held, that the judgment would not be reversed by reason of the error committed by the Court, as defendant had suffered no injury thereby.
In an action to recover possesion of a tract of land, claimed by plaintiff under the Possessory Act of this State, evidence tending to show, that at the time plaintiff filed his declaration, he knew that the land in controversy or any portion of it was claimed by defendant, is relevant.
The two hundred dollars of improvements, pertaining to the realty, required by the fourth section of the Possessory Act, must be made on the land claimed, before an action can be commenced to recover possession of the same.
Crocker, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Horton, J. concurring.
This is an action to recover the possession of a tract of land in Butte County. _ The tract really in controversy is the north half of the south-east quarter of Section 8, in Township 22 north, of Range 1 east. The plaintiff claimed under the Possessory Act of this State. He offered in evidence his declaration of location, filed in the Recorder’s office; -and the defendant objected to its introduction on the ground that it described the tract as being in “ Township 21,” instead of Township 22, and contends that the Court erred in overruling the objection. The premises are particularly described by the surrounding claims, which clearly show that the tract lay in Township 22, and that the figures 21 were inserted by mistake, instead of 22. The Court therefore properly overruled the objection.
It seems that Herring, the County-Surveyor, testified as a witness for the plaintiff, that he made the survey of the tract of land described [407]in the plaintiff’s declaration; that he wrote the declaration; and that the tract embraced one hundred and sixty acres. On cross-examination, the defendant asked him when this survey was made, and whether he made the survey prior to or at the time he wrote the certificate; to which the plaintiff objected, that the questions were not proper on cross-examination. The Court sustained the objection; and this is also assigned for error. The questions were clearly proper ones on cross-examination; but it is evident that the defendant was not injured by this ruling of the Court. The objection only went to the putting of the questions at that particular time; and did not preclude him from putting the same questions, upon making him a witness for himself, had he so desired. If, when the defendant recalled the witness as his own, the Court had then overruled the questions, he might perhaps have claimed that he had been injured thereby; but it seems that he then asked the' question without objection. The questions do not seem to have been of so important or material a character as to justify us in reversing the judgment because they were excluded at that particular stage of the trial.
It appears that the defendant had been in the possession, prior to the filing of the possessory claim by the plaintiff, of an old field, a part of which, including about fifteen acres, lay upon the north side of the eighty-acre tract in controversy. It seems that the remainder of the eighty acres was inclosed by a fence in the spring of 1860, built by the defendant and other parties. One of these persons, Gamer, was called as a witness, and the defendant asked k him what he knew or .understood about the fences thus built including any part of the Whitesides tract, and whether it included any portion of the tract upon which Whitesides resided. The possessory claim filed by the plaintiff, bounded the tract on the north by the “ Whitesides claim,” as well as described it as the south-east quarter of Sec. 8. The Court, on the ground of irrelevancy, excluded these questions, and also a question put to another witness respecting the knowledge of the plaintiff, that the defendant claimed the tract in controversy at the time of a certain conversation between the parties respecting the building of fences. We think all of these questions were relevant to the matters in controversy between
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