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Cook v. Rice

Supreme Court of California
Nov 19, 1891
91 Cal. 664 (Cal. 1891)

Summary

In Cook v. Rice, 91 Cal. 664, [27 P. 1081], the plaintiff asked for an injunction and for damages for certain trespasses upon certain lands.

Summary of this case from Jenner v. Samuel

Opinion

         Department Two

         Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Monterey County, and from an order denying a new trial.

         COUNSEL

          W. M. R. Parker, B. V. Sargent, Jr ., and Webb & Sherwood, for Appellant.

          S. F. Geil, and H. V. Morehouse, for Respondent.


         JUDGES: Temple, C. Vanclief, C., and Fitzgerald, C., concurred.

         OPINION

          TEMPLE, Judge

         The plaintiff, in his complaint, avers that on the second day of February, 1888, he was lawfully possessed of the east half of the northwest quarter of section 4, township 21 south, range 9 east, Mount Diablo meridian; that he had fencing on the same to the value of fifty dollars, which the defendants on said day maliciously destroyed, to his damage in the sum of fifty dollars; as a separate cause of action, that he has planted and sown on the same tract a crop of grain, in extent about eighty acres, of the value of five hundred dollars, which he had fenced and inclosed; that defendants cut down and destroyed his fence, and drove their stock in and upon his grain, to his great and irreparable damage; that they threaten to tear down any fence which he has or shall construct to protect said grain, and, if not restrained, will tear down and destroy his fences, and drive their stock upon his grain, and destroy the same, to his damage in the sum of five hundred dollars; that they are wholly insolvent. He therefore demands judgment for three hundred dollars damages, and that they be enjoined from cutting down or destroying his fences, or from wasting his premises.

         The complaint does not aver any title in the plaintiff, but possession only; and does not deny that the respondents have title to the land, or that their entry was rightful.          The answer denies the possession of plaintiff, the alleged trespass, and the damage.

         In the answer to the last cause of action, defendants admit the possession of plaintiff as to ten acres of the land, which is specifically described, and deny that they have ever in any way entered or trespassed upon the same.

         They aver as to the remainder of the land, that the defendants have been in occupation and possession thereof since May, 1886, and that a large portion thereof had been plowed and sown by them, and that plaintiff, while they were so in possession, wrongfully and unlawfully entered, with threats, force, and violence, and replowed and resowed and attempted to inclose the same, and to drive the defendants from the premises; and except as to the said ten acres, plaintiff has no possession, except the said forcible occupation.

         They also plead as an estoppel a judgment in favor of D. M. Rice, against plaintiff, wherein it was duly adjudged that plaintiff was not possessed or entitled to the possession of any part of the land except the ten acres specifically described; that plaintiff has, since the institution of said action, acquired no new or further right or title to said land; that the defendant Mrs. D. M. Rice is the wife of the said D. M. Rice, and claims no interest in the land, and her acts are those of a member of the family of the other defendant, and in privity with his title.

         The appeal is from the judgment, and an order refusing plaintiff a new trial.

         The land is public land of the United States, and both parties claim as pre-emptioners. The question is, whether there was evidence to sustain the verdict and the findings in favor of the defendants.

         On the trial, the defendant D. M. Rice testified that he moved upon the land in May, 1886, with his family, and built a good, comfortable house, barn, and chicken-house; that there was then no one living upon it, and no house or improvement except the small inclosure. There was a volunteer crop of barley on a long strip. In January, 1887, he commenced plowing, and had plowed eight or ten acres, when he was enjoined by Mr. Cook, who moved upon the land about six months after defendant. He never permitted his stock to run on the small inclosure, nor did he or his wife ever interfere with it. Mr. Cook, while defendant was enjoined from plowing, proceeded to fence and plow a large part of the land, leaving defendant's house outside of his inclosure by extending to and around it a sort of cul-de-sac .

         Defendant filed his declaratory statement as a preemptioner, May 25, 1886.

         It was shown that both plaintiff and defendant were qualified pre-emptioners; that Mrs. D. M. Rice tore down a portion of the fence, with the knowledge of her husband, and without objection made by him.

         A judgment [27 P. 1082] roll was put in evidence by defendants in the case of John Cook v. D. M. Rice, dated December 27, 1887. The complaint in that action avers possession on the part of plaintiff; that he had growing upon the land a volunteer crop of grain; that defendant unlawfully entered, and ejected plaintiff, and commenced to plow, dig up, and destroy the grain; that although plaintiff had forbid him so to do, he continued to plow, dig up, and destroy the grain, and unless enjoined, would continue so to do, to his great and irreparable damage.

         Plaintiff demands judgment for five hundred dollars damages, to be restored to the possession of the demanded premises, and for an injunction.

         The answer specifically denies the possession of plaintiff, the various alleged trespasses and damage, and avers that defendant entered upon the land when unoccupied and uninclosed, as a qualified pre-emptor under the laws of the United States, and while peacefully in possession, duly made his application to purchase the same.

         The case was tried September 28, 1887, and the court found that plaintiff was in the actual possession only of the tract specifically described in the answer in this case; that on the 23d of May, 1886, while all the land except the ten acres was unoccupied, the defendant D. M. Rice entered upon the same, and while in the peaceable possession of all except the ten-acre tract, filed in the land-office his declaratory statement.

         It was adjudged that plaintiff recover the ten-acre tract, with damages, and that the restraining order be dissolved.

         The action was to recover possession, and admitted the possession of defendant, claiming that it was wrongful because an intrusion upon the prior possession of plaintiff. It was adjudged that except as to the small inclosure, defendant's possession was rightful, and that plaintiff had not been in possession before the entry of defendant.

         It must follow, that when plaintiff entered, taking advantage of an injunction wrongfully restraining defendant from cultivating the land, he was intruding upon the possession of the defendant, and could not, by such entry, acquire a new right as against the defendant.

Plaintiff objected to the introduction of the judgment roll, and now claims that the court erred in overruling his objections,

         1. Because the judgment was not final, as the time for taking an appeal had not expired, and the cause was therefore still pending. It was not necessary that it should be final, in the sense that it was not liable to be reversed on appeal. It was enough that the judgment was in force, not suspended by an appeal or otherwise, and that while in force, it finally disposed of the controversy; and

         2. It was objected that it was not between the same parties. Substantially, it was between the same parties. Mrs. Rice made no claim to the land, and all she did was under the claim of her husband. Had she, by her acts, taken possession, the right, if any, thus acquired would have been common property, and the right to control and manage in her husband.

         The question being whether there was evidence to support the findings, it is not necessary to consider the plaintiff's evidence.

         We advise that the judgment and order be affirmed.

         The Court. -- For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.


Summaries of

Cook v. Rice

Supreme Court of California
Nov 19, 1891
91 Cal. 664 (Cal. 1891)

In Cook v. Rice, 91 Cal. 664, [27 P. 1081], the plaintiff asked for an injunction and for damages for certain trespasses upon certain lands.

Summary of this case from Jenner v. Samuel
Case details for

Cook v. Rice

Case Details

Full title:JOHN COOK, Appellant, v. D. M. RICE et al., Respondents

Court:Supreme Court of California

Date published: Nov 19, 1891

Citations

91 Cal. 664 (Cal. 1891)
27 P. 1081

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