Fulton v. Hanlow
Fulton v. Hanlow
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of ejectment for the possession of certain real estate situated within the city of San Francisco. The plaintiff claims title by virtue of a conveyance from the Sheriff of the county of San Francisco, executed to Frank M. Pixley, upon a sale under a judgment and execution against the city, and of certain mesne conveyances from Pixley to himself. The judgment against the city was recovered by the San Francisco Gas Company, and was docketed on the fourteenth of May, 1856 ; the execution was
The right of the plaintiff to recover depends upon the efficacy of this sale and conveyance. Ho question is made as to the validity of the judgment of the San Francisco Gas Company, or the regularity of the proceedings of the Sheriff, or the sufficiency of the mesne conveyances to the plaintiff to pass whatever title Pixley acquired. The question then is: Did the city of San Francisco possess, at the time that judgment was docketed or the execution was levied, any title or interest in the premises in controversy, which was the subject of levy and sale under execution ? If she possessed no such title or interest, of course nothing passed by the sale and conveyance of the Sheriff. And that she possessed no such title or interest follows from the admission made by the parties on the trial of the present action, and the decision of this Court in the case of Hart v. Burnett. (15 Cal. 530.) The admission made was, that the premises described in the complaint constitute a portion of the pueblo lands of San Francisco, formerly known as the Yerba Buena, confirmed to the city by the decree of the United States Land Commission. Those lands, and the tenure by which they are held by the city of San Francisco as successor of the old Pueblo of Yerba Buena, were the subjects of extended considerar tion by this Court in Hart v. Burnett. That case, like the present, was an action of ejectment, in which the plaintiff relied for recovery upon a sale and conveyance by the Sheriff under an execution issued upon a judgment against the city. The premises claimed in that case also constituted a portion of the pueblo lands of San Francisco, and the plaintiff contended that the city had succeeded to the rights of the pueblo with reference to them, and that her title was absolute; and, consequently, the subject of levy and sale under execution. But the Court, after elaborate examination, though agreeing with the plaintiff that the city had succeeded to the rights of the pueblo in the lands, was of opinion, and .so adjudged, that the lands were held in trust for the public use of the city, and were not, either under the old Government or the new, the subject of seizure
Upon this decree the plaintiff relies to take the present case out of the operation of the decision in Hart v. Burnett. He asserts, with reference to it, two propositions: first, that the decree is an adjudication that the lands sold were not held by the city under any trusts, as determined in Hart v. Burnett, but that the title of the city to those lands was subject to levy and sale under execution, and that by the sale and conveyance in question, the title passed to Pixley and became vested absolutely in him; and second, that the decree is admissible in connection with the conveyance as a muniment of title constituting a link in the deraignment to the plaintiff.
The construction which we give to the decree will render it unnecessary to consider the second proposition. As we read the decree, it is not an adjudication upon the character of the title of the city which the purchaser acquired from the sale and conveyance of the Sheriff. There was, in fact, nothing before the Court from which it could pass upon the character of the title. The Sheriff had advertised and sold whatever right, title and interest the city possessed in the premises which was the subject of levy and sale. He could sell no other title or greater interest. The City and County filed á complaint to restrain the execution of a conveyance to the purchaser; and the Court adjudged that the sale was effectual to pass the title—that is, such title as the Sheriff had sold, whatever it might be. It is that title, and no other, to which the decree refers. If there were any doubt as to this construction, it is removed by that part of the decree which adjudged that there was no equity in the complaint. In thus adjudging, the Court determined that the matters set forth as grounds for restraining the execution of the conveyance were insufficient to justify any interference with the action of
As already stated, it does not matter whether the conclusion which the Court reached as to the want of equity in the complaint was correct or otherwise. The conclusion stood as the determinar tion of the Court upon the effect, as entitling the complainant to the injunction, of the matters he alleged, assuming them to be true. But there is no doubt, in our judgment, of the correctness of the conclusion in this particular. The equity asserted, and upon which alone the suit proceeded, was that the premises were not the subject of levy and sale on execution, and that the deed of the Sheriff
If this test be applied to the Sheriff’s deed to Pixley, it will be seen at once that no cloud could possibly be cast by it upon the title of the City and County of San Francisco. The judgment of the Gas Company, and the execution issued thereon, constituted the authority to the Sheriff to sell whatever interest in the premises the judgment debtor possessed at the time the judgment was docketed, or
The judgment of the Court below must be reversed, and that Court directed to enter judgment for the defendant upon the facts found by the referee.
Ordered accordingly.
ÍTobtost, J. delivered the following concurring opinion :
The plaintiff, although showing no title other than one derived through a sale under a judgment and execution against the city of San Francisco, and admitting that the demanded premises were a portion of the pueblo lands of Yerba Buena, does not question the authority or effect of the decision in the case of Hart v. Burnett, (15 Cal. 530) but claims that his title derived in this way has become a good and valid title by virtue of a judgment pronounced in a case between the City and County of San Francisco, plaintiffs, and the San Francisco Gas Company, Frank M. Pixley and Charles Doane, Sheriff, defendants. By this judgment it is claimed that
In order that a judgment should be a defense in another action on the ground of res judicata, the same point must have been directly in issue and determined by the judgment. There is frequently much difficulty in deciding what is to be considered the point which was directly in issue, and which is to be treated as having been so settled by the judgment, as to be held forever res judicata; and from the number of decisions to which this difficulty has given rise, cases may be cited favoring the most extreme views in either direction: on the one hand, holding that any matter that was litigated in the case, or even that might have been litigated, is to be deemed to have been directly in issue; and on the other hand, holding that only the ultimate matter, as to which the judgment gives or denies relief, is to he deemed to have been the point directly in issue. An instance of the latter class is to be found in the case of King v. Chase (15 N. H. 9). In that case the question was as to the title to a quantity of oats. One party claimed title by virtue of a certain mortgage; the other party claimed that the mortgage was a forgery, and insisted that the question was res judicata, because in a former action between the same parties in regard to another quantity of oats held by virtue of the same mortgage, the question of the genuineness of the mortgage was litigated between the parties, and it was decided that the mortgage was a forgery. The claim of res judicata was not allowed, because the question of the validity of the mortgage was not the direct point in issue in the former trial, that point being the title to the oats. The following cases are to the same effect: Noel v. Willis, (1 Lev. 235); Hotchkiss v. Nichols, (3 Day, 138); Colt v. Tracy, (8 Conn. 268); Aslin v. Parker, (2 Burrows, 666); Gilbert v. Thompson, (9 Cush. 348). In the case of Bennett v. Holmes, (1 Dev. & Battles, 486) Judge Gaston gives the rule in these words: “ A judgment, therefore, in any action is conclusive only as to what it directly decides. As the judgment is the fruit of the action, it must follow the nature of the right claimed and the injury complained of, and can conclude nothing beyond them.”
So obvious does it appear to me that a simple judgment denying the relief asked and dismissing the bill could not be considered as
My views upon this point make it unnecessary to consider the other points raised in the case, and I concur with the Chief Justice that the judgment should be reversed, and the Court below (Erected to render a judgment for the defendant.
Reference
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- The decision in Hart v. Burnett (15 Cal. 530) cited and followed upon the following points: That the city of San Francisco succeeded to the rights of the pueblo of Yerba Buena in the lands of the pueblo; that these lands were held in trust for the public use of the city; that they were not, either under the old Government or the new, the subject of seizure and sale under execution; that the title of the city was unaffected by sales of the Sheriff under executions against her; and that a defendant in ejectment, relying solely upon his possession, may set up the invalidity of such sales, or of the title derived therefrom, in defense to the action. A declaration in a decree upon the character of the title of one of the parties, when the consideration of !he character of such title is foreign to the case and unnecessary for its disposition, is without any binding force as an adjudication either upon parties, privies, or any one else. In order that a judgment may be a defense in another action on the ground of res judicata, the same point must have been directly in issue and determined by the judgment. It is the point as to which relief is sought and upon which the judgment rests, and not any incidental or secondary matter that may have been controverted by the parties, that becomes res judicata. The city and county of San Francisco filed a complaint for the purpose of obtaining an injunction against the execution of a deed by the Sheriff to a purchaser under an execution sale of property held by the city, making the purchaser, the judgment creditor, and the Sheriff, parties defendant. The complaint set up the nature of the city’s title to the property, and facts going to show that it was not the subject of levy and sale under execution, and averred that a deed to the purchaser would be a cloud upon the title. The defendants answered, the judgment debtor and Sheriff disclaiming all interest in the controversy, and the purchaser denying in substance the several grounds of equitable interposition. The case was submitted on the pleadings alone, and the decision was to the effect that the sale under the judgment and execution was valid and effectual to pass the title of the premises to the purchaser, and that there was no equity in the complaint, and adjudging that the complaint be dismissed as to the judgment creditor and the Sheriff, and that the purchaser was entitled to a conveyance from the Sheriff: Held, that the purchaser’s title was not so adjudicated in this action, or established by the decree, as to become res judicata, but was still open to be controverted in a subsequent action of ejectment between the parties or their privies. Such a decree, by adjudging that there was no equity in the complaint, established the fact that the matters alleged were not sufficient for the exercise of the jurisdiction of a Court of Equity, and after this conclusion was reached, nothing was left for the Court but to deny the injunction and dismiss the suit; any determination as to the truth or falsity of the matters alleged was unnecessary and foreign to the case, and could not affect the rights of the parties in this respect when subsequently presented in a Court of law. The judgment of a Court of Equity is equally effectual as res judicata as that of a Court of law, but the nature of their different jurisdictions must be considered in order to determine what was the exact matter decided, and upon what points the judgment operates as a final adjudication. The only judgment that could be given in the equitable suit was merely one granting or denying an injunction, and the only direct point upon which that judgment could be based was that the deed would or would not be a cloud upon the plaintiff’s title.