Villa v. Pico

California Supreme Court
Villa v. Pico, 41 Cal. 469 (Cal. 1871)
Rhodes

Villa v. Pico

Opinion of the Court

By the Court, Rhodes, C. J.:

A short time previous to the Sheriff’s sale of the premises in controversy, under the execution issued upon the judgment in favor of Villa, and against Pico, a notice was served on the Sheriff by Pico, stating that he claimed the premises as his homestead. The Court below regarded that notice as having the effect to render the sale void. The notice alone *472could not have the effect which was attributed to it. Unless the premises were in fact his homestead, the notice or claim that .they constituted his homestead was utterly nugatory. There is no evidence in this case, showing that the premises were his homestead, at the time of the Sheriff’s sale.

For the guidance of the parties on the new trial, it is proper to say that the plaintiff failed to show title to the premises in controversy, derived from Candelaria Cañizares, because he did not show that the grant made in 1849, or the deed of the Mayor and Common Council, executed in 1858, included the premises in controversy.

Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.

Mr. Justice Crockett did not express an opinion.

Reference

Full Case Name
FRANCISCO VILLA v. FRANCISCO PICO and FRANCISCA PICO
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published
Syllabus
Notice to Shbriee as to Sale oe Homestead.—A notice to a Sheriff, before he makes a sale, that the premises he is about to sell, are the homestead of the party giving such notice, does not render the sale void. Such notice does not create a homestead, nor is it evidence of the existence of a homestead.