Holloway v. Galliac
Holloway v. Galliac
Opinion of the Court
In Peralta v. Ginochio, ante, p. 459, we considered the effect of the circumstance that a tenant was in the possession at the time, and prior to the execution of a lease, which was subsequently relied on, as estopping the lessee from denying the title of the lessor. We there held: “The landlord, by production of the lease, makes a prima facie case, and the burden of proof is cast on the tenant; and unléss he overcomes it by showing paramount title in him self, or those under whom he claims, the landlord must prevail.” It remained for the defendant in this case, therefore, to connect himself with a superior title.
On the trial below it appeared, from an entry in the book of Alcalde records of the Pueblo de San José, that a grant was made by the chief magistrate of the pueblo to one Charles White, on the sixth day of December, a.d. 1846.. The grant was of a lot “twenty-five yards in front by fifty in depth, and is bounded south-east by Chaipa Garcia’s house and lot.”
On the twentieth of February, 1849, the then 'Alcalde made an entry in the same 'book, and immediately below the foregoing minute of a grant, in these words: “The above is located fronting twenty-five varas on Market Place, and forty varas fronting on San Carlos street.”
The defendant having failed to connect himself with a title paramount, the plaintiff should have recovered judgment, by reason- of his position as landlord.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded for a new trial. Remittitur forthwith.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ADAM HOLLOWAY v. EMILE GALLIAC and JESUS DABILLO
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Ejectment against Tenant.—In ejectment by the landlord against a tenant who was in possession when he gave the lease, the landlord makes out a primes facie ease; by the production of his lease, and the burden is cast on the tenant, if he depends on the ground of paramount title in himself or another, of proving such title, .and if he fails to do so, the landlord must prevail. When Lease Estops Tenant.—A tenant is estopped by a lease which he takes when in possession, unless he proves paramount title in himself or another, under whom he claims. Description in a Grant by an Alcalde.—A grant by an Alcalde, of a lot in a pueblo, “twenty-five yards in front by fifty in depth, and hounded southeast by Chaipa Garcia’s house and lot, ’ ’ was valid, and conveyed ownership to a definite tract of land, if Chaipa Garcia occupied a lot in the pueblo, and a lot twenty-five by forty yards could be located immediately to the north-west of hers Idem.—An entry subsequently made by the Alcalde, in his book of records, immediately below the grant, in these words, ■ ‘ the above is located fronting twenty-five varas on Market Place, and forty varas fronting on San Carlos street, does not affect the grant, and may he disregarded. It does not grant any land, but undertakes to locate a lot already granted and definitely described. Grant by an Alcalde.—When an Alcalde granted a lot by a description sufficient to pass the title, his jurisdiction over the subject matter ended.