Johnston v. Fish
Johnston v. Fish
Opinion of the Court
Action to recover damages from defendants for the conversion of certain hay.
The plaintiff’s right of action grows out of the following facts: Prior to March 1, 1881, Henry Benson had been for many years the owner of a tract of land in Contra Costa county, which on that day he conveyed to one Jones. In May of the same year Jones conveyed it to the defendants herein. The conveyance from Benson to Jones was procured by the fraud of the latter, and on the 1st of September of that year Benson took possession of the land, claiming it as his own, upon the ground that by reason of the fraud he was entitled to disregard his conveyance, and remained in possession until evicted under a judgment in ejectment by the defendants herein in March, 1883. Shortly after Benson went into possession of the land the defendants herein brought an action of forcible entry against him, which was tried before a jury and a verdict and judgment rendered in his favor November 12, 1881. In April, 1883, this verdict was set aside and a new trial ordered, but no further step was taken in the action until 1887, when the action was dismissed. November O 21, 1881, the defendants commenced an action in ejectment against Benson and others for the recovery of the land and damages for the withholding thereof. The plaintiff herein was made a defendant in this action, but upon his disclaimer he was dismissed from the action November 29, 1881. A cross-complaint was filed in the action in behalf of Benson to avoid his conveyance to Jones on the ground of fraud; and upon the trial of this issue a decision was rendered February 19, 1883, in favor of the plaintiffs therein, upon the ground that they were bona fide purchasers from Jones for
There is no substantial difference between the facts in this case and those presented in Page v. Fowler, 39 Cal. 412, and under the principles laid down in that case the plaintiff’s right of recovery must be sustained. (See, also, Martin v. Thompson, 62 Cal. 618; 45 Am. Rep. 663; Emerson v. Whitaker, 83 Cal. 147; Groome v. Almstead, 101 Cal. 425; Stockwell v. Phelps, 34 N. Y. 366; 90 Am. Dec. 710.) Benson’s entry upon the land in September, 1881, was made under his claim that, by reason of the fraud perpetrated on him by Jones, his conveyance to Jones was avoided, and that he still remained the owner of the laud. )'Such an entry was not a mere trespass, but it was made under a claim of right adverse to the whole world, and constituted a disseisin of the real owners. The sub
The fact that the plaintiff herein knew that the defendants claimed to be the owners of the land, as against Benson, does not impair his right of recovery. If, as against Benson, they had no right to the fruits of the land which he gathered while it was held adversely to them, they would have no right against his vendee, since Benson could give to his vendee as good a title as he himself possessed, and it is equally immaterial whether the hay cut from the land was a volunteer crop or had been sown by the plaintiff. The right to the fruits of the land does not depend upon the amount of labor expended by the occupant in their production. The
The evidence fully sustains the finding of the court that the value of the hay at the time it was taken by the defendants was four thousand dollars. The defendants themselves alleged in the affidavit for its seizure in the claim and delivery action against Benson that it was of the value of five thousand dollars, and its value is stated at that amount in the judgment recovered in that action in their favor.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Garoutte, J., and Van Fleet, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- HENRY JOHNSTON v. L. I. FISH
- Cited By
- 23 cases
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- Syllabus
- Fraudulent Conveyance—Disseisin by Vendor—Ejectment by Bona Eidb Purchasers—Title to Crops.—Where the vendor of land has made a conveyance which was procured by fraud of the vendee, and has afterwards taken possession of the land in disregard of the conveyance, his action is a disseisin, and his possession is adverse to the whole world; and, pending an action of ejectment by bona fide purchasers from the fraudulent vendee, the vendor is entitled to dispose of the crops during the period of his possession, and any one dealing with him, therefore, becomes the owner of what is purchased from him, and their title is not affected by the subsequent determination of the ejectment suit in favor of the bona fide purchasers. Id.—Rights op Plaintiff in Ejectment—Use and Occupation—Fruits i of Land.—The plaintiff in ejectment is entitled to recover from a defendant only the value of the use and occupation, and is not entitled to the fruits of the land, nor can he, after he has established his right to the possession, recover the fruits of the land from one who has purchased them from the defendant while in adverse possession. Id —Purchaser of Crops—Knowledge of Ownership of Land.—The fact that a purchaser of the- crops from the claimant of the land in adverse possession knew that the plaintiffs in ejectment claimed to be the owners of the land does not impair his right of recovery of the crops as against them. Id.—Right to Fruits—Volunteer Crops.—The right to the fruits of the land does not depend upon the amount of labor expended by the occupant in their production, and it is immaterial whether the hay out from the land was a volunteer crop, or had been sown under a cropping contract with the occupant, and the fruits gathered belong to him as fully as the crops. Id.—Cropping Contract—Purchase—Replevin—Conversion of Crops— Trover.—One entitled to two-thirds of the crops and fruits under a cropping contract, and to the remaining one-third by purchase from the occupant in adverse possession, is not affected by a judgment in replevin brought against the occupant for the possession of the crops by the plaintiffs in the ejectment suit, to whom possession was delivered in the •replevin suit, and such owner may recover damages from them for the conversion of the crops.