Court Opinion

ID: 5437789
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 17:57:00.311618+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:54.118811
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Rhodes, J.:
The plaintiffs claim title under a patent dated September 22d, 1865, which was issued by the United States to Pierce, in confirmation, as we gather from the statement on new trial, of a Mexican grant, and which, it was admitted, embraced the premises in controversy. The first deed in the plaintiffs’ chain of title is the deed of Pierce to Johnson. RTeither that deed nor the subsequent deeds in that chain of title are contained in the statement. The attorney for one party gives the date of the deed of Pierce to Johnson as June 4th, 1863, and the attorney for the other party states the date as 1853. The defendant objected to the deed, on the ground, first, that it does not embi’ace. the premises in controversy; and second, “ that the legal.title went to William Pierce, the confirmee of the grant, and that there is no conveyance from him, subsequent to that patent, to any of these parties, or to the plaintiffs in this case;” and the objection was overruled. We are justified by this objection, and what we glean from the statement, in accepting 1853 as the true date of the deed of Pierce to'Johnson, and assuming that at that date Pierce held the Mexican gi’ant. The first *355ground is untenable. It is almost impossible to imagine a case where that objection would be valid, except when the deed on its face shows that it does not include any portion of the premises in suit. After the admission of the deed in evidence, it is necessary for the party claiming under it to show that it applies to the premises in controversy.
The second ground is also untenable. In the absence of the deed from the record we are justified in presuming, if it were necessary in support of the decision of the Court below, that the deed was in fee, with ■ full covenants of warranty; but it is unnecessary to go to that length. In Stark v. Barrett, 15 Cal. 361, the deed which was executed by the grantee, long anterior to the issuing of the patent, purported to convey the grantor’s right, title, and interest in a tract of the land which was included in the patent; and it was held that “ the patent, in recognizing the validity of the grant, necessarily established the validity of all properly executed intermediate transfers of the grantee’s interest.” The effect of that rule is to vest in such grantees the legal estate; and there is no rule in respect to the operation of such patents which is better established than this. The other points are not well taken.
Judgment and order affirmed.