Hihn v. Courtis

By the Court, Sawyer, J.:

This is an action for partition of the “Augmentation to the Soquel Rancho.” The several appeals are in all respects like those in the case of Peck v. Courtis, ante, 207. The same objections are taken to hearing the appeals, and the same grounds of objection exist in this as in the other case, except that in the record now before us, the final judgment appears to have been rendered on the Sth of August, 1864, consequently the appeal taken July 10th, 1865, was within a year thereafter, and in due time. On the appeal from the final judgment the record presents but one question—the only one in fact argued by appellants—and it is, to say the least, doubtful whether that is properly presented; but as the simplest and perhaps the most satisfactory mode of disposing of the case, we shall regard the question as properly before us.

On the trial before the referee, a conveyance of eight ninths of two large tracts of land from Donna Maria Castro, wife of Louis Depeaux, to her eight children, Niconora Coto and others, dated August 29th, 1850, was introduced in evidence under objection and exception on the part of the appellants. *400If this deed was properly received in evidence, then there is no error to the prejudice of appellants apparent on the record, and the judgment must be affirmed. The conveyance is of land which constituted a part of the separate estate of Martina Castro, wife of Depeaux. The objection to the deed is, that it is improperly executed, and, if properly executed in other respects, is not duly acknowledged under the provisions of the Act of 1850, concerning conveyances, and section six of the Act of the same year, defining the rights and duties of husband and wife; and that it is, therefore, void upon its face, and failed to pass any interest of Donna Martina Castro to the nominal grantees, some of whom are respondents—the numerous other respondents claiming under them through said deed.

The deed in question is the same which was the subject of discussion in the case of Ingoldsby v. Juan, 12 Cal. 564, and reference to that case is made for the facts in regard to it. The question raised is precisely the same as the one before presented and determined. The administrator of John Ingoldsby, the plaintiff in that case, is now one of the appellants, and the others claim, in part, at least, under said Ingoldsby.

With a view of breaking the force of the former decision upon the validity of this conveyance, it is claimed that the point as to the validity of the deed, although dismissed, was not necessarily involved, and not determined. The Court which decided the case was manifestly of a different opinion. In the beginning of the opinion, after stating that the case presents many interesting questions, the Court say : “ We do not consider it essential to the disposition of this case upon the merits to pass upon them all. The main question, which, we think, disposes of the question of title, rests upon the validity of the deed set up by the defendants in bar of the plaintiff's action. The deed, being the predicate of the title of the defendants, ivas ruled out, because, under the statute of 1850, it did not convey the title of the grantor, Martina, in the premises.'' (573-4.) After an elaborate discussion of the question as to the validity of the deed, at the close of the opinion it is again *401said : “We have avoided the expression of any opinion upon many questions presented by the record, and have assumed some positions more for the purpose of argument than with a view to decide them, the real question passed upon being the validity of the deed from Martina and Depeaux.” (580.) Manifestly the point in question was the very point, and the only one, discussed and decided.

The record in the former case shows, what does not appear in the report, that the deed, with all its indorsements thereon, including the second acknowledgment before the County Judge, was before the Court in that case in precisely the same form as it is presented in the record now; that the objections on the ground of defective execution, defective acknowledgment and defective authentication of acknowledgment were taken at the trial in the District Court, and were presented then, as now, in the form of objections to the introduction of the deed when offered in evidence; and that the objections were relied on in the argument at the hearing on appeal. The questions thus presented were necessarily determined by the Court in holding the deed to be valid.

It is next insisted that, if decided, the determination was clearly wrong and the case ought to be reconsidered by this Court and, if found erroneous, overruled. These positions are supported by an elaborate argument. We are fully satisfied, however, that if the point determined with reference to this deed may not be regarded as in some sense res adjudicata, the case is one eminently requiring the application of the principles of stare decisis, so far, at least, as this particular deed is concerned. The deed purports to convey eight undivided ninths of two entire Mexican grants, embracing within their limits several square miles of land—the number not designated. It is now about eight years since it was judicially determined, upon an elaborate and thorough consideration by the Court of last resort, that the instrument in question is a valid conveyance of the lands in controversy, and the determination depended upon a construction of the provisions of *402our own statute. That decision has become a rule of property with reference to this land, and many parties may have purchased portions of it during the last eight years on the faith of the adjudication. Certain it is, from the number of parties to this and the other suit referred to, decided at this term, that many persons are interested in the lands in controversy. To overturn the former adjudication under such circumstances because a majority of the present Court might arrive at a different conclusion from that attained by their predecessors—men equally well qualified to discern, and equally conscientious in the pursuit of the right, would be to trifle with the rights of litigants and bring merited obloquy upon the administration of justice. The remarks of that distinguished author of the standard work on Contingent Remainders, Mr. Fearne, upon the case of Perrin v. Blake, are very forcible and in point. He says : “ If rules and maxims of law were to ebb and flow with the taste of the Judge, or to assume that shape which in his fancy best becomes the times ; if the decisions of one case were not to be ruled by, or depend at all upon, former determinations in other cases of a like nature, I should be glad to know what person would venture to purchase an estate without first having the judgment of a Court of justice respecting the identical title which he means to purchase ? No reliance could be had upon precedents; former resolutions upon titles of the same kind could afford him no assurance at all. Nay, even a decision of a Court of j'ustice upon the very identical title would be nothing more than a precarious temporary security; the principles on which it ■yyas founded might, in the course of a few years, become antiquated; the same title might be again drawn into dispute; the taste and fashion of the times might be improved, and on that ground a future Judge might hold himself at liberty (if not consider it his duty) to pay as little regard to the maxims and decisions of his predecessor as that predecessor did to the maxims and decisions of those who went before him.” (Fearne on Cont. Remainders, Lond. Ed., 1801, p. 264; Dublin Ed., 1794, p. 264, Sec. 134.)

*403There is a class of cases, undoubtedly, which the same or a subsequent Court would be fully justified in overruling, and which often are overruled—cases hastily and clearly erroneously decided, under which no valuable rights can grow up, and the overruling of which would produce no inconvenience— recent cases under which valuable rights have not yet been acquired, which stand alone or nearly alone, and which are manifestly erroneous and are themselves departures from the law, as before well settled ; and others not necessary to mention. But many, if not most of them, are overruled in some sense upon the very doctrine of stare decisis. It is very true that a single decision upon a point recently made does not necessarily fall within the principle of stare decisis. But the case under consideration, in our opinion, is clearly within it. There was an adjudication on the identical deed—the identical title—eight years ago, and important rights may, and probably have, been acquired on the faith of that adjudication. If after a lapse of so long a term this adjudication could now be properly disturbed, in the language of Mr. Fearne, before cited, “Even a decision of a Court of justice upon the very identical title would be nothing more than a precarious temporary security.” It could, in fact, hardly be called a “ temporary security.” For these reasons we decline to re-examine the grounds of the decision in Ingoldsby v. Juan, and without intimating any opinion as to the correctness or incorrectness of the conclusions attained, adhere to it in this case on the principles of stare decisis.

We find nothing more in appellant’s brief of sufficient plausibility to require notice.

It follows that the deed of Martina Castro to her children was properly admitted in evidence and that the judgment must be affirmed.