A brief statement of the facts, and some of the proceedings in the cause, will materially aid in disposing of this appeal. The plaintiff claims under a patent issued in 1861, by the United States, under the public land system. The defendant, through his lessor, claims title under a Mexican grant, and the proceedings in the national tribunals for its confirmation, in which the last step was the confirmation of the survey by the District Court. The Court below found that the defendant was in possession, claiming under his lessors, and found the value of one third of the rents and profits of the premises. The only fact, stated in respect to the title, is: “That plaintiff deraigns title under a patent from the United States Government issued to Nathan W. Richardson, and holds as tenant in common with two of the members of the firm of DeWitt, Kittle & Co.”
No fact was stated in the finding respecting the defendant’s claim of title. Under the rule so frequently announced *87by this Court in construing the statute of 1861, (Stats. 1861, p. 589,) and section one hundred and eighty of the Practice Act, as amended in 1866, it will be presumed that the Court found the title to the premises in the plaintiff, and that he was entitled to the possession. (See Henry v. Everts, 30 Cal. 426; Sears v. Dixon, 33 Cal. 326.)
As the facts recited in the written findings are, undoubtedly, sustained by the evidence, it would be useless for the defendant, in his motion for a new trial, to state as the grounds of his motion, that such findings were contrary to the evidence; and, under the operation of section one hundred and eighty of the Practice Act, he is driven to the necessity of attacking the implied findings. This, we must hold, was done in this case; for several of the specifications under the general ground “ that the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings and decision,” point to findings that were not expressed. The defendant, as is suggested by. the plaintiff’s counsel, might have excepted to the findings as defective, but he was not compelled to that course. Had the request been made for findings upon the facts upon which the defendant relies for title, doubtless the Court would have complied. That, most certainly, is the better practice in actions of ejectment, when the parties claim through different chains of title. When title is found in one party, the Court is not required to find the facts constituting the title of the opposite party, for both cannot hold the same title; but, as such a finding would greatly facilitate the decision of the cause on appeal, it is not presumed that the Court would refuse when requested.
This case affords an illustration of the convenience of the practice we have indicated, as will appear in the discussion of the only remaining point we. shall notice. In the statement it is recited that the defendant “offered and gave evidence tending to establish that the land in this suit was included in the exterior boundaries of said Pancho Telenas, and also within the boundaries of the survey of the same, as confirmed by the District Court for the Northern District of
*88California.” The position of the defendant, and to which his argument is mainly devoted, that a title depending upon the confirmation and survey of a Mexican grant, and a patent issued in pursuance thereof—the confirmed survey now being equivalent to a patent—takes effect by relation at the date of the filing of the petition, and will prevail over a subsequent patent issued upon a purchase from the United States, is established by a long and unbroken series .of decisions in this Court. (Waterman v. Smith, 13 Cal. 373; Moore v. Wilkinson, 13 Cal. 478; Teschemaker v. Thompson, 18 Cal. 11; Leese v. Clark, 18 Cal. 535; Leese v. Clark, 20 Cal. 387; Seale v. Ford, 29 Cal. 104.) The survey, of course, must include the land in dispute. But that was a fact in issue in this cause, though it was not expressly found either way. The plaintiff insists that the fact was not proven. The evidence is not set out in the transcript, and, as the fact was not found, we cannot undertake to say that it was proven. Evidence tending to prove the matter in issue would undoubtedly be competent evidence, but it would not necessarily be satisfactory evidence. If not satisfactory evidence, it did not amount to proof of the fact. The presumption is, that the evidence was not satisfactory; for, had it been, the Court would have found the fact, or have found generally for the defendant—there not appearing to be any controversy about the sufficiency of the title to establish the facts upon which, the defendant relies for title to the land included in the survey.
As the record now stands, we cannot say that the Court erred in not finding that the surve\ included the lands in controversy.
Judgment affirmed.
In this case, which was decided at the October Term, 1867, Mr. Justice Sanderson and Mr. Justice Shatter expressed no opinion. A petition for rehearing in the cause was finally denied at the April Term, 1868.