This action was commenced on July 29, 1887, to enjoin the defendant from building a dam across San Mateo Creek. Plaintiff alleged that on January 1, 1887, Mary Drinkhouse, the owner of the premises, leased them to him for the period of one year, with 'the privilege of five years from the expiration thereof; that he went into possession, and on the nineteenth day of April, 1887, a written lease was entered into, by the terms of which he was to have the possession and use of the property for the term of five years from said nineteenth day of April; that defendant was constructing a dam below said premises, which, when completed, would throw water back upon them and permanently deprive him of the use thereof.
The court found that the verbal lease, made as alleged by plaintiff, was by mutual consent canceled on April 19, 1887, and the written lease entered into as alleged, but that no change was made in the possession or use of the property; that said Mary Drinkhouse is the mother *255of plaintiff, and continued to occupy and use the premises, and he continued to live with her, as he had theretofore done from his birth; that on February 28, 1887, and -while said Mary Drinkhouse was the owner of a tract of land including the premises described in the complaint, defendant herein commenced an action against her and J. A. Drinkhouse, her husband, for the condemnation of said tract of land to public use, and duly filed in the recorder’s office a notice of the pendency thereof, and that a decree in its favor was entered July 27, 1888; that during the trial of said action, plaintiff herein was present as a witness and acting on behalf of the defendants therein, but never until after the entrjr of the decree therein made any claim to any interest in the property.
We think that the evidence supports these findings, and that the conclusions of law drawn by the court below are warranted by the facts found. The plaintiff lived in San Francisco with his parents, and testified that he lived “ six days of the week in San Francisco, and one day in San Mateo”; that he never fitted up the place as a lodging-house, but put in a few tables, chairs, and blankets; that he had no servants or employees there, and that the foreman, who had been in the employ of his mother, continued to live in the building. He admits that when he entered into the written lease he knew that a suit was pending in which the water company was seeking to condemn the land. His verbal lease for one year was canceled six weeks before the condemnation suit was commenced. He knew that such a suit was pending, — was in fact an active participant on behalf of his parents against the claim of the company.
Under section 1246 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the plaintiff herein was authorized, though not named as a party to the condemnation proceedings, to appear, plead, and defend his interest as a lessee, if any such he held, “in like manner as if named in the complaint,” and having failed to do so, although he had notice of the *256proceeding,—assuming that he was a lessee in good faith, which the court evidently did not believe, — he is now estopped, by the judgment in that proceeding, from claiming anything by virtue of his written lease, entered into subsequent to the filing of the lis pendens. (Roach v. Riverside Water Co., 74 Cal. 263; Civ. Code, sec. 3529; Miller v. White, 80 Ill. 580; Wells on Res Adjudicata and Stare Decisis, sec. 32.)
The court did not err in its ruling against the objections of plaintiff to the admission of the judgment roll and lis pendens.
The court found on all the material issues. Some of the material allegations of the complaint were not denied. It was not necessary, therefore, to find in relation to them.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Sharpstein, J., McFarland, J., Thornton, J., and Beatty, C. J., concurred.