Action to quiet plaintiff’s alleged title to a tract of swamp and overflowed land, containing ninety-one acres, situate in Marin County. The action was brought against Leander Quint in his lifetime, for whom the administratrix of his estate was substituted before trial. Judgment passed for plaintiff, and defendant appeals therefrom, and also from an order denying her motion for new trial.
The defendant claimed title by a grant, bargain, and •sale deed from plaintiff, reciting a paid consideration of $150, and executed January 18, 1879.
The plaintiff claims title by a tax deed executed to him by the .tax collector of Marin County on March 1,1880, and also by prescription, alleging adverse possession under the tax deed during five years before the commencement of the action.
The recitals in the tax deed show that the taxes for which th.e land was sold to plaintiff were state and county taxes assessed to John De Frieze for the fiscal year ending June 30,1879, amounting to $1.55, and that the property was sold to plaintiff for this sum, plus .costs and charges, altogether amounting to $2.73.
The title w.a.s not traced to any higher source than the plaintiff, though the description of the land in the deed of January 18, 1879, from plaintiff to defendant, closes as follows: “For more particular description, see patent recorded in liber A, page 377, of records of Marin .County.”
The patent referred to was not put in evidence, but in rebuttal plaintiff’s counsel read in evidence the description of the land from the record of that patent, which appeared to be the same as that contained in the deed of plaintiff to the defendant, but did not read enough to show who was the patentee. There is nothing in the record tending to prove that John De Frieze was the patentee, op that he ever owned the land in question, *659except that the tax for which the land was sold was assessed to him. Finally, it does not appear how or from whom plaintiff originally acquired title to the land before the date of his deed to defendant, yet he is estopped by his deed to defendant, purporting to grant the absolute title, from denying that before and at the date of that deed he had such absolute title, and by that deed conveyed it to the defendant. (Belcher etc. M. Co. v. Deferrari, 62 Cal. 160; Dodge v. Walley, 22 Cal. 228; 83 Am. Dec. 61; Haffley v. Maier, 15 Cal. 13; Clark v. Baker, 14 Cal. 613; 76 Am. Dec. 449); and it is also clear, that if any title passed by the tax deed, such title would have inured to the benefit of the defendant alone. But it appears that the tax deed was utterly void. The certificate of the tax sale, introduced by plaintiff as a part of his evidence in chief, states that the property was assessed to “ John De Frieze, and to all owners and, claimants, known and unknown.” These words in Italics do not appear in the tax deed, as required by section 3786 of the Political Code, although it appears that they were recited in the deed as drawn, but were stricken out before the deed was executed, thus showing that section 3786 of the Political Code was deliberately disregarded. Counsel for respondent contend that the deed alone can be received as evidence of the assessment, and that the certificate of sale put in evidence by plaintiff as a foundation for the deed must be disregarded. In this I think counsel are mistaken. The deed is only “ primary ” (prima facie) evidence “ that the property was assessed as required bylaw”; and this rests on the disputable presumption that the matters recited in the certificate are recited in the deed, as required by section 3786 of the Political Code. Here the plaintiff proved by the certificate that the property was not assessed, as required by law, before the deed was offered in evidence. Section 3776 of the Political Code requires the certificate to state 61 (when known) the name of the person assessed,” while the deed is required to recite only the matters recited in the certificate. By first introducing the certificate, the *660plaintiff proved not only that the property was not lawfully assessed (Daly v. Ah Goon, 64 Cal. 512), but also that the deed did not contain the recitals required by law.
Plaintiff’s main reliance, however, is upon title by prescription, arising from his alleged adverse possession.
The evidence relied upon to prove adverse possession tended to prove only the following facts: Three years and five months after the execution of the tax deed, to wit, on August 13,1883, the plaintiff executed to Bernard T. Miller a lease of the land in question for the term of five years, at a rental of twenty-five dollars per year, the lessee covenanting to construct upon the premises, within twenty days from the date of the lease, “ a building suitable to afford protection in winter to at least three valuable domestic animals.” At the time of the execution of this lease, the land had no improvements upon it, and never had been inclosed, cultivated, nor occupied by any person. The greater portion of it was low, boggy land, but during portions of the year it afforded feed for cattle, which had been accustomed to graze upon it. James Miller, the father of the lessee, had a ranch adjoining the leased premises, on the west side thereof, but which was not fenced on that side. “ Cattle could roam at will over this land [land in question] from any contiguous land.” James Miller kept a dairy and a number of cows on his ranch. About the time that Bernard T. Miller took the lease from plaintiff, he also leased from his father, James Miller, the latter’s dairy and cows, and thereafter allowed these cows, with others of his own, to graze upon the leased land, but without a herder, except to drive the cows from the land for the purpose of milking, and to return them after milking. The cows were not confined to the leased land, but could graze upon other adjoining land; and there was nothing to prevent the cattle of other persons from grazing upon the leased land. Being asked if other cattle than his own were pastured upon it during the term of the lease, Bernard Miller answered: “ They might have been; I cannot say positively.. Cattle get back and forth on the *661ranches once in a while. I could not say positively whether there were or not.....I never remembered seeing any cattle on there excepting my own and those I had rented from my father.” About a month after the date of the lease, B. F. Miller constructed a shed on the land, sufficient to shelter three cows, by setting a post in the ground at each of the four corners and covering it with boards, and also boarding up three sides of it, but leaving one side open. This was the only improvement placed upon the land by him or plaintiff, and it does not appear whether the shed was ever used by him or not. During the first four years of the lease he resided about a half a mile from the land, but within sight of it, and during the remainder of the term he resided farther from the land. It does not appear that he personally attended to the dairy, but does appear that he was absent from it a considerable portion of the time. In the way above described, he used the land in question during a term of five years before the commencement of this action, but in no other way. It does not appear that his lease was recorded, nor that defendant had actual notice of it, or notice that he used or claimed the land for any purpose during the first four and a half years of the alleged adverse possession. About five months before the alleged five years of adverse possession expired, the defendant erected a house upon the land, twenty feet long by twelve feet wide, in which his employee resided several weeks immediately after it was built, and it was while this house was being built that Miller first notified defendant that he (Miller) had a lease of the land, and claimed the possession of it. Defendant also built a fence on a portion of the line between the land in question and the land of James Miller, immediately after building the house. After the expiration of Miller’s lease, and while defendant and his employee were absent from the house, the plaintiff took possession of it, and forcibly prevented them from reentering. The tax deed to plaintiff was recorded March 1, 1880, and the plaintiff paid the taxes on the land for *662the years 1881, 1883, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, and 1888, said taxes having been assessed to him. for those years; but there is no evidence that defendant had actual notice of the deed, or that plaintiff paid the taxes or claimed the land until after defendant built the house on the land. At no time after the execution of the tax deed was plaintiff in the possession of any part of the land, unless he was so by his tenant, Miller, until he took possession of the house built by defendant, as above stated.
On the facts above stated, counsel for appellant contends,— 1. That the tax deed gave plaintiff no color of title, because he obtained it in bad faith, and for the mere purpose of creating a sham color of title; 2. That even conceding that the tax deed gave color of title, the plaintiff never had adverse possession of the land during any period of time; 3. That conceding adverse possession, it was not continuous during a period of five years, having been interrupted by defendant at the time he built the house and fence on the land, five months before the five years’ adverse possession was complete.
As I think the second of these positions should be sustained, the first and third need not be considered.
It is contended for respondent, and the court found, that the acts of plaintiff and his lessee, Miller, constituted adverse possession as defined in section 323 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which is substantially the same as section 11 of the act of 1850, “ defining the time for commencing civil actions” (Hittell’s Gen. Laws, art. 4353), and which, so far as applicable here, is as follows: “ For the purpose of constituting an adverse possession by any person claiming a title founded upon a written instrument, .... land is deemed to have been possessed and occupied in the following cases: .... 3. Where, although not inclosed, it has been used for the supply of fuel or of fencing timber for the purposes of husbandry, or for pasture, or for the ordinary use of the occupant.”
It has been uniformly held in this state that, in order to set the statute of limitation in motion against the *663owner of land, the occupancy thereof must be sufficiently open and notorious to notify an ordinarily prudent owner of its existence, and of its hostile character, unless he is otherwise actually notified of these facts; and to be available against persons dealing with the owner for the land, the occupancy must be of such a character, at least, as should put them upon inquiry as to the title of the occupant (Thompson v. Pioche, 44 Cal. 508; Thompson v. Felton, 54 Cal. 547; Fair v. Stevenot, 29 Cal. 488; Smith v. Yule, 31 Cal. 182; 89 Am. Dec. 167; Unger v. Mooney, 63 Cal. 586; 49 Am. Rep. 100; Thomas v. England, 71 Cal. 457); and the burden of proving all the essential elements óf an adverse possession, including its hostile character, is upon the party relying upon it. (American Co. v. Bradford, 27 Cal. 361; Lick v. Diaz, 30 Cal. 75; Garwood v. Hastings, 38 Cal. 223.)
The evidence furnishes no ground for a pretense, even, that defendant ever had actual or express notice that the plaintiff or his lessee had or claimed any kind of possession until about the time that defendant built his house upon the land, which was not more than six months before the alleged period of five years’ adverse possession expired.
Conceding that what is proven to have been done on the land by plaintiff and his lessee, Miller, constituted any kind of possession, which may be regarded as doubtful, such possession was not of such a character as to justify the inference that defendant had notice of its existence even, much less that it was hostile to his title, until four years and six months of the alleged period of adverse possession had elapsed. The land was uninclosed and uncultivated. No person resided upon it. It was bounded on all sides by uninclosed land, upon which, as well as upon it, the cattle of the neighboring ranchers roamed and grazed without restraint. Defendant bad no notice of the lease to Miller, nor that Miller had leased his father’s dairy or cows, or controlled any cattle that grazed upon the land except his own. The grazing of his neighbors’ cattle upon the land, so long as defend*664ant made no effort to restrain them, by inclosure or otherwise, did not indicate to him that his neighbors had or claimed adverse possession of his land. The little shed sufficient to afford shelter to “ three valuable domestic animals,” say ten feet square and seven feet high, is the only thing relied upon to indicate to defendant that plaintiff or Miller was in possession of the land; and no doubt it was intended to be used as evidence of such possession, and for no other purpose. So important was it considered by the plaintiff, that the only visit he made to the land during the term of the lease was for the purpose of ascertaining whether Miller had built it according to the covenant in the lease. Why was this shed required to be sufficient to shelter only three valuable animals ? Why is there no evidence that it was ever used for any purpose ? It was obviously a mere sham, which should be allowed no effect whatever as evidence of possession.
I think the finding of adverse possession of the land in question is not justified by the evidence, and that the judgment and order should be reversed, and a new trial granted.
Belcher, C., and Temple, C., concurred.
The Court.For the reason given in the foregoing opinion,the judgment and order are reversed and anew trial granted.
Hearing in Bank denied.