This is an action to recover possession of a certain tract of land situated in Humboldt county. This land is covered by the waters of Humboldt bay. Plaintiffs rely upon a patent from the state of California, in which the lands are described as state tide lands. Defendants rely upon title by prescription, or adverse possession. The present action was brought April 30,1894. In the year 1871 a number of persons composing ' the firm of Evans & Co. became the owners of a tract of land ad*334joining the premises in controversy, upon which was situated a sawmill, and which property was known as the Occidental Mill property. The business of this firm and the ownership of this property continued by itself and its grantees down to September 12, 1888, at which time the entire title vested in defendant liebecca McKay. The various deeds of conveyance transferred the Occidental Mill property and its “appurtenances.” From 1871 to the commencement of this action the various owners of the mill property, in connection with the mill, used the property in controversy as a boom, viz., as a storage place for saw logs. This boom or storage place was inclosed by piles driven into the ground, to which were attached by chains continuous series of heavy timbers called boom sticks. Upon the land side the inclosure was completed by pickets driven into the soil.
The merits of this litigation to a considerable extent revolve around that provision of the law relating to the payment of taxes by an adverse occupant of land. It is there provided: “In no case shall adverse possession be considered established under the provision of any section or sections of this code, unless it shall be shown that the land has been occupied and claimed for the period of five years continuously, and the party or persons, their predecessors and grantors, have paid all the taxes, state, county, cr municipal, which have been levied and assessed upon such land.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 325.) This provision of the law took effect May 31, 1878. The language of the provision, to the effect that the party in possession must “have paid all the taxes .... which have been levied and assessed upon such land,” is not well chosen, inasmuch as it can hardly be said that taxes are assessed upon the land. But the intent of the law-making power is reasonably plain; and a fair construction of the language is that the word “levied” refers to the act of the board of supervisors in making the levy, and the word “assessed” refers to the act of the assessor in making the assessment. This construction being adopted, we agree with appellant that by the words of the provision itself both the assessment and levy must be made while the occupant is in possession, or he is not called upon to pay the tax. It is insisted that ■such construction might result in the creation of an adverse title by the payment of the taxes for only four years. But that *335fact, is immaterial. A compliance with the demands of the statute is all that can he asked. What are those demands, is the important question, and not what are the results to follow from a compliance with them.
The question we have been discussing becomes most material ■in this case. It is conceded that defendants paid no state or county taxes levied during the year 1889. The action being brought April 30, 1894, to establish an adverse possession for ■the five years next preceding the commencement of the action, it was necessary to prove the payment of all taxes levied and assessed during that term of five years, that is, all taxes levied and assessed subsequent to April 30, 1889. If the state and county taxes for the year 1889 assessed upon this land were “assessed” prior to April 30, 1889, then the defendants were not called upon to pay them, even though those taxes were levied subsequent to that time, for, as we have seen, the taxes must be both levied and assessed within the five years of adverse occupancy. As to what constitutes the assessment of any particular tract of land by the assessor, within the purview of this statute, we are not called upon to decide. Neither will we determine under the evidence before us the particular day upon which this land was assessed. Whether or not it was assessed prior or subsequent to April 30, 1889, was a question of fact essentially for the jury and not the trial judge.
The court instructed the jury as to the law bearing upon this question of payment of taxes, in general accord with the case of Brown v. Clark, 89 Cal. 196. It is there declared: “The duty laid upon the occupant is to pay all taxes which have been levied and assessed against the land during his term of continuous occupancy and adverse claim of right for five years. If he does this, he can maintain his position as against the person who would otherwise be the owner of the land.” This instruction was directly in line with the statute and clearly sound. But appellant’s counsel asked the court to give the following instruction to the jury, which request was refused: “Since 1878, to acquire a title to land by adverse possession, it has been necessary that the persons claiming such adverse possession should pay all taxes, state, county, and municipal, levied and assessed -during the period covered by his adverse claim, and I instruct *336you that, unless the taxes so mentioned were both levied and assessed within the period covered by his claim, the adverse claimant is not obliged to pay the same. In other words, if the taxes were levied within the period covered by his claim, but assessed before the period covered by his claim, or, if the taxes were assessed during the period, but not levied until after the period had expired, the adverse claimant is not obliged to pay such taxes. In other words, as I instructed you before, the adverse claimant is obliged to pay such taxes only as are both assessed and levied within the period covered by his claim.” In view of the fact that it was a material question in the case when the state and county taxes for the year 1889 were assessed, in view of the further fact that the assessment and levy of 1889 must both have occurred within the five year term of adverse occupancy in order that defendants were required to pay the taxes for that year, and in view of the further fact that a jury, in the absence of an explicit instruction bearing upon this point, might well conclude that the levy of the tax alone within the term of adverse occupancy would be sufficient to require a payment of the tax by defendants, we are satisfied the instruction asked should have been given. It is sound law, directly bearing upon the issue under investigation, and would have been of material assistance to the jury in arriving at a just verdict. In the absence of such an instruction, we are not satisfied that the jury made a proper application of the facts to the law of the case.
The title by adverse possession relied upon by defendants was created at either one of two periods of time. The provision of the statute as to the payment of taxes taking effect May 31, 1878, defendants’ title was either created between 1871 and that date, or it was created during the five years next preceding the commencement of the present action. Tor it is conceded that defendants paid no taxes upon this property subsequent to May 31, 1878, until the year 1890. Hence, that time could form no element in the creation of the title for the earlier period. The court gave the jury the following instruction, which appellants strenuously insist was error: “You are instructed that an adverse, open, notorious, exclusive possession for the period of five years extinguishes the right of the party *337having the true title, and vests a perfect title in the adverse holder, if such possession had so existed for five years before the first day of April, 1878; and if such possession existed for five years and was not completed before said first day of April, 1878, then the person in possession of the land must have paid all the taxes, state, county, and municipal, which had been levied and assessed upon such land during the whole of a continuous period of five years subsequent to the first day of April, 1878.” By this instruction the date at which the statute took effect is fixed at April 1, 1878. The true date should be May 31, 1878, sixty days after the passage of the act, but this mistake is harmless. The instruction as a whole is unsound in declaring that a period of time of adverse possession, immediately prior to the taking effect of the statute, could not be added to a period of time immediately succeeding the taking effect of the statute, in order to make up the full complement of a five years’ term of adverse possession. It is certainly not true that a person holding adversely when the statute took effect must pay taxes for a full continuous period of five years subsequent to the taking effect of the statute. His adverse possession prior to May 31, 1878, may be added to his adverse possession subsequent to that date, and his title is perfect and complete when the sum total of these two periods of time equals the prescribed statutory period. But no harm ensued to appellants from this instruction, for it is conceded that no taxes were paid by them until 1890; and it necessarily follows that the conditions outlined in the instruction were not in the case. There was no evidence bearing upon the point, and the error was purely abstract and not prejudicial.
The opinion of the court denying appellants’ motion for a new trial is attached to their brief, and it appears therefrom that the court was somewhat in doubt as to whether or not lands covered by navigable waters could be acquired by adverse possession. If the law is such as the court by its opinion seems to indicate, then the plaintiffs in this action should have lost their case. They rested their cause of action upon a patent from the state. They were out of possession, and had nothing but a paper title upon which to base their action. If they had sufficient title upon which to base the action, then they *338had a title which could be lost by an adverse possession. If the land in controversy was not private property, plaintiffs had no title. If it was private property, there certainly could be an adverse occupancy of it for the statutory period. Furthermore, this litigation only affects the parties to it. The United States is unaffected by it, and may litigate its claims whenever moved so to do. It was said in Hayes v. Martin, 45 Cal. 563. “It is not requisite that the party who relies upon the statute should show that he claims title in hostility to the United States. He may admit title in the United States, either with or without a claim on his part of the right to acquire the title from the United States, and it is sufficient if he has such possession as is required by the statute, and claims in hostility to the title which the plaintiff establishes in the action.” (See, also, McManus v. O’Sullivan, 48 Cal. 16.)
Section 325 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “For the purpose of constituting an adverse possession by a person claiming title not founded upon a written instrument, judgment, or decree, land is deemed to have been possessed and occupied in the following cases only: 1. Where it has been protected by a substantial inclosure; 2. Where it has been usually cultivated or improved.”
As explanatory of the second subdivision of the section, appellants asked the following instruction: “A piece of property is said to be usually improved or improved in the usual manner, when it is improved as similar property is improved. An improvement may mean to employ advantageously, or to enhance in value, or to make letter, or to occupy for a beneficial purpose pursued during occupation. It does not necessarily mean buildings or structures thereon.”
The court refused to give this instruction as requested, but modified it by omitting therefrom the words in italics. The last sentence could well have been given, but portions of the instruction were properly rejected. Those portions took too wide a scope. The mere beneficial user of this land for hunting, fishing, or bathing would probably have come within the signification of the language used, yet certainly those things are not meant by the words “usually improved.” The court refused to give the following instruction: “If you find from the *339evidence that the boom testified to by the witnesses for the defendants was surrounded on all of its sides continuously by ' boom sticks fastened together, and also fastened to piles, and that such boom sticks and fastenings constituted a boundary and inclosure for the boom sufficient for all of the purposes to which the same was or could be applied, then I instruct you that the same was substantially inclosed.”
This instruction should have been given. It contains a sound principle of law, and was clearly applicable to the facts of the case.
It is contended that an outstanding title was shown in Evans & Co., if their title did not pass to these defendants. As previously suggested, if Evans & Co. had a title at any time, it was created by adverse possession occurring prior to May 31, 1878. And, even if it be conceded that a defendant in ejectment may show an outstanding title in a stranger created by adverse possession, for the purpose of defeating a plaintiffs cause of action—a proposition not decided—still this claim of appellants has no merit. For an action based upon such title would be barred by the statute of limitations, and a title so barred is not such a present, live, effective, outstanding title as would defeat plaintiffs cause of action. (Totten v. James, 55 Mo. 494; McDonald v. Schneider, 27 Mo. 405; Hoag v. Hoag, 35 N. Y. 473; Griffin v. Sheffield, 38 Miss. 359; 77 Am. Dec. 646; Jackson v. Schauber, 7 Cow. 187.) In this direct connection it may be further suggested that a privity of estate is absolutely necessary before various periods of adverse possession created by different parties may be tacked together, and, as to the land in- controversy, the existence of such privity between the various grantees of the Occidental Mill property, prior to 1878, is not entirely plain.
We do not deem it necessary to discuss the various other questions raised upon this appeal.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Van Fleet, J., Henshaw, J., McFarland, J., and Temple, J., concurred.