Board of Education v. Keenan

55 Cal. 642, 1880 Cal. LEXIS 337
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1880
DocketNo. 5,898
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 Cal. 642 (Board of Education v. Keenan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Education v. Keenan, 55 Cal. 642, 1880 Cal. LEXIS 337 (Cal. 1880).

Opinions

McKee, J.:

The action is ojoctmentj in which the plaintiff seeks to recover possession of the premises in controversy as a school lot, situate [644]*644in the city of San Francisco, which, it is claimed, has been selected by the city of San Francisco under the provisions of certain ordinances, which have been passed by the Common Council of the city and been ratified and confirmed by an act of the Legislature, entitled: “An Act concerning the City of San Francisco, and to ratify and confirm certain ordinances of the Common Council of said city”; approved March 11th, 1858.

At the trial in the court below, the plaintiff introduced in evidence the ordinances referred to, the act of the Legislature, the appointment of commissioners to select and set apart lots for school-houses, hospitals, fire-engine houses, and public squares for the use of the city, in that part of the city west of Larkin Street and south-west of Johnson Street, the report of said commissioners to the Common Council, the map to which it referred, together with other evidence tending to show in the plaintiff a right of entry .upon the lot in question. Defendants admitted that the lot was in that portion of the city west of Larkin Street and south-west of Johnson Street; that they were in possession of it at the commencement of the action, and that it was not within any exception or reservation mentioned in the decree of confirmation of lands to the city of San Francisco. The plaintiff then offered to prove, by witnesses in court, that the lots selected by the commissioners, and referred to in their report, were colored by them upon the map accompanying their report; that such coloring was intended to designate them as school lots ; that the lot in question was one of the lots so colored, and intended to be designated as school lots, and that this coloring and designation were done before the map and report were furnished to the Common Council. To this offer, the Court sustained an objection, and refused to allow the witnesses to testify, and that ruling is assigned as an error.

If no objection had been made to the offer, the Court below would have permitted the plaintiff to introduce the testimony of the witnesses. The defendants, however, objected to the offer, not on any formal grounds, but on the ground that the testimony offered was hearsay, incompetent, and contradictory of the map; and the question presented to the Court for determination was, whether the proposed testimony was subject to the objections urged against it. It was in this view that the attention of the Court was called to it.

[645]*645“As a general rule,” says the Supreme Court of the United States, “ we think that the party ought to be confined, in examining the admissibility of evidence, to the specific objections taken to it. The attention of the Court is called to the testimony in that point of view only.” (Hindds Lessee v. Longworth, 11 Wheat. 199; Burton v. Briggs, 20 Wall. 125.) So in Goveny v. Hale, 49 Cal. 552, where a defendant offered in evidence a mass of papers to prove that a promissory note, mentioned in an inventory, was the separate property of a married woman, and the objection was, that the papers which were offered were irrelevant, immaterial, and not proof of the fact, it was held that the objection was too broad. The question, then, here, as it was in the court below, is, was the testimony offered hearsay, incompetent, or contradictory of the map in evidence.

In the report which the commissioners made to the Common Council of the city, and which was part of the evidence in the case, the commissioners say that they had selected the lots and squares for school, fire, and hospital, and other public purposes; that the number of school lots selected was twenty-eight, and their size one hundred and thirty-seven and a half feet square, except those located on the Potrero, which are one hundred feet by two hundred feet; and that.they had adopted the accompanying plan or map, on which were described the streets as laid out and the lots and squares selected for public purposes. This plan or map was approved and adopted by the Common Council, and their action was afterward ratified and confirmed by the Legislature of the State ; and it is the same map which is in evidence in the case.

It is claimed that certain lots delineated on this map and indicated by certain figures inscribed thereon, were selected by the commissioners as school lots, for the use of the city, by coloring them with different colors. On the map, certain lots arc described, within the lines of which are written certain numerals, the meaning of which the Court below, on the trial of the case, announced it would recognize. The lot in controversy appears on the map to be colored brown. Other lots of similar color are also to be found on the map; but in its condition when presented as evidence in the case, the map itself did not show coloring of many or most of the lots claimed to have been sc[646]*646lccted for the use of the city. The coloring, if it ever existed, had become obscured or effaced by time, or from some other cause; and the first question included in the offer was, whether parole evidence was admissible to show that the lots, indicated on the map by the numerals within their lines, were, in fact, colored by the commissioners at the time when the map was made and filed, and became the official map of the city.

If this fact existed at the time when the map was made and became official, it was part of the condition of the map, and of the description of the lots designated thereon. For the map itself shows by a certificate indorsed thereon by the commissioners, that it was made “ for the location and dimension of the streets to be laid out west of Larkin Street and south-west of Johnson Street, with the lots of ground selected and set apart for the several public uses as herein designated.” By this authentic act it is evident that the map contains the lots or grounds selected and set apart by the commissioners for the several public uses referred to in the Van Ness Ordinance. But how were they designated ? If by coloring, and the coloring has disappeared from many of them, it would be competent to show these facts by the testimony of witnesses which would restore the map to its original condition. Such testimony would not be hearsay or incompetent, or contradictory of the map. It would be simply explaining the map, and placing it as evidence before the Court in the legible condition in which it was when it left the hands- of its authors, and was approved, adopted, and ratified by the lawful authorities. Parole evidence in aid or explanation of an authentic act is always admissible. The efficacy of such testimony is shown in the case of the Board of Education v. Donahue, 53 Cal. 190. In that case, the report and map of the commissioners referred to in the offer made in this case, were considered by the late Supreme Court. Parole testimony had been taken at the trial in the District Court to show that certain lots designated on the map had been colored by a draftsman by the direction of the commissioners; and upon such testimony, in connection with the report and map, a majority of the Judges of the Court held that it was the intention of the commissioners to indicate that these colored lots on the map were selected as school lots for the use of the city, and the [647]

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Bluebook (online)
55 Cal. 642, 1880 Cal. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-education-v-keenan-cal-1880.