City & County of San Francisco v. Linares

106 P.2d 369, 16 Cal. 2d 441, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 322
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1940
DocketS. F. 16429
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 106 P.2d 369 (City & County of San Francisco v. Linares) 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
City & County of San Francisco v. Linares, 106 P.2d 369, 16 Cal. 2d 441, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 322 (Cal. 1940).

Opinions

SHENK, J.

This is an application for the writ of mandamus to compel the respondent, as Secretary of the Board of Park Commissioners of the City and County of San Francisco, to publish the call for bids and to receive sealed proposals for a fifty-year lease of the subsurface space beneath Union Square, for the purpose of erecting and constructing therein a public automobile garage and parking station.

As a return to the alternative writ the respondent has filed a general demurrer to the petition.

The Town of San Francisco, predecessor of the City and County of San Francisco, acquired title to this property prior to the admission of California into the Union. Acting under the authority of a resolution by the ayuntamiento or town council of San Francisco, John W. Geary, its first alcalde, on January 3, 1850, executed a deed conveying to the Town of [443]*443San Francisco the title to the land “bounded northerly by Post Street, easterly by Stockton Street, southerly by Geary Street, and westerly by Powell Street, the same being laid down on a map of the Town of San Francisco, as surveyed by William M. Eddy, Town Surveyor, as a ‘public square’.” The deed further confirmed “unto the said Town of San Francisco as a public reserve, forever, the said piece or parcel of land bounded and described as above”.

The prior ownership of these and other lands by the pueblo of San Francisco and the authority of its officers, duly authorized, to convey title for common use, or for special purposes, or in full ownership in the grantee, was confirmed in 1860 in the ease of Hart v. Burnett, 15 Cal. 530.

Since the execution of the deed of January 3, 1850, the property has been devoted exclusively to the uses of a public park or square. Under the present and prior provisions of the charter of the city and county, it has been under the management and control of the Board of Park Commissioners of the City and County. Section 41 of the charter provides as follows:

“Section 41. The commissioners shall have the complete and exclusive control, management, and direction of the parks, squares, avenues, grounds and recreation centers, now or hereafter placed under the charge of the commission, including exclusive right to erect and to superintend the erection of buildings and structures thereon, except as in this charter otherwise provided.
“The commissioners shall not lease any part of the lands under its control nor permit the building or maintenance or use of any structure on any park, square, avenue or ground, except for recreation purposes, and each letting or permit shall be subject to the approval of the board of supervisors by ordinance, but the commission may lease to the highest responsible bidder for a term not to exceed fifty years and upon such other terms and conditions as it may determine, sub-surface space under any public park and the right and privilege to conduct and operate therein a public automobile parking station, provided that the said construction, when completed, and the operation will not be, in any material respect or degree, detrimental to the original purpose for which said park was dedicated or in contravention to the conditions of any grant under which said park might have been received. [444]*444The revenues derived from any such lease shall be credited to the park fund.
“The commission shall have power to lease any stadium or recreation field under its jurisdiction for athletic contests and exhibitions and may permit the lessee to charge an admission fee. ’ ’

The city and county is asserting its power through the Board of Park"Commissioners to proceed with the leasing of the subsurface of Union Square in accordance with the foregoing charter provision and particularly the portion thereof which we have italicized. The questions presented are whether the power to proceed as proposed is properly vested in the Board of Park Commissioners and whether the limitations on the exercise of that power arising under the deed have been observed.

In the adoption of section 41 of its charter the City and County of San Francisco acted under a constitutional grant of power so to do. (Const., secs. 8, 8a, 8%, art. XI.) In thus dealing with its own lands, the city and county was not restricted by any constitutional provision. The express grant of power to the Board of Park Commissioners must, therefore, be taken as complete and adequate for the purpose intended, unless the terms of the grant to the Town of San Francisco in 1850 were such as to thwart that purpose.

It will be noted that the language of section 41 of the charter clearly recognizes that the title to Union Square is held by the City and County subject to the right of the public to the perpetual use of the land for park purposes.

It will also be noted that the Town of San Francisco acquired the property, not as the grantee of a private party or individual, but as the result of a dedication by a public authority. The rule of construction is not the same in both instances. In Slavich v. Hamilton, 201 Cal. 299 [257 Pac. 60], wherein the question of the right to construct a veterans’ memorial hall in a public park was involved, it was said: ' ‘ The uses to which park property may be devoted depend, to some extent, upon the manner of its acquisition, that is, whether dedicated by the donor, or purchased or condemned by the municipality. A different construction is placed upon dedications made by individuals from those made by the public. The former are construed strictly according to the terms of the grant, while in the latter cases a less strict construction is adopted. (Harter v. San Jose, 141 Cal. 659 [75 [445]*445Pac. 344] ; Spires v. City of Los Angeles, 150 Cal. 64 [87 Pac. 1026, 11 Ann. Cas. 465].)”

In the Spires case, the city of Los Angeles, as successor to the pueblo of Los Angeles, held “Central Park” under a dedication by the public “as a public place forever for the enjoyment of the community in general”. In approving the use of the land for library purposes and with reference to the foregoing words of dedication, the court said at page 66:

“This was comprehensive language, and in construing the grant, or rather the extent of the terms of the dedication, no narrow and strict construction should be applied to limit the city in the uses to which the property dedicated may be devoted, as long as they are such as tend to further and promote the enjoyment of the people under the general dedication of the land for their benefit. And that the establishment of a public library, to which the visitors to the park have access, is consistent with such public enjoyment, and tends to enlarge it, we have no doubt.
“As matter of public knowledge, we are aware that the erection of hotels, restaurants, museums, art-galleries, zoological and botanical gardens, conservatories, and the like in public parks is common, and we are not pointed to any authority where it has been regarded as a diversion of the legitimate uses of the park to establish them, but, on the contrary, their establishment has been generally recognized as ancillary to the complete enjoyment by the public of the property set apart for their benefit. ’ ’

In Spinks v. City of Los Angeles, 220 Cal. 336 [31 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 P.2d 369, 16 Cal. 2d 441, 1940 Cal. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-county-of-san-francisco-v-linares-cal-1940.