City of Oakland v. Adams

174 P. 947, 37 Cal. App. 614, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 385
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 24, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 2025.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 174 P. 947 (City of Oakland v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Oakland v. Adams, 174 P. 947, 37 Cal. App. 614, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 385 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BEASLY, J., pro tem.

In this eminent domain proceeding by which defendants’ property was condemned by the city of Oakland for a public park, the judgment is attacked on this appeal by the defendants on the ground that the description of the property found in the complaint is insufficient. “The complaint,” says appellants’ counsel in his reply brief, “does not specifically describe the easterly boundary of this land, but it refers to a deed made by the Oakland Waterfront Company to the city of Oakland for such description. This deed fixes the easterly boundary as being the easterly line of the Rancho San Antonio as finally confirmed and patented to V. and D. Peralta between stations 131 and 134. . . . Nowhere in the patent are stations 131 or 134 or intervening stations mentioned or referred to.” The reference to the Oakland Waterfront Company’s deed to the city of Oakland as matter of description has the same effect as if the description were incorporated in the complaint. (Vance v. Fore, 24 Cal. 435.) This deed describes the westerly line of the park lands as the easterly line of Rancho San Antonio, as finally determined and patented to V. and D. Peralta by the United States of America, between stations 131 and 134; and the easterly line of the Peralta grant of the San Antonio Rancho between the stations mentioned was described in the patent as follows: “Thence meandering the west shore of San Antonio creek at the line of ordinary high water” to a station. Under the authority of Oakland v. Oakland, Waterfront Co., 118 Cal. 160, [50 Pac, 277], and City of Oakland v. Wheeler, 34 Cal. App. 442, [168 Pac. 23], this description must be held sufficient so far as the complaint is concerned.

It was further alleged in the complaint that the tract sought to be condemned was the whole of an entire tract, and three boundaries of this tract were admittedly described with certainty except as to the length of two of them. What may be called the two side-lines extending from the Fallon Street or western frontage of the property sought to be condemned to the easterly line thereof, which is the line in dis- *617 pute, were described as so many feet more or less in length; and this easterly boundary—which may be called an end-line of the tract for convenience—would have been left uncertain but for the references to the other deed and the patent, and the description of this line in the patent as the meander line of ordinary high tide of San Antonio Creek, which is a tidewater stream. But these references, taken with the allegation that the tract as a whole was to be condemned, were sufficient in the complaint to inform the defendants accurately of the land the plaintiff sought to take.

As contended in the case of City of Oakland v. Wheeler, supra, so here it is claimed that the line could not be located on the ground. The force of this objection is weakened by the fact that the city sought to condemn the whole of defendants’ tract, and that they themselves, as one of them testified, knew their land extended to the Peralta line, and had always paid taxes on and claimed all the land to the Peralta line. As in the case of City of Oakland v. Wheeler, so here, certain engineers testified that the line of the land could not be located on the ground by the description; but the court and jury visited and inspected the premises. What they found or saw does not appear in the record. There was some evidence as to the location of this tide- line upon the ground. There was also a fence on the property erected by the defendant, Edson F. Adams, which the jury found in a special verdict, in answer to a question submitted to them, was the Peralta line, and this Peralta line, as we have seen, was the line of ordinary high tide. It does not appear that the jury may not have been able to determine for themselves upon an inspection of the property that this fence was erected upon this line, the natural place for a fence marking the boundary of a man’s property to be. It is true that Mr. Adams testified that he did not erect the fence for this purpose, and gave various reasons which, it is claimed, show that he did not erect it with the intention of placing it upon the boundary of the defendant’s property; but the question of the construction of this testimony and what they saw when they visited the premises, and of the weight and construction of other testimony on this subject, was for the jury. It is well settled in this state that knowledge gained by. the court from a view of the premises is independent evidence, to he taken into consideration in *618 determining the issues of the case. (People v. Milner, 122 Cal. 171, [54 Pac. 833]; Hatton v. Gregg, 4 Cal. App. 537, [88 Pac. 592].)

“If a finding of fact is based upon a reasonable inference, it is not within the power of this court to set it aside any more than it is within its power to set aside any other finding supported by sufficient legal evidence, for a finding of fact based upon reasonable inferences drawn from facts proved with legal sufficiency is as much and as completely as any other finding of fact a finding based upon good and sufficient evidence.” (Ryder v. Bamberger, 172 Cal. 791, [158 Pac. 753].) If the court and jury discredited Mr. Adams’ explanation as to this fence, and found evidences upon the ground which indicated that the fence was actually placed upon the high-tide line, their finding in that respect cannot be here reviewed; and it may be added that .the jury found this fence line to be the Peralta grant line, and that the court, in findings made up by it, adopted this finding of the jury.

The appellants contend that the court and not the jury should have determined the boundaries of the land sought to be condemned and have located these boundaries upon the ground. While it may be said that the court should have done this under well-settled authorities in this state (Vallejo etc. R. Co. v. Reed Orchard Co., 169 Cal. 545, [147 Pac. 238]; City of Oakland v. Pacific Coast Lumber Co., 171 Cal. 392, [153 Pac. 705]; San Joaquin Irr. Co. v. Stevenson, 26 Cal. App. 274, [147 Pac. 254]), nevertheless, as the jury found the boundary to be at the fence line, and as the court subsequently adopted that finding as a fact, and as the jury evidently based its verdict for damages done to the defendants upon that line, no harm can possibly have come to the defendants by reason of the court not following the course which the defendants insist it should have pursued in settling the location of the boundary. The question of the sufficiency 'of this description was raised in many ways during the trial, but all these objections are answered by the foregoing considerations.

At the close of plaintiff’s testimony the defendants made a motion for a nonsuit. The plaintiff had rested its case without introducing any evidence whatever to identify the land described in the complaint. It may be conceded, al *619

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 947, 37 Cal. App. 614, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-oakland-v-adams-calctapp-1918.