City of San Diego v. Granniss

19 P. 875, 77 Cal. 511
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1888
DocketNo. 12856
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 19 P. 875 (City of San Diego v. Granniss) 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 of San Diego v. Granniss, 19 P. 875, 77 Cal. 511 (Cal. 1888).

Opinion

McFarland, J.

This case was submitted to the court below upon an agreed statement under sections 1138 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure. Judgment was rendered for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals. The matter involved is the right of plaintiff to assess and tax certain land of defendant, situated on what is known as the peninsula of San Diego, the question being whether or not said land is within the limits of the city. And its determination depends upon the true construction of an act of the legislature approved April 1, 1876, entitled “An act to reincorporate the city of San Diego.” (Stats. 1875-76, p. 806.)

From the maps before the court, and admitted to be substantially correct, it appears that the main body of the city is built around three sides of the bay of San Diego, somewhat in the shape of a horseshoe. The upper or inland end of the bay is toward the north, and the lower end, or mouth, is toward the south. Leaving the mainland at a point on the east side of the bay, and apparently not far from its mouth, is a strip of land ■which runs northerly up through the bay, and is called the “ peninsula.” The body of water lying immediately around the peninsula (on three sides) is called “ ship’s channel,” and on the westerly side leads out to the open sea. The peninsula runs far beyond the middle of the bay, its exact distance from the northern shore not appearing, and it is in the very center of the horseshoe. It is, topographically, almost as much in the heart of the city as if the latter inclosed it on all sides, as in a circle. There is a line designated in the said act incorporating the city as “a line drawn from the southwest corner of the pueblo at Chollas Valley, due west to the light-house at Point Loma”; and it is admitted that if the southerly limits of the city extend to that line (which is substantially a line between the two ends of the “horseshoe”), then the plaintiff should have had judgment. And the same admission is made if the city limits ex[514]*514tend over the bay “and into the ocean to the extent of one marine league from the shore.” But San Diego was a pueblo, and received a patent as such from the United States in accordance with a certain survey made in 1858 by J. C. Hayes. This patent does not include any part of the peninsula, but is confined to lands outside of the shores of the bay. And defendant contends that the limits of the city are bounded by the lines of the patent, except only that the water-front along the ship’s channel is slightly modified. We have thus stated the situation sufficiently for an understanding of the subject with which the legislature was dealing.

Defendant’s contention, it seems to us, rests almost solely upon the .proposition of considering the first clause of the first section of the act in question alone, and ignoring all other parts of the act which bear upon the question of the city’s limits,—a proposition which cannot be maintained without violating well-settled rules of construction. One clause of a statute or contract, apparently conclusive as to some particular thing, may be enlarged or limited by other provisions of the instrument upon the same subject. And in such a case the intent must be gathered from all the provisions considered together, the interpreter having his eye on the sub-' ject-matter of the instrument, and giving effect to each clause of the latter, when it can be done.

The first section of said act is as follows:—

“ Sec. 1. All that tract of land known as the pueblo of San Diego, included in the survey made for the city authorities in July, 1858, by J. C. Hayes, United States deputy surveyor-general for the state of California, shall henceforth be known as the city of San Diego, the boundaries of which shall be fixed by the field-notes of the said survey, except the water-front line on the bay, and this shall be ship’s channel of the said bay; and the municipal jurisdiction shall extend to said limits, and over [515]*515the waters of said bay, and into the ocean to the extent of one marine league from the shore.”

It will be observed that if this section 1 were to be alone considered, the construction contended for by defendant would not, by any means, be assured. It provides that the field-notes of the Hayes survey (the pueblo patent) shall furnish the boundaries of the city about to be incorporated, except as to the water-front line. The front line is, therefore, not to be fixed by the lines of the patent. How then is it to be fixed? The section first speaks of the line “ship’s channel.” But a glance at the map shows that ship’s channel is a very indefinite thing.

It is a body of water of indefinite width in the form of the letter U, commencing near the place where the peninsula leaves the mainland, and running up the easterly side, through the deep and wide northern part of the bay, around the head of the peninsula, and down the westerly side into the ocean. Now, is the intent that the front of the city shall be a curved line supposed to be drawn through the deep water along the outer undefined edge of this indefinite channel ? Or is the intent that it shall include, at least, all that lies north of a line drawn through and connecting the southerly parts of this siphon-shaped figure? The former construction would be inconsistent with the clause of the section which immediately follows, and which provides that the municipal jurisdiction shall extend “to said limits,” and into the ocean to the extent of one marine league from the shore. There is no limitation attached to the words “municipal jurisdiction,” and they include, of course, all the powers which the municipal corporation is given by its charter. And the charter includes all the powers usually granted such corporations, the power of taxation being expressly mentioned. There is no ground for the position that the word “jurisdiction,” as here used, should be construed as meaning jurisdiction for certain [516]*516special purposes only. It is subject to no limitations other than those of the charter itself.

But there are other provisions of the act which throw strong light upon the question under discussion. Section 2, which divides the city into wards, provides as follows: “For voting purposes, the inhabitants of that portion of the peninsula of San Diego which lies north of a line drawn from the southwest corner of the pueblo at Chollas Valley, due west to the light-house on Point Loma, shall be considered as in the second ward, and said inhabitants shall have the right to vote at city elections.” (The land north of that line includes practically the whole of the peninsula.) And the only way to get rid of this provision and maintain the contention of defendant is to assume that the legislature intended to give the elective franchise to people who were not residents of the city, and lived beyond its limits, free of any burden of taxation. But such an assumption would be in the very teeth of the time-honored rule that no construction of words is admissible which gives to them an absurd signification, if any other reasonable construction is possible. And that this clause was put into the act upon the understanding by the legislature that it was making the peninsula a part of the territory of the city, is apparent from subsequent provisions. Section 4 provides that no person shall be eligible to any city office, “nor shall any person be entitled to vote for the same, who shall not be a qualified voter according to the constitution of the state, and who shall not have resided in the city and ward for which he shall be elected, or offer to vote,

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Bluebook (online)
19 P. 875, 77 Cal. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-san-diego-v-granniss-cal-1888.