Davidow v. Griswold

137 P. 1111, 23 Cal. App. 188, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 165
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1168.
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 137 P. 1111 (Davidow v. Griswold) 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
Davidow v. Griswold, 137 P. 1111, 23 Cal. App. 188, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 165 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is an action to quiet title and the main question is whether plaintiffs are estopped from denying the dedication of certain parks and streets as delineated on a map of the townsite of Los Guilieos, afterward lmown as Kenwood, in the county of Sonoma. There is little controversy as to the vital facts, most of them having been stipulated at the trial. It is not disputed that two maps were filed, one on the ninth day of August, 1887, entitled, “Map of the Town of Los Guilieos, Sonoma County, Cal.,” and the other on the twentieth day of February, 1893, entitled, “Revised map of the town of Kenwood, formerly Los Guilieos, Sonoma *190 Co., California,” and that the latter was a duplicate of the former except as to the name of the town.

It is admitted hy appellants that, by reason of the filing- of these maps, there was an offer of dedication of the property in controversy, but it is contended that the offer was not accepted and it was afterward withdrawn and revoked.

On the other hand, respondents claim that, by reason of the filing of these maps and the sale of many lots in accordance therewith, an acceptance of the offer of dedication was necessarily implied and that thereby the dedication became complete and beyond the power of recall or revocation. The common source of title is the Sonoma County Land and Improvement Company, and it was stipulated: “That on Jan. 30, 1887, - Sonoma County Land & Improvement Company, then a corporation, became the owner in fee simple of those portions of subdivisions 6 and 7 of Los Guilicos Rancho, Sonoma County, lying south and west of the county road leading from Sonoma to Santa Rosa; that all the land delineated upon the maps introduced in evidence in this action is included within said portions of said subdivisions of said rancho.

“That between January 30, 1887, and October 18, 1894, said Sonoma County Land and Improvement Company executed and delivered to a large number of persons about 75 deeds to a large number of parcels of land in said townsite, describing them in nearly every instance as the same are numbered and indicated on the map filed August 9, 1887, and in such deeds made reference to said map, all of which deeds were, subsequently, recorded in the office of the county recorder of Sonoma County.

“That the chain of title through which plaintiffs acquired the property described in the complaint contains a number of deeds, wherein it is described by lot and block numbers, referring to the one or the other of the two maps of 1887 and 1893.

“That the Sonoma County Land & Improvement Company, on Jan. 24, 1890, executed and delivered a deed to the North Pacific Land & Improvement Company, its successors in interest, conveying all unsold lots in the townsite of Kenwood, and therein described them by lot and block number and referred to the map of 1887.

*191 “That between Feb. 20, 1893, and Sept. 14, 1898, the Sonoma County Land & Improvement Company executed and delivered to some twenty different grantees deeds to a large number of parcels of land in said townsite, describing the same in nearly every instance by lot and block number, as they appear on the map filed Feb. 20, 1893, and in such deeds referred to such map, all of which deeds were later recorded.”

These maps, it may be said, and the surveys therein delineated were made by Preston R. Davis, county surveyor of Sonoma County, under the direction of the said land and improvement company, and the townsite as shown by said maps was laid out on the ground and indicated by appropriate monuments. The said company and its successor in interest, the North Pacific Land and Improvement Company, caused copies of said maps to be published in print and to be furnished to intending purchasers, and they represented to the purchasers of lots that the same was a true map of said townsite as the same has been laid out and dedicated to public use and, in making deeds to said purchasers, they described the lots with reference to the streets and avenues and block and lot numbers indicated on said maps, and the purchasers bought their lots in reliance upon said representations and said maps, and many of said purchasers and their successors in interest, upon the faith of said representations and said maps, placed expensive improvements upon their respective holdings.

We are justified in saying that all the foregoing facts are shown by the evidence, the stipulations of the parties and the admissions of the pleadings. Indeed, it is hardly necessary to go beyond the pleadings themselves. The said facts, with others, are set out in the verified complaints in intervention and the purported denial is so equivocal and evasive that plaintiffs could have no just cause for complaint if their answer were treated as an admission of the existence of the facts not covered by the stipulation. Their answer is in this form: “These plaintiffs have no information upon the subject sufficient to enable them to answer all of the allegations contained in the complaint in intervention and basing their denial upon that ground these plaintiffs deny,” etc. The matters were of such character that the plaintiffs could not *192 hide behind the pretense of want of information. (Zany v. Rawhide Gold Min. Co., 15 Cal. App. 373, [114 Pac. 1026].) Besides, in the absence of an averment to the contrary, we must assume that the plaintiffs believed the facts to be as alleged in the complaint in intervention. They did not even bring themselves within the provision of the code permitting an answer upon the ground of want of “information or belief.” (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 437.)

If we may state it more concisely, we have, then, this situation : The owner of a tract of land has it surveyed and platted as a townsite. He has a map of it, upon which are delineated streets and parks, filed in the recorder’s office. He sells lots all over this townsite, described by reference to this map, and, moreover, upon the positive representation that the streets have been laid out and dedicated to public use, and, in reliance upon these representations, the lots are purchased and improved. This may not be dedication in the strict acceptance of that term but the result is the same. The owner has voluntarily placed himself in a position where equity will not permit him to deny thereafter that the- said streets and parks are as represented by him; and, independent of the statement that they have been dedicated to public use, the other acts of the owner, considered' in connection with the said purchases under the conditions mentioned, would pre* elude the said owner from contending, at least as far as said purchasers are concerned, that they are not streets and parks. And if they are to be considered as really streets and parks when we regard the rights of the purchasers, it is difficult to understand how their status. would be changed when we regard the rights of the public generally.

We think the principles covering the case are clearly stated in San Leandro v. Le Breton, 72 Cal. 170, [13 Pac. 405], and Archer v. Salinas City, 93 Cal. 43, [16 L. R. A. 145, 28 Pac. 839].

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Bluebook (online)
137 P. 1111, 23 Cal. App. 188, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 165, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davidow-v-griswold-calctapp-1913.