Davis v. Pacific Improvement Co.

70 P. 15, 137 Cal. 245, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 539
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 2067.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 70 P. 15 (Davis v. Pacific Improvement Co.) 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
Davis v. Pacific Improvement Co., 70 P. 15, 137 Cal. 245, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 539 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

HARRISON, J.

The plaintiff brought this action for the partition of a block of land in San Francisco, known as South Beach Block 25, alleging in his complaint that he and the Pacific Improvement Company is each the owner of an undivided half thereof, and that the other defendants, including the appellant herein, “claim to have some interest in the premises described in the complaint herein under a common source of title, but the character and extent of the interest, if any they have, are to the plaintiff unknown”; and prayed that “all the defendants herein be required to exhibit and establish their respective claims of title in and to the said premises,” and that the court partition the property among the persons found entitled thereto. In his answer to the complaint the appellant set forth that he is the owner in fee of certain designated parcels of the land of which partition was sought. The block in question is a part of the land of which an estate of ninety-nine years was granted to the city of San Francisco by the state under the act of March 26, 1851. (Stats. 1851, p. 307.) The court found that the above estate which was granted to the city of San Francisco is vested in the plaintiff and the defendant Pacific Improvement Company, and that the appellant has no title or interest therein, and entered an interlocutory decree directing a partition of this estate between the plaintiff and the Pacific Improvement Company. From this interlocutory decree and from an order denying a new trial the present appeal has been taken.

At the trial of the cause the appellant, in support of his p-lp-im, introduced in evidence certain tax deeds made to him *247 July 13, 1886, by the tax -collector of the city and county of San Francisco for the parcels of land of which he claimed to be the owner, and his claim of title depends upon the validity of these deeds. One of these deeds was for a parcel of the land sold to him for delinquent.taxes for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1883, and the others for the fiscal year ending June 30,1884. No objection was made on behalf of the plaintiff to the introduction of the deeds in evidence, and in form they comply with the requirements of the Political Code, under which they are made prima facie evidence of certain facts and conclusive as to others. The plaintiff, however, contends that, certain evidence introduced by him overcame the prima facie evidence of the deeds, and deprived them of any effect as conveyance of title.

1. The plaintiff introduced in evidence certain maps or plats of the block in question upon which the block had been subdivided into lots, and contends that as the assessment was not made in accordance with these subdivisions, it was unauthorized and the subsequent proceedings were invalid.

Section 3650 of the Political Code prescribes the manner in which property is to be assessed and the form of the assessment-book. After declaring "that all the property to be listed within the county shall be specified in separate columns, under appropriate heads, it gives as' the heading for one of these separate columns:—

“3. City and town lots, naming the city or town, and the number of the lot and block according to the system of numbering in such city or town, and improvements thereon.”

The assessments upon which the tax deeds of the appellant were made describe the land by metes and bounds, and not by any number or block. One of the plats or maps introduced by the plaintiff is the map commonly known as the Eddy or Red Line map, which is claimed to have been made under the provision of section 5 of the aforesaid act of March 26, 1851. Of this map it is sufficient to say that, although block 25 thereon is subdivided by lines extending across the block, and these subdivisions are bisected, the several subdivisions are not numbered, nor is their size given, and consequently it would be impossible for them to be assessed by number. The object of the above provision of the Political Code is to obviate the necessity of describing each lot by metes and bounds and to *248 render an assessment by number equivalent to one made by metes and bounds. But an assessment of land described by metes and bounds is not invalidated by reason of the fact that it would be as fully identified by giving its description by the number of the lot and block in which it is located. It may also be said that the subdivision of the land granted to the city by the act of March 26, 1851, either into blocks or lots, was not authorized by the act, and that the purpose for the map authorized by the act was to make a line of demarcation between the upland and the tide-land. There was no evidence that the map had ever been officially declared a map of the city of San Francisco.

In his brief the plaintiff refers to a map made in 1853 for the sale Of the reversionary interest of the state in the land. It does not appear from the record that this map was offered in evidence, but from the copy set forth in the plaintiff’s brief it appears that the subdivisions are radically different from those shown upon the Eddy map. This map was, moreover, prepared for the purpose of making a sale of the reversion held by the .state, and does not affect the estate in the land covered by the partition, nor indicate that it was a part of the system of numbering in said city. The same observations may be made with reference to the map of the land prepared in the year 1868 from the one that had been made under the direction of the board of tide-land commissioners.

There was no evidence before the court that any “system” of numbering the lots and blocks had been adopted or was at any time in existence in San Francisco, and it appears that the land described in the tax deeds was for many years assessed under the same description as in the deeds. The fact that a single block has been subdivided into lots would not constitute a “system” of numbering, or indicate that other blocks were subdivided or numbered. In Klumpke v. Baker, 131 Cal. 80, where it did not appear that there was any system in San Francisco for the subdivision of the blocks into lots, it was held that the action of the assessor in subdividing the blocks for the purpose of assessment, even if erroneous as to ownership, does not invalidate the assessment, especially where the owner does not give to that officer a description of the land claimed by him.

2. It is next objected by the plaintiff that the assessor did *249 not prepare a delinquent list for either of the years 1882 or 1883, and consequently there was no legal notice of the sale.

The court does not find, nor was there any evidence, that the delinquent list was not prepared for either of these years, and under the provisions of the statute the deeds themselves became evidence that it was prepared. By section 3769 of the Political Code the tax collector is required to file with the county recorder a copy of his publication of the delinquent list, with his affidavit attached thereto that it is a true copy of the same, and by the same section this affidavit is made prima faci& evidence of this fact.

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Bluebook (online)
70 P. 15, 137 Cal. 245, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-pacific-improvement-co-cal-1902.