Elliott v. McIntosh

183 P. 692, 41 Cal. App. 763, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 502
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 26, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2829.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 183 P. 692 (Elliott v. McIntosh) 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
Elliott v. McIntosh, 183 P. 692, 41 Cal. App. 763, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 502 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

NOURSE, J., pro tem.

Appeal from a judgment in favor of defendants in an action by plaintiff to eject defendants from a strip of land lying between the lands of the parties hereto, and being a portion of what was formerly laid out on a map as a street, but which was never accepted or opened for travel. The said tract was platted in 1873 and lots sold therein to predecessors of the parties hereto, Samuel Elliott, the husband of appellant, having acquired his title in October, 1883, the defendants having acquired theirs in May, 1917, just prior to the commencement of this action.

Samuel Elliott, the husband and immediate predecessor in interest of the appellant, planted the lots which he thus acquired in an orchard, which orchard extended over the lines of the disputed street, as indicated upon the map of the tract, and up to a fence which was built by one Riordan, a lessor of respondents’ predecessor, as early as 1906. All of the land here in dispute was planted in orchard and cultivated by Samuel Elliott for at least twenty-nine years before the action was commenced. The fence erected in 1906, apparently with the consent and approval of appellant and her predecessor, marked, the line of their cultivation and occupancy from that date until it was torn down ten years later by Morgan, the immediate predecessor of respondents. When this fence was- tom down, in 1916, a new fence was erected by Morgan on the center line of *766 what appeared on the map as Cedar Street, over the objection of appellant. The strip between the old fence erected by Riordan in 1906 and the fence erected by Morgan in 1916 is about twenty-two feet wide and includes one row of orchard trees planted by Elliott. On May 22, 1917, Morgan conveyed lots 2 and 3 of block B to respondents, and they continued the fence erected by Morgan, and claimed title to the premises on the theory that their deed to the lots carried their title to the center of the street.

As far as respondents’ case is concerned, the only evidence of title produced by them is their deed from Morgan, dated May 22, 1917. This deed does not purport to convey any right to the disputed land, but covers the two adjoining lots only. Thus the only claim of title on the part of respondents is based upon the theory that the conveyance by lot number with reference to the. recorded map carries title to the center of the street. In order that this may be so it is necessary that there be first a valid dedication and acceptance of the street. The only evidence of dedication is the record of the map filed in 1873. It is conceded that there was no formal acceptance and no user.

[1] When an owner of a tract of land plats it upon a map, designating certain portions as public streets or highways, and thereafter records the map, he is deemed to have thereby made an offer to dedicate the indicated streets to the public for highway purposes. If such dedication is accepted, it thereupon becomes irrevocable. [2] By such dedication alone he does not part with the title to the land designated as streets, but grants to the public an easement only for highway purposes. Upon the failure to accept the offer of dedication the easement expires, and the full title reverts to the owner of the adjoining land.

[3] The mere filing of a map designating certain portions of the tract as streets does not constitute an acceptance. (Hayward v. Manzer, 70 Cal. 476, 480, [13 Pac. 141]; Niles v. Los Angeles, 125 Cal. 572, 577, [58 Pac. 190].) [4] Acceptance of the offer of dedication must be evidenced within a reasonable time after the offer, and if this is not done, the owner may resume possession, and thereby revoke his offer. (Niles v. Los Angeles, supra.) [5] Such acceptance may be either actual or implied. It may be done by the formal act of the public authorities having jurisdiction over the premises. It may be done by *767 the use on the part of the public for such a length of time as will evidence its intention to accept the dedication. (Hayward v. Manzer, supra.) [6] Again, if an owner, having recorded such a map, sells the lots designated thereon by specific reference to such map, he is presumed to have made an irrevocable dedication of the streets, which dedication thereby becomes accepted by use of the public. (San Leandro v. Le Breton, 72 Cal. 170, 175, [13 Pac. 405]; Berton v. All Persons, 176 Cal. 610, 615, [170 Pac. 151]; Davidow v. Griswold, 23 Cal. App. 188, 192, [137 Pac. 619].)

[7] Proceeding from this proposition it must follow that if lots are sold by number and not by metes and bounds, reference being made to such a map, the original dedicator is estopped to deny that the portions designated as streets on the map were not in fact dedicated or accepted. Furthermore, conveyances of such a character carry title to the center of the street. (Colgrove Water Co. v. Hollywood, 151 Cal. 426, 431, [13 L. R. A. (N. S.) 904, 90 Pac. 1053]; Civ. Code, sec. 1112.) But this, of course, is not the ease if the portion claimed as a street is not such in fact. (Sanchez v. Grace Methodist Church, 114 Cal. 295, 299, [46 Pac. 2].)

[8] In the case at bar it is conceded that Cedar Street was never accepted by the county and was never opened or used as a public street or highway. The record fails to disclose any conveyance on the part of the dedicator of the lots delineated on the map which would effect an implied acceptance under the rule of the San Leandro ease, supra. Certain deeds were offered in evidence showing conveyances by predecessors of the parties to this litigation, and such deeds refer to the lots shown upon the map filed in 1873; but it does not appear that Cedar Street was not abandoned long prior to their execution. The admitted fact that the street was never formally accepted and never opened or used as a highway supports the presumption that it was never even impliedly accepted, and that the land so designated as Cedar Street had fully reverted to the owner before any of these deeds were executed.

Such being the case, the respondents cannot claim that by the deed of May 22, 1917, they procured title to the center of the street. This deed, therefore, was not relevant to the issues, as it did not cover the property in suit, and the trial *768 court should have sustained the objection to its introduction in evidence. This leaves the respondents as mere trespassers without any color of title or right to possession.

As the title to the land embraced within the lines of ■ Cedar Street reverted to the original dedicator upon failure to accept his offer of dedication, the question remains whether appellant obtained any title or right to possession which would entitle her to maintain this action.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P. 692, 41 Cal. App. 763, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-mcintosh-calctapp-1919.