Eltinge v. Santos

152 P. 915, 171 Cal. 278, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 623
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1915
DocketSac. No. 2143.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 152 P. 915 (Eltinge v. Santos) 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
Eltinge v. Santos, 152 P. 915, 171 Cal. 278, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 623 (Cal. 1915).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment adverse to him and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The action was one to quiet title to plaintiff’s land, to declare two certain buildings erected by defendant on a strip of land northwest of plaintiff’s property a nuisance as being on a public street; to require the removal of said buildings; to enjoin defendant from interfering with plaintiff’s access to the street on which it was alleged the said buildings had been placed, and for damages. The court granted all of the relief prayed for, except the money asked by way of damages.

Plaintiff’s land and that claimed by defendant belonged originally to J. W. Mitchell. In 1873 he filed a map of the townsite of Turlock, showing certain streets and subdivided lots, and also a railroad reservation. One of the streets, “Main Street” by name, passed in a northeasterly and southwesterly direction between the subdivided blocks, being eighty feet in width until it reached “Front Street,” which was at right angles to it. Southwest of Front Street were three so-called blocks, one of them only partly outlined on the map, and the other two not subdivided. These joined the railroad reservation on the southwest and were marked “Ware,” “House,” “Eeservation,” and two of them—the ones designated as “House” and “Eeservation”—were bounded on the *280 northeast by Front Street. These two were each two hundred and seventy-five feet in their longest dimension along Front Street and along the line of the railroad’s property, while the subdivided lots were three hundred feet long. This made the space between “House” and “Reservation” blocks (which would be the extension of Main Street after crossing Front Street) one hundred and thirty feet in width. Plaintiff asserted and the court found that she owned and was entitled to possession of certain property, including that part of “Reservation” block on the line of Main Street as said street is shown upon the original map.

J. W. Mitchell died in 1893 and the Fin de Siecle Investment Company became the owner of all of his property. On June 11, 1903, that corporation filed a new map of an addition to the town of Turlock, but indicating also the property here in controversy. By this map Main Street is shown as being of a uniform width of eighty feet and as extending across the railroad track. This was the first evidence to anyone examining the record that the Fin de Siecle Investment Company asserted title to the land now claimed by defendant, because the deed to the corporation of Mitchell’s former interest in the section of land had been general in its terms and had not included this property by special description. The strips twenty-five feet in width added to parcels originally marked “House” and “Reservation” were for the first time delineated on the new map as parts of said blocks.

On December 4, 1905, the Fin de Siecle Investment Company conveyed the lot twenty-five by seventy-five feet adjoining “Reservation” block to W. M. Coward, defendant’s predecessor in interest, who deeded it to defendant on December 1, 1906, for $950. On the tenth day of July, 1906, and before the incorporation of the city of Turlock, the board of supervisors of the county of Stanislaus accepted and published an official map of that county. On that map the lot in question and the similar lot opposite are shown as parts of the respective blocks and not as portions of Main Street. During March, April and May, 1907, defendant constructed on fifty feet of his lot a building which cost six thousand dollars, and in April, May and ■Tunp.; 1908, on the remaining twenty-five feet he put up another building at a cost of two thousand five hundred dollars. The court also found that during the time in which defendant *281 was constructing the buildings on said land and during the time he has maintained them, plaintiff owned the adjoining land claimed by her; that it was leased for a small rental by , tenants who constructed a warehouse thereon; that these tenants had full knowledge of defendant’s activities in erecting the buildings on the land claimed by him, but that plaintiff only knew of any operations on said premises while the second building was in course of construction. There were findings to the effect that neither the plaintiff, her predecessors, nor her tenants had ever used for ingress or egress the strip of land to which defendant asserts ownership. By the findings it is also established that from the time of his purchase thereof, defendant has been assessed for and has paid all taxes, including irrigation district taxes as well as county, city, and school taxes; that the officers of the county and the general public had actual knowledge of the occupancy by defendant of the property and his claim of ownership; and that no objection was made by any official to his use thereof; that the strip of land twenty-five by seventy-five feet claimed by defendant was never used for any purpose until he built upon it; that there was never any general travel over it, although it was open and not inclosed; and “that until the construction of the building by the defendant a telegraph pole and a flag pole stood at about the northeasterly corner of the building of defendant.” Plaintiff, according to the findings, has not, and never had, any interest in the said strip. Main Street is physically eighty feet wide throughout its length, and the buildings of defendant in no wise interfere with the use of said eighty feet. The court also found “that the premises and lands of plaintiff were conveyed to her according to the original map of Turlock; that said map was filed by and consented to by the owners of the land upon which Main Street was laid out, and that the owners of the land upon which Main Street was laid out and by whom said map was filed were at the time the owners of the land thereafter conveyed to plaintiff, and plaintiff derives her title to said land through said persons, and neither she nor her predecessors in interest have ever relinquished - or conveyed away their right to have Main Street kept open and maintained as delineated upon said map.” There were findings that the existence of the buildings depreciated the value of *282 plaintiff’s property and that the statute of limitations did not bar plaintiff’s action.

Among the conclusions of law was one that the strip of land in question was a portion of a public highway and that defendant was unlawfully in possession thereof. Another was as follows:

“That irrespective of the existence of said strip of land as a portion of the public highway, the said plaintiff, by reason of the conveyance to her of her said premises, in accordance with said plat, has acquired an easement over said strip of land and the right to have the same kept free from all obstructions of every kind and character, and to have there-over ingress and egress to and from her said premises without let or hindrance, and to remove and have removed all obstructions therefrom.”

The findings do úot support the conclusion that there was an irrevocable dedication of the strip of land in question to the public as part of a street. The filing of the map showed an intention to dedicate, but nothing more, while the filing of the later map by the investment company, Mitchell’s successor, evidenced an intention to withdraw the offer. Public dedication is a matter between the owner and the public— not between the grantor and his vendees.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 P. 915, 171 Cal. 278, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 623, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eltinge-v-santos-cal-1915.