Forgeus v. County of Santa Cruz

140 P. 1092, 24 Cal. App. 193, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 108
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 25, 1914
DocketCiv. No. 1179.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 140 P. 1092 (Forgeus v. County of Santa Cruz) 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
Forgeus v. County of Santa Cruz, 140 P. 1092, 24 Cal. App. 193, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 108 (Cal. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land near Twin Lakes in Santa Cruz County, the bay of Mon *194 terey being the southerly boundary line of said land. One of plaintiff’s predecessors in interest, J. C. Kimble, by deed dated September 4, 1890, granted to the county of Santa Cruz, for public use as a highway, street, or road, a strip of land sixty feet in width, now known as the East Clift Drive. It is the contention of appellant that the road divided the Kimble land into two parts, leaving north of the road high land and south of the road beach land. The tract south of the road is the one in dispute. It consists of sand hills, or dunes, and a regular beach, and there is no dispute that for years teamsters have gone on to this tract and hauled away large quantities of sand, it being particularly adapted for plastering. In January, 1907, the Santa Cruz Bay View Company, the predecessor in interest of plaintiff, constructed a fence around the property it claimed to own south of the road. Openings were left in the fence for the use of the public in going on to the beach, and no objection seems to have been made to any one carrying away drift woodj but the fence excluded the teams and, under the direction of one of the supervisors and in accordance with the advice of the district attorney of the county, the north fence was torn down and the teamsters drove again upon the beach for the purpose of getting sand. A complaint was thereupon filed in the superior court for an injunction against the county of Santa Cruz and the board of supervisors as a whole and the members thereof individually to enjoin them from interfering with, molesting or destroying said fence or any part thereof and them or their agents from entering upon said premises. The court found that all the land south of said right of way is tide land which is covered by the neap tides, that plaintiff has no right, title, or interest therein, and that the fence constructed was and is a public nuisance, defendants being entitled to remove the same and to prevent the construction or rebuilding thereof at any point south of said right of way deeded by said Kimble to the county of Santa Cruz.

Manifestly—and it is so conceded—the vital point in the case relates to the location of the south line of plaintiff’s land, and this depends upon the northern limit of ordinary high water in Monterey Bay. It is the contention of plaintiff that the ordinary high water mark is two hundred and fifty feet *195 or thereabouts south of the southern boundary of said East Cliff Drive while, as must be apparent, the claim of defendants, which was approved by the court, is that said boundary of the drive corresponds with said ordinary high water mark.

If plaintiff’s position is correct or if said ordinary high water mark lies at any considerable distance south of said drive, it would follow that the court’s findings cannot be sustained.

There is no dispute as to the significance of the expression “ordinary high tide,” or that this line marks the said boundary of plaintiff’s land according to the common law and the rule which prevails in this state. This terminology does not refer to the “limit which the monthly spring tides reach,tides which occur only at the full and the change of the moon.

. . . The limit of the monthly spring tides is, in one sense, the usual high water mark, for as often as those tides occur, to that limit the flow extends. But it is not the limit to which we refer when we speak of ‘usual’ or ‘ordinary’ high water mark. By that designation we mean the limit reached by the neap tides, that is, those tides which happen between the full and change of the moon twice in every twenty-four hours.” (Teschemacher v. Thompson, 18 Cal. 11, [79 Am. Dec. 151], See, also, Gould, on Waters, p. 61; Long Beach Land & Water Co. v. Richardson, 70 Cal. 206, [11 Pac. 695], Valentine v. Sloss, 103 Cal. 215, [37 Pac. 326, 410], and section 670 of the Civil Code.)

Turning to the evidence, we can find no substantial support for the conclusion that the ordinary high water mark is as far north as the southerly boundary line of said drive. As the controversy is largely one of fact it seems advisable to quote quite extensively from the testimony of the witnesses.

It appears that, in 1896, by the United States Geodetic Coast Survey, the line of ordinary high tide was located all along the coast and at different locations were placed, so as to insure permanency as far as practicable, bench marks, a bench mark being a “mark affixed to a permanent object in tidal observations, or along a line of survey, to furnish a datum level.” The bench mark for the coast of Santa Cruz was placed on the stone steps of the court house at Santa Cruz. According to custom, said geodetic survey branch of the government, in 1910, published its tide tables for 1911 *196 by means of which, in connection with said bench marks, it is not disputed that the ordinary high water line of that date can be determined and located.

A. M. Baldwin, the county surveyor of the county of Santa Cruz, in April, 1911, established the line of ordinary high water along Twin Lakes, using said bench mark as the base for his survey, in connection with the data furnished by said tide tables. He explained, carefully and technically, his method of procedure. The result of his testimony, in connection with the map compiled by him according to his survey, would be the conviction that the northern, boundary line of the ordinary high tide is something over 240 feet south of said drive and that it corresponds substantially with the meander lines of the survey under which the United States patent was granted to plaintiff’s predecessors in. interest.

The foregoing surveys and calculations may be, of course, faulty; but if they cannot be held to be conclusive of the controversy, their significance as a factor is readily apparent. It may be stated that the county surveyor did not pretend to testify from his personal observation and knowledge of the tides.

E. R. Bennett, the minister of the Baptist church, which owns some property adjoining the beach in controversy, testified : “I have known, the property situated south of the road marked ‘East Cliff Drive,’ down to the Bay of Monterey, more or less intimately for twelve years. For five years I have passed the property very often and I have observed it at those times. I have been on the property. I remember in the year 1907 when the Santa Cruz Bay View Company built a fence on that property. I looked over the place, described as ‘sand bluff’ on the map, about three days ago, and it seems to be about in the average condition of the past several years. Taking the average, summer and winter through, it is very nearly the average tide at the present time.” He further testified that the beach had “not changed in any particular degree in the last twelve years, that "is, no permanent change is particularly noticeable. There have been temporary changes, quite a number of slight ones in the last twelve years” and that the ordinary high tide for twelve years has reached the line as claimed by plaintiff.

*197 C. A.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P. 1092, 24 Cal. App. 193, 1914 Cal. App. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/forgeus-v-county-of-santa-cruz-calctapp-1914.