Golden v. City of Vallejo

182 P. 347, 41 Cal. App. 113, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 426
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1982.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 182 P. 347 (Golden v. City of Vallejo) 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
Golden v. City of Vallejo, 182 P. 347, 41 Cal. App. 113, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 426 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action is in ejectment, and the vital question relates to the title to á strip of land through which flows a creek into a reservoir belonging to the water system of the city of Vallejo. Appellant owns the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 9, township 5 north, range 3 west, M. D. M., and the respondent owns the quarter directly east. The controversy is over the boundary between these subdivisions, and the only point in dispute is as to the location of the northeast? corner of Golden’s property. Appellant claims that a certain mound of rock called the “O’C Corner” (or O’Connor Corner) is the proper point; while *115 respondent insists that the lower court was justified by the evidence in finding that the true comer is on the other side of the creek, where it was located in 1892 by E. N. Eager, the county surveyor of Solano County.

The following diagram illustrates these points and also the disputed tract of land, being about 180 feet in width and a quarter of a mile in length:

The said wateD-way is of great importance to the city of Vallejo and it has been used as a part of its water system *116 The said water-way is of great importance to the city of Vallejo and it has been used as a part of its water systemsince 1892. No doubt this was known to Golden when he took up his part of the section in 1907 and he must have been familiar with said Eager corner and the claim of the city to this disputed tract. He waited, however, till 1914 before questioning the city’s right and title to the property. This circumstance is not decisive, though, as neither estoppel nor prescription is claimed, but it can hardly be ignored in the consideration of the good faith of the parties.

Independent, however, of any delay by either party in claiming title, we are satisfied after a careful reading of the entire record that there is sufficient support for the court’s finding that said northeast corner of appellant’s land is located on the western side of the creek, substantially as testified to by said Eager.

The question is to be determined largely by a consideration of the expert evidence, the testimony of the surveyors who were called by the respective parties. It may be admitted that some support is furnished for appellant’s theory, that the said “O’C Corner” was established by the original government survey as the common comer of said sections 3, 4, 9, and 10. .There is some evidence that it was so recognized in the community for many years, and the testimony of plaintiff, himself a surveyor, O. H. Buckman, county surveyor of Napa County, and Surveyor B. L. Mineher rather favor appellant’s view; but it is somewhat significant that in the testimony of Mr. Golden are found the following statements: “I made notes of this survey [his survey of the grounds], but, I did not make a map of it. I have not these notes here, I don’t know where they are. . . . The surveying work that I did there is not in accordance with the government rules for establishing lost corners.” Mr. Buckman, also, admitted: “I have not the notes of the survey I made for Mr. Golden. I have mislaid them and cannot find them. ’ ’

On the other hand, it is apparent that Mr. Eager and T. D. Kilkenny, city engineer of Vallejo, who made surveys of the premises, submitted full notes of their work and were thoroughly examined and cross-examined by the court and the parties.

Of course, this circumstance is not to be unduly magnified, but it could hardly be disregarded in- viewing the conflicting testimony of said experts. Manifestly, we are not called upon to say whether the testimony of plaintiff’s experts would have *117 ! supported a conclusion in favor of Ms theory, but to determine whether there is any substantial support for the adverse finding of the court.

1 As to this “O’C Corner” Mr. Eager testified: “It had marks on it and they were not government markings. It was a stake with O ’C on it. If I had not made any survey at all and just came across that mound of rocks when I first made my survey in 1887, there was plenty about it to show me that it was not the government corner. The stake itself was a redwood stake, and it was a flat board "and the government comers are always stakes larger than a flat board. . . . The mound of stones at the O ’C corner was smaller than the government builds for the section corners. ... It was not the government corner because government corners are never marked in the way this was. ’ ’

And as to tMs, plaintiff himself testified: “The O’C corner consists of a pile of rocks with a stake in it marked ‘O’C.’ The letters O. C. are cut into the stake. I first saw the 0 ’C corner with the same stake in it over twenty years ago. I am familiar with the manner in which section corners are marked by government surveyors. The 0 ’Connor comer is not marked in that manner.”

Clearly, the foregoing furnishes some evidence that the monument placed at said point was not the work of the government surveyor. It is not conclusive, but in the absence of any positive evidence as to who placed said flat board and rocks, it is a circumstance tending to show that it was the work of another than the government surveyor and that it was done at a different time from the original survey, it being a fair inference that the government surveyor would pursue the usual course of the official surveyor in marMng the corner. Or, if it be assumed that the original monument was destroyed or effaced and another put in its place by the government surveyor or someone else acting in good faith, it is not unreasonable to expect that the substituted monument would conform as nearly as possible to the original. "We are to keep in mind that it is a question of probabilities whether the so-called monument or any monument was placed at that point by the government surveyor, and said circumstance was of some importance in determining that question. In other words, it is less probable that it was a government monument by reason of the fact that its construction was so different *118 from the usual government monument that marks the corner of a township.

Another circumstance of greater significance is, that it does not conform to, but rather contradicts, the calls of the original field-notes. These notes show that when the surveyor in 1863 ran north between sections 9 and 10, he set the corner post for 3, 4, 9, and 10 amidst some live-oak trees. Then running east between sections 3 and 10, he crossed the creek at 3 chains. That is, he had to run east from the corner to reach the creek. If we are, therefore, to give effect to this original report of the government surveyor, we must place the corner on the west of the creek, but the O ’C comer is on the east side.

As to this Mr. Buckman testified: “I recall that the field-notes of the. government survey say that you left the post and crossed the creek three chains east of the post. You could not do that if the 0 ’Connor Comer is the corner location. The 0 ’Connor Comer is east of the creek while the corner referred to in that part of the field-notes would be west of the creek.”

Again, there is no chamisal at the 0 ’Connor corner, whereas the field-notes say that the surveyor in leaving the comer established by him left the “Chamisal at post.” As to this Mr.

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182 P. 347, 41 Cal. App. 113, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-v-city-of-vallejo-calctapp-1919.