Gramer v. City of Sacramento

41 P.2d 543, 2 Cal. 2d 432, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 344
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 1935
DocketSac. 4732
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 41 P.2d 543 (Gramer v. City of Sacramento) 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
Gramer v. City of Sacramento, 41 P.2d 543, 2 Cal. 2d 432, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 344 (Cal. 1935).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

We are concerned in this case with an appeal by the plaintiff as well as one by the intervener from a judgment rendered after trial in favor of the defendants. The action was commenced to compel the City of Sacramento to execute a reconveyance of certain parcels of land to the plaintiff for the benefit of the heirs of John A. Sutter, Jr., and the complaint in intervention claimed the land for the heirs of John A. Sutter, Sr. The contest arises out of the following facts:

By an ordinance of the City of Sacramento passed January 31, 1924, the city abandoned Seventeenth Street between B and C Streets and the alleys in the block bounded by B, C, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Streets. This property is the subject of the action. The source of title goes back to John A. Sutter, Sr., who acquired the land upon which Sacramento is situated from the Mexican government. On October 14, 1848, John A. Sutter conveyed the property to his son John A. Sutter, Jr., who laid out the city with lots, squares, streets and alleys, the survey and map thereof having been made by Captain William H. Warner. Sales of lots by reference to the map were made and by January 2, 1849, there were nine or more lot owners to whom conveyances had been made. On that date Sutter, Jr., executed a quitclaim deed which in its material parts reads as follows:

“Know All Men By These Presents: That I, John A. Sutter Jr. of Sacramento City in the Teritory of California have this day conveyed and quit claimed and by these presents do convey and quit clame unto the present & futerer owners of Town lots and town property in Sacramento City in the teritory of California all my right title & Interest in and to cirtain portions of said City discribed as follows and under the conditions following, That is to say all the streets & Alleys in said City except so much of L and Twenty-seventh streets and of all alleys runs into or threw any part of Sutters Port, said portions of said streets & Alleys being reserved to myself said streets & alleys hereby conveyed to be *435 kept for Public use under such conditions & regulations as the future authoritys of said Citty may determine & initel said City shall be ineoperated & City authorityes established Frount Street shall be subject to the exclusive use of the owners of lots frunting on said frunt Street in such manner that .the owners of each lot or part of a lot fronting on said street shall have the exclusive use of all the ground lying immediately opposite his lot or part of a lot, and betwene such lot or part of lot & the river but all the cross streets such for instance as L, H, and others shall remain at all times open for Public use and also the entire following squares in said City, to wit [Here follows designation of certain squares.]
“The said several squares are hereby conveyed unto the present & future propriators of town property in said City for the public use of the inhabitance of said City to be applyed to such public purposes as the future ineoperated authoritys of said City from time to time declare and deturmin. To have & to hold the aforesaid primesis unto the present & Future owners of town property in said City the heirs & assigns forever upon this exspress condition that I reserve to myself my heirs & assigns all ferry Priveledges that I now have or may hereafter acquire on & upon aney or all of the aforesaid primesis.
“In testimoney whareof I have hirento set my name and affixt my seale the 2nd day of January in the yeare of our Lord eighteen hundred and forth nine.
“signed sealed & delivered in Presents of
“John A. Sutter Jr (seal)”

In general it is the contention of appellant that the deed conveyed the property to the city upon an express condition that it should be used exclusively for street and public purposes, and that by reason of the abandonment there has been a reversion of the title to her—or if the deed is to be treated as a dedication the abandonment has left the title in the grantor, his heirs and representatives. The position of the intervener is substantially the same, except that she claims as the result of deeds between John A. Sutter and his son that the reversion is to the heirs of John A. Sutter, Sr. At the time the deed was executed the City of Sacramento was not incorporated, that legal formality not occurring until February 27, 1850. After its incorporation, however, the *436 deed was accepted and the streets therein designated have been used as public thoroughfares down to the present time, except those which the evidence discloses to have been abandoned. A series of thirteen ordinances abandoning streets were introduced in evidence, the first having been adopted December 1, 1862, and the last on February 10, 1921. Evidence was introduced by the defendant municipality concerning the use of the vacated areas, from which it appears that the abandoned streets have been put to "a variety of uses, such as residential, industrial, railroad, schools and capítol building, apparently, as counsel says in his brief “upon the assumption, throughout the more than sixty-five years during which those vacations have taken place, that the owners of the property abutting on the vacated streets and alleys were also the owners of the fee to the middle of such streets and alleys and that as the owners they were entitled to take over possession and use as their own the vacated areas. ...”

The particular deed of January 2, 1849, has been, before this court, with respect to the question of whether it sufficiently designated a grantee or grantees, and also with reference to the construction of that portion which grants the squares for public purposes. The first case is that of Mayo v. Wood, 50 Cal. 171, wherein Mesick, as a grantee of Sutter, claimed title to certain of the squares designated in the deed, and we find on page 175 language material to the disposition of the present controversy. We there read: “The instrument executed by John A. Sutter, Jr., on the 2nd. day of January, 1849, dedicated the land in controversy to public use, to be applied ‘to such public purposes as the future incorporated authorities of said city may from time to time declare and determine’. It purported in terms to convey whatever title he had to ‘the present and future owners of town lots and town property in Sacramento City’. It recognized the fact that there were such ‘present’ owners and that Sacramento was then known as a city, though not at that time formally incorporated as such. Aside from the question of dedication, the instrument was operative as a conveyance to vest the title in the then ‘present’ owners of the town lots and property. This was a sufficient designation of the grantees to uphold it as a conveyance, and thereafter Sutter, Jr., had no title to this property which could *437 pass by Ms deed to Mesick.” (Italics ours.) The second case involved the right of the City of Sacramento to use one of the squares mentioned in the latter half of the deed, for the erection and maintenance of a municipal auditorium. It was determined in this latter case (Futterer v. City of Sacramento, 196 Cal. 248 [237 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
41 P.2d 543, 2 Cal. 2d 432, 1935 Cal. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gramer-v-city-of-sacramento-cal-1935.