Hall v. Fairchild-Gilmore-Wilton Co.

227 P. 649, 66 Cal. App. 615, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4061.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 227 P. 649 (Hall v. Fairchild-Gilmore-Wilton Co.) 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
Hall v. Fairchild-Gilmore-Wilton Co., 227 P. 649, 66 Cal. App. 615, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 487 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

*618 CRAIG, J.

After an opinion rendered by this court on appeal of the instant proceeding a rehearing was granted by the supreme court, which entered an order directing that the matter be retransferred here for such action as this court might deem proper in- view of the amendment of section 12% of the Vrooman Act, passed in 1923 (Stats. 1923, p. 110). In other respects the opinion formerly written by this court must be regarded as having met with the approval of the supreme court. We shall therefore follow that opinion except for giving consideration to the point presented for the first time upon application for hearing before the supreme court, and which merely requires that we determine whether or not the act as it stood in 1921 (Stats. 1921, p>. 563), or the amendment of section 12% of 19-23, shall prevail in making the reassessment contemplated by our former opinion.

The action is one to quiet title to a number of lots in the city of San Diego.

In the defendant’s answer it asserts the ownership of a lien thereon arising -as the result of an assessment for the improvement of certain streets under the Vrooman Act. The trial court held that the lien was void because of the facts found, but concluded that the curative clause in the Bond Act remedied the defects in the proceedings as to the property against which bonds had been issued. A decree was entered accordingly, quieting plaintiff’s title as to lots-which had been assessed for less than twenty-five dollars, but holding that defendant was the owner of a valid lien in each instance where a bond had been- issued. The plaintiff moved to set aside this latter part of the judgment, and to amend the conclusions of law pursuant to sections 663 and 663a of the Code of Civil Procedure, which motion was denied. Plaintiff thereupon appealed from so much of the judgment as declared the street bonds valid as above stated, and from the order denying the motion to modify the judgment.

The findings of the trial court detail the various steps which were taken in the assessment proceeding. It was found that the street improvement work in question was ordered to be done by the legislative body of the city of. San Diego and generally that the proceeding was conducted under the Vrooman Act. “That portions of the ground *619 for the improvement of which said resolution of intention No. 24453 made provision were at all times prior to November 27, 1918, part of that certain public square known as Washington Square, and shown and designated as such on said Pascoe map; that there has been no dedication, opening, or setting apart for street purposes of said portion of Washington Square, except by virtue of that certain ordinance passed by the legislative body of said city, November 20, 1918, approved by the mayor of said city November 27, 1918.” Here follows a copy of ordinance No. 7563 of the city of San Diego, where it is recited that the board of park commissioners of said city had requested and authorized the opening, naming and dedicating of certain public ways along and over that certain public square in Old Town in the city of San Diego, named and dedicated Washington Square. That it was for the public interest and convenience that such portions of said Washington Square should be used by the public, and for public ways and thoroughfares. It was then ordained: That a strip of land (describing strips lying along each side of said square, and including) Ninety (90) feet in width off of and along the southwesterly side of said Washington Square, be, and the same is hereby dedicated and set aside as and for a public way and thoroughfare, and the same shall be known as and is hereby named San Diego Avenue.”

The court also found: “That the portion of said Washington Square desigated by said ordinance No. 7563 as public streets constitutes more than sixty (60) per cent of the total area of said public square. That the portion of said Washington Square declared by said ordinance No. 7563 to be a portion of San Diego Avenue was included by said resolution of intention No. 24453, as a portion of San Diego Avenue, to be improved, without describing it other than as San Diego Avenue, and without any reference to Washington Square.”

In addition to these findings relied upon by appellant is another as follows: “That no resolution has ever been passed or adopted by the legislative body of said city, accepting, naming or defining the boundaries of said Taylor Street, or the portions of said San Diego Avenue (excepting said ordinance No. 7563), directed to be improved by said resolution of intention; but said streets are shown *620 upon said Pascoe Map of Old San Diego, but no definite or certain boundary line is shown upon said map for a portion of said San Diego Avenue, which portion of said Avenue was included by said resolution of 'intention No. 24453 among those to be improved thereunder.”

The charter of the city of San Diego which was in force at the time the rights of the parties to this proceeding accrued and subsequent thereto contained the following provisions: “All parks, places and squares now open and dedicated to the public use, or which may hereafter be opened or dedicated to the public use, shall be under the exclusive control and management of the said Board of Park Commissioners, with power to lay out, regulate and improve the same.”

Appellant attacks the proceeding upon numerous grounds, but on account of the views hereinafter expressed, a single fundamental proposition involved renders it necessary to reverse the judgment and order from which appeal is taken.

If for any reason the proceeding was invalid as to the taking of a portion of Washington Square for street purposes, and if this invalidity was of such character that it cannot be remedied by the curative clause of the act of 1917, then the entire assessment was void, and the appellant must prevail. City of Moline v. Greene, 252 Ill. 475 [37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 104, 96 N. E. 911]; City of Chicago v. Hill, 251 Ill. 502 [96 N. E. 223]: “The 17-foot ‘parkway’ here in question is as much a part of the improvement as any other part of the land to be taken. The striking from the ordinance and petition of the description of this 17-foot ‘parkway’ would make the improvement remaining in the ordinance another and different improvement from that originally provided for therein.”

We think it is clear that the city council of San Diego was utterly without jurisdiction to take over sixty per cent of Washington Square, a public park, and make of it a highway, thus entirely withdrawing that portion of it from the purposes of its original dedication. Numerous authorities sustain the proposition that when land is once dedicated for park purposes it is beyond the" authority of a city, or even the legislature, to withdraw it therefrom.

The city council could not devote property purchased for a park to the improvement of a public street, and the as *621 sessment of such property for street improvements would be invalid. (Powell v. Walla Walla, 64 Wash. 532 [117 Pac. 389].)

Warren v. Lyons City, 22 Iowa, 351, is in point.

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Bluebook (online)
227 P. 649, 66 Cal. App. 615, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-fairchild-gilmore-wilton-co-calctapp-1924.