Harter v. City of San Jose

75 P. 344, 141 Cal. 659, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1038
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 18, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 2836.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 75 P. 344 (Harter v. City of San Jose) 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
Harter v. City of San Jose, 75 P. 344, 141 Cal. 659, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1038 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

COOPER, C.

Upon the filing of the complaint in this action the court below granted a temporary injunction. After-wards an amended complaint was filed. To this complaint defendant demurred, and at the same time moved to dissolve the temporary injunction. The court sustained the demurrer and made an order dissolving the injunction. Judgment was thereupon entered in favor of defendants.

Plaintiff appeals' from the judgment and the order dissolving the injunction. Plaintiff, as a resident and taxpayer of the city of San Jose, seeks to maintain the action against the city and the other defendants—the mayor and common council—to enjoin them from executing a lease. The complaint alleges that there is within the county of Santa Clara, subject to the jurisdiction of San Jose, a tract of land of about four hundred acres, known as the “City Reservation,” or “Alum Rock Park,” and that the same is a public park, to the free use of which the plaintiff and the people of the city are entitled; that the defendants are about to, and will unless restrained, execute and deliver a lease to one Terry of two and one half acres of the said park for hotel purposes for a period of twenty-five years, said proposed lease being set out in an exhibit annexed to the complaint.

It is further alleged that the defendants have no power to execute the said lease; that such lease will deprive plaintiff and the residents of said city of the free use of the said park, destroy and injure the trees and shrubbery growing thereon, and mar the natural beauty thereof, to the great and irreparable injury of plaintiff and the residents of the city of San Jose.

The present charter of the city provides that a portion of the city park “may be leased for hotel purposes only, not exceeding two and one half acres, for a term of not more than twenty-five years, but no such lease shall in any manner restrict or interfere with the free use of the waters and grounds of the park by the public. ’ ’ (Charter of San Jose, see. 1, subd. 19, Stats. 1897, p. 602.)

*661 The contemplated lease is of two and one half acres and for the term authorized by the charter, and provides: ‘ 1 The premises leased hereby, and the business conducted thereon, shall at all times be subject to such stipulations and restrictions" as may be prescribed by the park commissioners, and this lease shall not in any manner restrict or interfere with the free use of the waters or grounds of the park by the public.”

Therefore, it is plain that the present charter gives the authority to execute the lease. In fact, the appellant does not contend otherwise.

The main contention is, that the park was dedicated to the public solely for a public park, and that the city authorities cannot devote any portion thereof to other purposes. The cases cited and relied upon in support of the contention arose where the original title was conveyed by private parties for the use of a park or other named public use. For the purposes of this case, it may be conceded that where the title is in a. private party, and such private party conveys land to the public for a certain definite public.purpose, it cannot be diverted to another and different purpose not connected with the original dedication. The title in such ease remains in the original owner, subject to the public use. The public takes it in trust and for the public purpose designated in the instrument of conveyance. There may be cases where the public authorities have diverted or dedicated the property of the municipality for a public park or other public purpose under such circumstances that individuals have acquired rights with reference thereto that would entitle such individuals to insist that the city authorities should not be allowed to divert the property to other and independent purposes; but in this case the property was not dedicated nor conveyed by an individual to the public for the purposes of a park. The plaintiff does not claim to be the owner, nor to have acquired any rights with reference to the park other than such as is possessed by every taxpayer in the city.

It appears that on September 13, 1866, it was resolved by the mayor and common council that the committee on public buildings proceed at once to cause a survey of such parts of the lands on and in the vicinity of Penitentia Creek as they *662 may deem necessary for the purpose of being set apart for a public park.

In March, 1867, the present park was, by virtue of said resolution, surveyed by one Bowen, the county surveyor, and a plat and field-notes made. On March 13, 1872, the legislature passed an act entitled “An act to reincorpórate the city of San Jose.” (Stats. 1871-1872, p. 333.) Section 63 of this act provided that the tract of land surveyed by Bowen (being the present park) “be and the same is hereby declared a public park. . . . Provided, that said mayor and common council may lease the same for a term not exceeding ten years upon such terms and conditions as they may deem proper, but such lease shall not authorize or permit any use or disposition of said park or reservation as to prevent the free use thereof during the existence of such lease by the people of said city as a public park.”

The said act took effect immediately. The acts of the city authorities, as thus approved by the legislature, constituted a dedication by the city to itself as a public park. No acceptance other than this was necessary. The dedication was complete upon the approval of the act. (Hoadley v. San Francisco, 50 Cal. 273.) Thus it is plain that the original dedication authorized the mayor and common council to lease all the park upon such terms and conditions as they might deem proper, the term of such lease not to exceed ten years. The act did not attempt to specify the purpose for which such lease might be executed, but left it wholly in the discretion of the mayor and common council. Thus the dedication was on the condition that the park or any portion of it might be leased.

On March 15, 1872, the legislature passed another act, entitled “An act to provide for the opening and improving of Santa Clara Avenue in the county of Santa Clara.” (Stats. 1871-1872, p. 370.) This act created a board of commissioners, who were authorized to expend money and improve Santa Clara Avenue. It was therein provided that ‘ Said land thus selected [the park] shall be designated by suitable monuments, and shall be and remain a public park for public uses forever, and shall be under the charge, control, and management of the board of commissioners hereby created.”

*663 Appellant contends that this latter act had the effect of making a dedication of the park, without any conditions as to leasing or any power to lease. We do not think such was the effect of the act. The tract of land had already been dedicated by the city authorities under the former act of March 13, 1872. The latter act could not dedicate that which had already been dedicated. It could, and did, place the management and control of the park in the board of commissioners. If appellant’s argument be conceded, then it must also be conceded that the legislature could, after the dedication, change the conditions upon which the dedication was made from time to time. And this the legislature has done.

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Bluebook (online)
75 P. 344, 141 Cal. 659, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 1038, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harter-v-city-of-san-jose-cal-1904.