Hixson v. Jones

253 Cal. App. 2d 860, 61 Cal. Rptr. 883, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2415
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 25, 1967
DocketCiv. No. 23388
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 253 Cal. App. 2d 860 (Hixson v. Jones) 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
Hixson v. Jones, 253 Cal. App. 2d 860, 61 Cal. Rptr. 883, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2415 (Cal. Ct. App. 1967).

Opinion

BROWN (H. C.), J.

Appellants filed a quiet title action to a strip of real property naming as defendants the City of Fremont, California; the County of Alameda, L. T. Whipple and respondents Jones. The City of Fremont filed a disclaimer to the disputed property. The County of Alameda and L. T. Whipple (who answered the complaint), having no interest in the real property, did not appear at the trial to contest either Hixons’ or Jones’ claims to the property. Respondents Jones filed an answer and cross-complaint also praying to quiet title in their names.

The trial court quieted title in favor of respondents.

This action was brought by appellants to determine the ownership of a strip of real property 25 feet wide and 110 feet long, adjacent to a parcel of property owned by appellants, which is 52.5 feet wide by 110 feet long. The question is whether or not the deed to this parcel of property from appellant’s grantor, Laura Thane Whipple, included a 25-foot strip of land which is one-half of what was designated as 3d Street, on a map filed in 1907, entitled “Bond Tract,” which map was recorded in Alameda County, subdividing the area in question into lots and dedicating parts thereof to the public as streets. Among the streets shown on this map is 3d Street (later rejected as a street by the county), which is immediately adjacent to the parcel of property acquired by appellants from Laura Thane Whipple. This 1907 map further divided the land into lots 35 feet in width by 100 feet in depth.

Appellants testified that in 1954 they were interested in purchasing a corner lot from Mrs. Whipple. At this time the County of Alameda had a minimum lot size requirement of 50 feet by 100 feet. Mrs. Whipple’s selling agent, B. C. Parks, added three 35-foot lots together (105 feet) shown in the subdivision map of 1907 and divided the total into two lots of 52.5 feet by 100 feet in order to comply with the county [862]*862minimum lot size requirement. Appellants desired a longer lot and 10 feet was added from a rear lot (lot 9 on 1907 map).

Parks told appellants prior to the signing of the deed that if 3d Street was ever abandoned it would undoubtedly-become attached to their property and that, although they could not build anything stationery on the area known as 3d Street, he supposed they could raise vegetables or such things on it, and if the street was ever abandoned they would recover title to it.

Appellants believed that it was to be a street and had no interest in acquiring title to it. Parks requested the title company to make up the legal description based on the lots but neither he nor Mrs. Whipple specifically requested them to use a metes and bounds description. The title company thereupon drew a description of the real property situated in the City of Fremont, County of Alameda, using the following language: “Lot 8 and a portion of Lots 7 and 9 in Block 4, according to the map of ‘Subdivision of the Bond Tract’, filed August 22, 1907 in the office of the County Recorder of Alameda County, and of record in Map Book 23, page 26, bounded as follows: Beginning at the intersection of the northwestern line of County Road No. 1008, known as Driscol Road, with the southwestern line of 3rd Street, as shown on said map, and running thence along said line of Driscol Road southwesterly 52.50 feet; thence parallel with said line of 3rd Street northwesterly 110 feet; thence parallel with said line of Driscol Road northeasterly 52.50 feet to said line of 3rd Street; thence along the last mentioned line southeasterly 110 feet to the point of beginning. ’ ’

Mrs. Whipple testified that at the time of the sale to appellants she believed that 3d Street was a street; that she did not intend to sell 3d Street but intended that it should remain a street; and that she had no intention of later reclaiming it for herself.

In the years that followed, appellants used and maintained the strip. On March 21, 1963, Mrs. Whipple granted the remaining property she owned in the area to the respondents Eugene P. and Ann T. Jones but did not convey the strip of land 25 feet wide by 110 feet long, the land in dispute. On November 6, 1963, appellants brought this action to obtain a court declaration that 3d Street had been abandoned and also to quiet title in and to the one-half of 3d Street adjacent to their property. Over three months after the action was filed, Mrs. Whipple quitclaimed to the respondents Jones any inter[863]*863est she may then have owned in and to the 25-foot strip, because she thought it would do well as a driveway for access to the entire Jones property (there were other accesses to the property).

On June 10, 1965, the defendant City of Fremont filed a disclaimer, disclaiming any interest in the portion of 3d Street under dispute.

Under these facts it is our view that the trial court erred in its conclusion that respondents Jones owned the 25-foot strip of land.

“A transfer of land bounded by a highway, passes the title of the person whose estate is transferred to the soil of the highway in front to the center thereof, unless a different intent appears from the grant.” (Civ. Code, § 1112.) In Neff v. Ernst, 48 Cal.2d 628, 635 [311 P.2d 849] the court states: “It is the general rule that it will be presumed that where property is sold by reference to a recorded map the grantee takes to the center of the street or streets shown on the map as bounding the property, even though the streets shown therein appear to have been vacated or abandoned or the deed itself refers to the streets as having been vacated or abandoned. The presumption continues to apply in the absence of a clear expression in the deed not to convey title to the center line. (Anderson v. Citizens Sav. etc. Co., 185 Cal. 386 [197 P. 113]; Pinsky v. Sloat, 130 Cal.App.2d 579 [279 P.2d 584].)”1 In case of doubt, a deed must be interpreted in favor of the grantee. (Civ. Code, § 1069; Neff v. Ernst, supra.)

In the early case of Anderson v. Citizens Sav. etc. Co., 185 Cal., at pages 386, 396 [197 P. 113], the court said: “ ‘The whole question is most exhaustively discussed by the learned American editors of Smith’s Leading Cases (8th ed., vol. 2, p. 178) in the notes of Dovaston v. Payne, and the conclusion reached that the treatment of the highway as a monument furnishes the means to include the fee to the street center in every case where there is not express language excluding it. (See, also, 3 Kent’s Com. 349.) The wisdom of such a con[864]*864struction is manifest, and the great weight of authority sustains it.’ ”

The description on the August 2, 1954 deed to appellants uses a lot description and in addition a metes and bounds description along “the southwestern line of 3rd Street, . . .” The use of a metes and bounds description which does not include one-half of an adjoining street is one of the ways to rebut the statutory presumption that the grantee takes the underlying fee to the center of the street.2 (Joens v. Baumbach, 193 Cal. 567 [226 P. 400]; Machado v. Title Guar. & Trust Co., 15 Cal.2d 180 [99 P.2d 245]; Merchant v. Grant, 26 Cal.App. 485, 489 [147 P.

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Bluebook (online)
253 Cal. App. 2d 860, 61 Cal. Rptr. 883, 1967 Cal. App. LEXIS 2415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hixson-v-jones-calctapp-1967.