Hoffman v. Van Duzee

65 P.2d 1330, 19 Cal. App. 2d 517, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 468
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 12, 1937
DocketCiv. S. C. 22
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 65 P.2d 1330 (Hoffman v. Van Duzee) 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
Hoffman v. Van Duzee, 65 P.2d 1330, 19 Cal. App. 2d 517, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 468 (Cal. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

SHINN, J., pro tem.

Plaintiffs had judgment in an action to quiet title to a city lot and defendants appeal.

According to a map of the Hubbs tract recorded in 1906, there was a block of seven lots facing on Anaheim Street in the city of Long Beach between Alamitos Avenue on the west and Orange Avenue on the east, having a total frontage of 428.95 feet. The lots were numbered consecutively from one on the west to seven on the east; each had a frontage on Anaheim of 60 feet, with the exception of lot one, which was shown on the map to have a width of 63.95 feet, and lot seven, which was shown to be 65 feet in width. This controversy is between plaintiffs, owners of lot three, and defendants, owners of lots one and two. It arises out of the claim made by defendants that the block as originally laid out was actually 431.60 feet in length between Alamitos and Orange Avenues, or 2.65 feet in excess of the length shown on the map. Defendant Clara R. Hubbs, here represented by her guardians, was the original owner of the subdivision, and the lots sold in the tract, including lot three, were conveyed by reference to the recorded map.

Defendants contend that such excess of frontage as exists should be allocated to their lot one under rules which it is not necessary to state. Plaintiffs contend, and the court found, that the recorded map was correct and that no such excess existed in the block.

It is evident that the whole case turns upon a question of fact. If the court’s finding that the map was not proven to be incorrect is supported by the evidence, the case is disposed of, and it becomes unnecessary to determine how any excess *519 frontage should be allocated as among the owners of the several lots in the block.

The contention of defendants is that the map was in error in that it failed to include within the boundaries of the block as delineated all of the land facing Anaheim Street between Orange Avenue and Alamitos Avenue. The question which the court had to decide was the width of the block in 1906, at the time the land was surveyed and platted into lots. The court assumed, to start with, that the map was correct; this was a proper assumption. (O’Farrel v. Harney, 51 Cal. 125.) When defendant Clara R. Hubbs conveyed plaintiffs’ lot three by reference to the recorded map, the map thereby became a part of the conveyance so far as the location of plaintiffs’ lot was concerned. (Churchill Co. v. Beal, 99 Cal. App. 482 [278 Pac. 894]; Craign v. Powell, 128 U. S. 691, 696 [9 Sup. Ct. 203, 32 L. Ed. 566, 568] ; followed in Kneeland v. Korter, 40 Wash. 359 [82 Pac. 608, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 745]; 4 R. C. L. 117; 22 R. C. L. 283.) The deed to lot three is to be understood as plaintiffs contend, and as the court found, namely, as a conveyance of a parcel of land 60 feet in width on Anaheim Street, commencing 123.95 feet east of Alamitos Avenue, such being the width of defendants’ lots one and two. Dimensions shown on recorded maps used and referred to in conveyances for the purpose of description express the understandings and agreements of the parties with reference to the location and boundaries of the land conveyed. They are to be taken as correct until shown by clear proof to be in error. At the trial plaintiffs relied upon the map and did not have to prove its correctness. The map itself until shown to be incorrect, furnished proof of the fact that the west line of plaintiffs’ lot was 123.95 feet east of the intersection of Alamitos Avenue and Anaheim Street, that intersection being the northwest corner of the block. In other words, the map which plaintiffs introduced in evidence made out a prima facie case for the relief which they sought. Defendants, who sought to impeach the map, had the burden of proving that it was incorrect. They undertook to prove that the block was 431.60 feet long at the time the land was surveyed and the map was recorded. In their attempt to do this they proved the results of a survey made in December, 1934, by C. W. Cook, a licensed surveyor, who testified as a witness. His testimony related to the distance between the west line *520 of Orange Avenue and the east line of Alamitos Avenue. The weakness of this evidence is found in the fact that his survey was made from initial points not identified with the original survey. Defendants did not produce the field notes of the original survey, nor did their later survey purport to be a resurvey which used any of the initial points or monuments of the original survey. It was based upon information which Mr. Cook received in the office of the city engineer as to certain monuments which had been set by the city engineer purporting to mark the centers of street intersections of the four streets surrounding the tract. It was not shown when or how these monuments were set, nor were they verified by any kind of proof. Mr. Cook found no stakes or other boundaries marking what he used as the north corners of the block in making his measurement of the length of the block. The trial court was not obliged to find that Mr. Cook’s survey was more accurate than the original survey. It could be no better than its starting points, and as the authenticity of these was in doubt, the survey as a whole was inconclusive. As no evidence except the map was offered as to the actual location of the streets in 1906, the proof of defendants failed to show that the distance between the streets as they were located in 1906 was any greater than that shown on the map. Defendants’ survey, in so far as it was based upon information obtained from the city engineer’s office, was not sufficient to prove that there was an excess of frontage in the block over that shown on the map. The trial court could not speculate as to matters which the proof left in doubt. Nor can this court weigh the evidence, as appellants desire us to do, and reach a finding contrary to that of the trial court.

Mr. Cook found certain surveyor’s stakes, one 305 feet and the other 365 feet west of what Mr. Cook took to be the northeast corner of the block. Mr. Hubbs measured from what he took to be the northeast corner in 1918 and found the same stakes which Mr. Cook discovered. According to the map, these should have marked the north corners of lot two, and if they were true corners, plaintiffs ’ lot three lay 126.60 instead of 123.95 feet east of Alamitos Avenue. These stakes were not identified as original stakes. While they were described as surveyor’s old stakes, no one knew when or how they had been placed. Unidentified as they were, they did not prove the original survey to have been in error in its measurement *521 of the length of the block, and, of course, unless shown to have been the original stakes, they could not have been accepted as marking the north boundaries of lot two and the north common corner of lots two and three.

Section 2077 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “6.

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Bluebook (online)
65 P.2d 1330, 19 Cal. App. 2d 517, 1937 Cal. App. LEXIS 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-van-duzee-calctapp-1937.