Humboldt County v. Van Duzer

292 P. 192, 48 Cal. App. 640, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 486
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 26, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 3335.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 292 P. 192 (Humboldt County v. Van Duzer) 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
Humboldt County v. Van Duzer, 292 P. 192, 48 Cal. App. 640, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 486 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

KOFORD, J., pro tem.

This is an appeal from a judgmenl in favor of plaintiff quieting title against defendants to a strip of land in Humboldt County, acquired by the county in the year 1880, for the purpose of a public road and ferry crossing over Eel River.

The land in question was deeded in 1880 to the county by deiendant Van Duzer’s predecessor, George H. Singley, for a money consideration, by an ordinary grant deed describing the land conveyed by metes and hounds, conveying the fee and not specifying that the land was conveyed for road and ferry purposes. The deed was made in pursuance of the report of a board of appraisers appointed by the board of supervisors in 1879 for the purpose of selecting and appraising land to be acquired for ferry purposes at the place on the river called Singley’s Ferry. The report of the appraisers contained a map or plat showing the location of the land to be acquired, connecting roads, river bank, and other pertinent objects near by. The land itself, as shown on the map, was designated “New Road.” It was filed and recorded in 1880.

Singley had been licensed by the board of supervisors to operate Singley’s Ferry November 5, 1879. In December, 1880, Singley petitioned the supervisors to be relieved from the obligation of operating the ferry, specifying in his petition the difficulties of operation occasioned by the erratic behavior of the river in shifting its course, throwing up sand-bars, and the like. This petition was granted and no license to operate a ferry at this place existed until a year later. On December 20, 1881, a license was granted to Martin McDonald to operate a ferry at Singley’s Ferry. *642 Defendant Van Dyzer, who had during the same year acquired the lands of Singley, signed and filed an instrument-consenting to the use of his lands and dedicating the same for the purposes of landings for the ferry to he operated by McDonald.

It appears that McDonald, in whole or in part, used McDonald Lane as an approach to the ferry landing instead of the Singley Road, the land here involved. McDonald Lane was also involved in this action, but as to it the defendants filed a disclaimer. The Singley Road fell into disuse as a result of the ferry’s changing its landing places 'from time to time. The defendant Van Duzer eventually took possession of the arable portion of the land which had been deeded to the county by Singley, and he and his tenants have been cultivating and farming it for upward of thirty years.

Appellants claim title to a part of the land by adverse possession. It is recognized that land dedicated to public use cannot be acquired by adverse possession, but it is claimed that this land was never impressed with a trust for public use. [1] It is pointed out that the deed itself did not dedicate the lan<} for road or ferry purposes, and it is contended that the finding of the court that the land had been accepted and used as a public road and ferry crossing is not supported by the evidence.

The findings, following the testimony, show that the river has undergone many changes, annually moving and shifting about, throwing up sand-bars, so that there was a constant struggle between the ferrymen and the river. The ferry had to move up or down the river for deep water and suitable landings as the river in its whim changed deep water to sand-bar or river bank and back again. The testimony of witnesses ■ who had seen the ferry operated in 1880 was heard at the trial. The face of the ground had changed so much in thirty years that these witnesses were not able with great exactness to designate the precise boundaries or location of the river approach used by the public in 1879, 1880, and thereabouts. Appellants claim that the testimony shows the land so used was at one side of and not within the boundaries of the land in suit. The surveys and testimony are both conflicting on this point. However, before the trial commenced the boundaries of the disputed land had *643 been marked out by rows of white flags by a surveyor and several witnesses testified that these flags marked the river approach used by the public in 1880 and other dates specified.

The findings of the trial court upon this conflicting evidence are sufficiently supported by the testimony. The public use of the road, together with the map of the appraisers referred to which designated the land “New Road,” followed by the deed of conveyance to the county, constituted a dedication to public use of the land conveyed.

Whether the ferry be a highway or not, the ferry crossing was a public use, and it is of no great consequence to this ease whether the land was dedicated to one public use or another. We see no application in the argument of appellant that a ferry is not a highway. The land, originally bisected by the river, is now all dry land, owing to the fact that the river has moved south. In this process of moving, ■whatever land involved was used strictly for ferry purposes as distinguished from a public road to and from the ferry landings became a part of the road proper. [2] The law of accretion would apply to the county’s property as well as to the defendant’s.

Appellants contend that if it is held that this land was once dedicated or impressed with a public use, nevertheless this public use was abandoned by the county; that after abandonment of the public use the land was thereafter held by the county in its proprietary capacity as distinguished from its governmental capacity, and that thereupon the land, no longer being held for a public use, was subject to acquisition by adverse possession. It is claimed that the release of Singley as ferryman, the changes in the river course, and the location of the ferry, the fact that there is now no water touching the land upon which a ferry could be floated, the establishment of other approaches and the recent construction of a concrete bridge across the river, constitutes such an abandonment of the public use of the land.

It is not to be doubted that land held for a public use cannot be acquired by adverse possession. This is established in this state by a long line of authorities. These authorities are cited and reviewed in People v. Kerber, 152 Cal. 735, [93 Pac. 878], and Patton v. Los Angeles, 169 Cal. 531, 147 Pac. 141]. But it has been held that property held *644 by a city or county in its proprietary capacity is subject to acquisition by adverse possession. (Ames v. San Diego, 101 Cal. 390, [35 Pac. 1005].) Furthermore, it has been intimated that property held for a public use may be converted into proprietary property by an abandonment of the public use by the public authorities, and thereafter become the subject of acquisition by adverse possession. (People v. Kerber, supra; Patton v. Los Angolés, supra.)

We have been referred to no ease where a street or highway once dedicated by formal act or conveyance has been held to have been abandoned by implication. We do not regard People v. Goodin, 136 Cal. 455, [69 Pac. 85], as so holding. The case of Myers v. Daubenbiss, 84 Cal. 1, [23 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 192, 48 Cal. App. 640, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 486, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humboldt-county-v-van-duzer-calctapp-1920.