In Re Dixon

8 P.2d 881, 120 Cal. App. 635, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1932
DocketDocket No. 8236.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 8 P.2d 881 (In Re Dixon) 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
In Re Dixon, 8 P.2d 881, 120 Cal. App. 635, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 132 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

JAMISON, J., pro tem.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of respondents upon a petition to have certain lands, alleged to be owned by them, registered under the Land Registration Act commonly known as the Torrens Act.

The land sought to be registered by respondents is the north half of lot 67, and a portion of lot 78, San Gabriel Boulevard, Los Angeles County, California, as per map recorded in book 54, pages 71 and 72, miscellaneous records of said county. The only part thereof that is involved in this appeal is a strip 15 feet wide extending east and west across the south end of the north half of lot 67.

Respondents claim to be the owners of said strip by title in fee simple and by adverse possession. They purchased the north half of said lot 67 from one Beck and wife on May 10, 1920. According to the map said lot 67 contains 10.43 acres. John T. Morgan was the owner of the south half of said lot and on September 30, 1919, he sold the north two acres of the south five acres of said lot 67 to appellant, as per map recorded in book 54, pages 71 and 72, miscellaneous records of Los Angeles County.

Respondents took possession of the said tract immediately upon its purchase, and appellant took possession of his two acres in October, 1919. On June 15, 1928, the court made an order appointing Arthur P. Wills, land referee, to take testimony and report his findings to the court. Thereafter the said referee took testimony and reported his findings to the court, and upon the filing of this report, the matter was referred back to the referee for a more specific report as to the payment of taxes, and upon the filing of this supplementary report the findings of the referee were adopted as the findings of the court.

Appellant contends that the findings are not supported by the evidence, that neither the finding that respondents are owners of the said strip of land by virtue of the description contained in the deed to them from Beck and wife, nor the *637 finding that they have title to said strip by adverse possession is supported by the evidence.

The width of said lot 67, from north to south, as measured to the center of Southern Avenue is 660.52 feet. The referee found that the south line of respondents’ north half of lot 67 measured north from the center line of Southern Avenue, was 330.26 feet, Southern Avenue being 60 feet wide. Both the deeds to respondents and appellant are made with respect to the land conveyed to them in conformity to the recorded map aforesaid.

The finding of the referee with relation to this matter was as follows: .“The recorded map in 54 M. R. to which reference is made in the petition, and which must be consulted in order to describe the properties, described in lot 67, as extending southerly and northerly 660.52 feet, and easterly and westerly 687.92' feet, and as containing 10.43 acres, and bears on its face this notation: ‘all measurements made to center of streets’. A simple computation shows that in order that there may be 1043 acres in lot 67, the southerly border of said lot must be taken to be the center of Southern avenue (now known as Emerson place).”

Appellant claims that the south line of respondents’ north half of lot 67 should be fixed by measuring from the north line of Southern Avenue. This measurement would give respondents 315.26 feet measured from south to north and to the owners of the south half of lot 67 the same. In the case of Earl v. Dutour, 181 Cal. 58 [6 A. L. R. 1163, 183 Pac. 438], the plaintiff had a decree quieting his title to a strip of land 15 feet wide adjacent to the center line of lot 17 of the Hilliard tract of which lot plaintiff and defendant owned respectively the easterly and westerly half. The question in dispute was whether the center line of the lot formed the eastern or western boundary line of the strip of land in suit, its solution depending upon the construction to be placed upon the word ‘‘lot” in the deed by which was conveyed to defendant the westerly one-half of lot 17 of the Hilliard tract, as per map recorded. The map indicated that the western boundary of lot 17 was the center line of an avenue 60 feet in width.

Plaintiff successfully contended in the trial court that the 30-foot strip covered by the avenue was part of the lot within the meaning of the deed and that therefore the eastern boundary of defendant’s line was a line halfway *638 between the center line of the avenue and the eastern boundary of lot 17. The Supreme Court rejected this contention saying: “However clearly it may appear that the owner of a lot holds title to the center of an adjoining street, subject to the public easement, and that the boundary of the lot is technically, therefore, the center of the street, in view of the fact that the owner of such lot or land has no right to the possession or occupancy of any portion of such public street, we are of the opinion that the word ‘lot’, as generally and customarily used, does not include such portion of the street. As stated by the supreme court of Indiana, ‘lot and street are two separate and distinct terms, and have separate and distinct meanings. The term “lots” in its common and ordinary meaning includes that portion of the platted territory measured and set apart for individual and private use and occupancy. While the term “streets” means that portion set apart and designated for the use of the public, and such is the sense in which such terms will be presumed to have been used, unless it be made to appear that a contrary meaning was intended. ’ (Montgomery v. Hines, 134 Ind. 221, 225 [33 N. E. 1100].) In the absence, therefore, of any circumstance indicating that a more unusual and technical meaning of the word ‘lot’ was contemplated and intended by the grantor, it will be presumed that the grant of a fractional part or a given number of feet of a certain lot, or parcel of land conveys the given fractional part or number of feet of that portion of the lot or parcel of land which is set apart for private use and occupancy.” (Thorpe v. Los Angeles Gas & Elec. Corp., 115 Cal. App. 201 [1 Pac. (2d) 37, 39].) In Montgomery v. Hines, supra, the court said, “The streets were dedicated to public use, and the adjacent lot-owners took title to the lots with the same, and no greater interest in the street than if the lots had been described 'in the plat as being the width they in fact were, independent of the street.”

There is no evidence to the effect that the word “lot” was used in the aforesaid deeds otherwise than as it is generally and ordinarily used, therefore we are of the opinion, that the deed from Beck and wife conveyed to respondents tha north half of lot 67, measured from the northerly line of Southern Avenue. That is to say that the north half of lot 67 extends northerly and southerly 315.26 feet and easterly and westerly 687.92’ feet.

*639 One of the elements necessary to be proven in the establishment of title by adverse possession is the payment of all taxes, state, county and municipal that have been levied and assessed upon the land. (Sec. 325, Code Civ. Proc.)

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Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 881, 120 Cal. App. 635, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-dixon-calctapp-1932.