Kittle v. Pfeiffer

22 Cal. 484
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 22 Cal. 484 (Kittle v. Pfeiffer) 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
Kittle v. Pfeiffer, 22 Cal. 484 (Cal. 1863).

Opinion

Crocker, J. delivered the opinion of the Court—Cope, C. J. and Norton, J. concurring.

This is an action to enjoin the defendants from erecting and constructing buildings and other obstructions in certain streets in the City of San Francisco, known as “ Belle Air Place ” and “ Pfeiffer Street.” The Court below, after the trial of the issues raised by the parties, rendered a judgment dismissing the complaint, and for costs against the plaintiff, from which he appeals.

From the record in this case it appears, that on the twenty-fourth day of October, 1854, J. L. Folsom and the defendant, William A. Pfeiffer, conveyed, by quitclaim deeds, to the City of San Fran[488]*488cisco, certain strips of land, to be forever kept open as public highways, under the name of “ Belle Air Place ” and Pfeiffer Street,” which deeds were duly recorded; that on the first day of October, 1855, the defendants, Pfeiffer and wife, mortgaged to the plaintiff’s testators, fifty-vara lot numbered 1,494, described as commencing at the south-east corner of Stockton and Francisco streets; running thence easterly one hundred and twenty-two feet and six inches to “ Belle Air ” Street; thence southerly along Belle Air Street one hundred and twenty-two feet six inches to Pfeiffer ” Street; thence westerly along Pfeiffer Street to Stockton Street; thence to the place of beginning—to secure the sum of ten thousand dollars ; that the mortgage was duly acknowledged and recorded, and on the-day of February, 1857, the plaintiff’s testators obtained a decree against said defendants, Pfeiffer and wife, foreclosing the mortgage, under which decree the mortgaged premises were duly sold and purchased by and finally conveyed to, plaintiff’s testators, who went into possession under the Sheriff’s deed, and they and the plaintiff have continued in possession ever since; that there is on the lot a brick building erected by Pfeiffer, standing on the corner of Francisco Street and Belle Air Place, with windows to light the same opening on Belle Air Place; and that the defendants commenced the erection of a building within the boundaries of Belle Air Place, along side of said brick building and obstructing said windows, and have also erected buildings and obstructions bn Pfeiffer Street, and they threaten to inclose and totally obstruct said streets.

It also appears by the findings of the Court that the City of San Francisco or the public never accepted said conveyances, and that said strips of land were never opened or used by the city or public as streets or highways. It also appears that prior to these deeds to the city, the defendants occupied the two fifty-vara lots 1,493, and 1,494, which include the premises claimed as streets, residing thereon with their family, claiming the same as a homestead; that the wife never executed the deeds to the city, and they claim the premises as their homestead.

The Court below found from these facts that the tracts claimed to be streets never were created and never existed as public or [489]*489private streets; that the mortgage, so far as it related to these streets, bound the husband only, and not the wife, and did not create any street or way, and that the premises were the homestead of the defendants, and therefore the plaintiffs had no right of action.

The principal question involved in this case is, what acts are necessary to constitute a dedication of land to public use. The principal uses to which lands may be applied for public purposes, and to which the doctrine of dedication is applicable, are for roads, streets, alleys, squares, landings, cemeteries, and the like. Such dedication may be without any grant or conveyance. (Abbott v. Mills, 3 Vermont, 526; State v. Catlin, 3 Id. 533; Vick v. Vicksburg, 1 How. Miss. 379.) And where made by grant or conveyance, they are valid, even though there be no grantee in esse at the time, to whom the fee could be conveyed. (Pawlet v. Clark, 9 Cranch, 292; Cincinnati v. Lessees of White, 6 Pet. 431; Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Id. 566; New Orleans v. The United States, 10 Id. 662; Kennedy v. Jones, 11 Ala. 63; Brown v. Maning, 6 Ohio, 303.) So a sale of lots by the owner according to a map or plan of a city or town, on which streets, squares, and landings are marked out, is held a dedication to public use of such streets, etc. (Irwin v. Dixon, 10 How. U. S. 81; Wyman v. The Mayor of New York, 11 Wend. 486; The People v. Lambier, 5 Denio, 9; Rowan v. Portland, 8 B. Monroe, 232.) These principles have also been held to apply to strips of land bordering upon navigable streams, in front of towns or cities, and which have been left or marked upon the town plat, as streets or public landings. (Barclay v. Howell’s Lessee, 6 Peters, 498; Rowan v. Portland, 8 B. Monroe, 232; Newport v. Taylor, 16 Id. 699; Cincinnati v. Lessees of White, 6 Peters, 431; Vick v. Vicksburg, 1 How. Miss. 379.) A sale of lots described as bounding on certain streets, of itself is held as a dedication of the street to public use, without any further act. (Ang. on Highways, Sec. 142; Abbott v. Mills, 3 Vermont, 526; Matter of Thirty-Ninth Street, 1 Hill, 192; Matter of Thirty-Second Street, 19 Wend. 128.) And the dedication is the same whether the lot is bounded by the center of the street or the side of it. (Matter of Thirty-Ninth Street, 1 Hill, 192.) While in such [490]*490cases the public have a general right of way, the purchasers have a special right of way, as appurtenant to the lots thus purchased by them, which is a private interest vested in them, and of which they cannot be divested any more than of any other property. (Matter of Seventeenth Street, 1 Wend. 271; Livingston v. The Mayor of New York, 8 Id. 85; Wyman v. The Mayor of New York, 11 Id. 486; Parker v. Framingham, 8 Metcalf, 267; Parker v. Smith, 17 Mass. 415; Alden v. Murdock, 13 Id. 259.)

In Bond v. Cunningham (2 Cal. 368) it was held as an established principle, “ that where lots are sold as fronting on, or bounded by, a certain space designated in the conveyance as a street, the use of such space as a street passes as appurtenant to the grant, and vests in the grantee, in common with the public, the right of way over such street; that such acts on the part of the grantor constitute a dedication of such street, and that he cannot afterwards so sell or dispose of it as to alter or defeat such a dedication.” So it was held in San Francisco v. Scott (4 Cal. 114), that land may be dedicated to the public use as a street or highway, by deed or other overt act, or may be presumed from the lapse of time or acquiescence of the party. Again, in Harding v. Jasper (14 Cal. 642), it was held, that a dedication of a public highway might 61 be made either with or without writing, by any act of the owner, such as throwing open his land to public travel, or platting it and selling lots bounded by streets.designated in the plat, thereby indicating a clear intention to dedicate.”

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Bluebook (online)
22 Cal. 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kittle-v-pfeiffer-cal-1863.