McLeod v. Reyes

40 P.2d 839, 4 Cal. App. 2d 143, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 382
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1935
DocketCiv. 5250
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 40 P.2d 839 (McLeod v. Reyes) 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
McLeod v. Reyes, 40 P.2d 839, 4 Cal. App. 2d 143, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 382 (Cal. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

PLUMMER, J.

In this action the defendants, cross-complainants and respondents Title Insurance and Trust Company, a corporation, Los Angeles Mountain Park Company, a corporation, and Castellammare Beach Corporation, a corporation, had judgment quieting title to the lands and premises claimed by them, acquired by mesne conveyances from former owners of the tracts claimed by the respective corporations, to whom the respective lots or tracts.had been allotted in a partition suit prosecuted to final judgment in the District Court (now Superior Court) of Los Angeles County. From this judgment certain of the defendants have appealed.

The action as originally begun involved title to a strip of land bordering the Pacific Ocean, approximately five miles in length, and if we accept the offer to prove the average width thereof at 75 feet, included a trifle more than 45 acres. Upon this appeal only that portion of the lots fronting on the Pacific Ocean, the ownership of which was found to be in the corporations just named, is involved. The tract in dispute lies between the meander line, as run by the United States surveyors, and the Pacific Ocean. There is no controversy, however, that the United States patent carried ownership to the line of high tide, and that the survey line running along the Pacific Ocean was only a meander line, and not intended as the true boundary.

The lots of land of which the corporations above named are the respective owners, are a portion of a larger tract" known as the “Rancho Boca de Santa Monica”, a Spanish grant made by the Mexican government in 1839 to Francisco Marquez and Ysidro Reyes.

Pursuant to the treaty entered into between Mexico and the United States, after the conclusion of the Mexican war proceedings were instituted in 1851 to secure confirmation of title to this land. Pending the securing of a United States patent and a patent from the state of California, partition proceedings were instituted, and upon the issuance *146 of the patents referred to, supplemental pleadings were filed in the action just referred to, and partition had of the lands included in the Mexican grant.

Omitting courses and distances, the following excerpts from the United States patent sufficiently describes the rancho as patented by the United States government:

“Beginning at a bluff, a sharp hill which divides a cañada overgrown with tule near the sea at the place known as ‘Topango’ Point, running thence easterly along the beach seven thousand five hundred varas to a gulch which opens in the wall or precipice formed by the sea; thence northerly four thousand varas to the point where the line passes the path leading down to the Canada de la Iglesia in a line with a small red bluff of the same cañada; thence westerly along the Sierra and parallel with the coast to a point opposite the place of beginning; thence southerly to the place of beginning, containing one and one-half square leagues of land. ...
“Beginning at a sand stone thirty-seven by twenty-five by four inches marked ‘ B-l ’, set eighteen inches deep in earth and surrounded by a mound of earth and stone eighteen inches high on the point of a sandy bluff about ten feet above high water mark to Point 'Topango ’ of the juridical possession, from which stone the corner of the United States Coast Survey Signal Station bears north fifteen degrees and forty-five minutes west twenty-six chains and thirty-two links distant, and the line of the coast to the west bears north seventy-one degrees west and running thence according to the true meridian the variation of the magnetic needle being fourteen degrees and thirty minutes east, along the coast of the Pacific Ocean.”

The estimated number of acres included within the grant •was 6,656.93. This estimate is less by some 73 acres found to be included within the patent, according to the survey made for the purposes of partition. According to the field-notes of the survey and the specific description of the lots - contained both in the interlocutory and final decree of partition, the meander line along the coast of the Pacific Ocean appears to have been followed, which gives rise to the present controversy urged by appellants that the meander line was adopted and became the boundary line of the premises distributed to the grantees of the parties to whom judg *147 ment was awarded in this action, and that no partition was made of the lands lying between such meander line and the line limiting the high tide of the Pacific Ocean.

It must be borne in mind the partition was ordered in 1883, at a time when the beach land was of no practical value, and therefore in making partition could not have reasonably been taken into consideration in determining the values of the respective allotments in order to make an equitable partition of the rancho.

We may also here add that while innumerable objections have been raised as to the correctness of the findings and judgment of the trial court, which have all been considered, only those deemed vital to a decision in this cause will be set forth herein.

Briefly, the determination of one question is decisive of this cause, to-wit: Did the final decree of partition heretofore referred to distribute to the allottees, grantors of the respondents herein, the lands lying between the meander line as run by the United States government, and the line of high tide of the Pacific Ocean ? If so, the appellants have no right thereto.

As a secondary question the respondents claim title by adverse possession.

As a preliminary statement of facts upon which the complaint in partition was based, the supplemental pleadings set forth the issuance of a patent in 1881, as shown by the official records of the county of Los Angeles, reference to which was specifically made for a particular description of the premises in which the exterior boundaries of said rancho were finally established and determined, the parties praying that the lands and premises so patented be partitioned.

No issue is presented questioning the fact that the United States patent carried the southerly limits of the rancho to the high tide of the Pacific Ocean. The prayer of the supplemental pleading to which we have referred calls for a partition of the patented premises, which means premises having a southern boundary coincident with the high-tide line of the Pacific Ocean.

The interlocutory decree following the hearing had upon the petition for partition contains an order from which we quote the following: “It is hereby ordered and adjudged that the rights and interests of the several parties to this *148 action in and to the lands described and sought to be partitioned in the complaint herein are as follows,” etc. “It is further ordered and adjudged that partition be made of the land and premises mentioned and set forth in the complaint in this action and hereinafter described.” The description follows the patent issued by the United States government. The interlocutory decree further ordered, as a reference thereto clearly shows, that the referees should make partition of the rancho so that each allottee would receive his fraction of the whole of said lands and premises.

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Bluebook (online)
40 P.2d 839, 4 Cal. App. 2d 143, 1935 Cal. App. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-reyes-calctapp-1935.