Newcomb v. City of Newport Beach

60 P.2d 825, 7 Cal. 2d 393, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 648
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1936
DocketL. A. 15141
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 60 P.2d 825 (Newcomb v. City of Newport Beach) 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
Newcomb v. City of Newport Beach, 60 P.2d 825, 7 Cal. 2d 393, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 648 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Plaintiff brought this action against the City of Newport Beach to quiet her title to two lots within the bounds of said city. The court found that the lots were tidelands in Newport Bay. The" judgment provided that plaintiff was the owner in fee of said lots, “subject to an easement in favor of the public for right of navigation and fishery only, but without any right in the public or any public agency to make any physical changes or improvements therein or thereon without the exercise of eminent domain”. It further adjudged that defendant city had no right, title or interest in said land.

The city has appealed from the judgment. It contends that in view of the finding that the lands are tidelands subject to the public trust, it is entitled to make changes and improvements thereon in the interest of the public trust, as administrator of said trust by virtue of a legislative grant to the city from the state in 1927 of the state’s interest in tidelands of Newport Bay. Defendant city further contends that the title of those through whom plaintiff claims was divested by certain tax sales, and that as purchaser at said sales it owns title to said lots in fee.

Plaintiff deraigns her title through a patent issued by the state of California in 1907 to George W. Harbou. Said patent was issued under the provisions of sections 3440-3443 of the Political Code, providing for the sale by the state of its swamp and overflowed, salt marsh and tidelands. The lots were described in said patent as tidelands- belonging to the state by virtue of her sovereignty, and were conveyed to Harbou by reference to a plat known as Location 267, State Tidelands. As to the patentee and plaintiff, successor in interest to said patentee, said patent is a conclusive determination of the nature of said lots, and establishes their character as tidelands on navigable waters, title to which vested in the state of California by virtue of her sovereignty on her admission to the Union in 1850. (Ord *399 Land Co. v. Alamitos Land Co., 199 Cal. 380 [249 Pac. 178]; Saunders v. La Purisima etc. Co., 125 Cal. 159 [57 Pac. 656] ; 21 Cal. Jur. 752.)

Defendant city also offered oral testimony as to the tideland character of the lots in question. For the purpose of determining whether lands vested in the state by virtue of her sovereignty it is their condition as tidelands at the time of the admission of California into the Union in 1850 which is material. (Ord Land Co. v. Alamitos Land Co., supra.) None of the witnesses herein was familiar with the lands as early as 1850, but their testimony as to the condition of the lots at a later date was material in arriving at a conclusion as to their status at the earlier time. (Ord Land Co. v. Alamitos Land Co., supra.) The federal government has established pierhead and bulkhead lines in said bay as a navigable harbor. In the light of the evidence the trial court lawfully could reach no other conclusion than that the lots were tidelands on navigable waters. It is true that Newport Bay was not included in the list of navigable waters in section 2349 of the Political Code, until 1909, but this does not mean that prior to that date it was not navigable in fact.

The effect of the patent issued by the state to Harbou, plaintiff’s predecessor, was to vest in him title to the tidelands in question subject to the public easement for navigation, commerce and fishing. (People v. California Fish Co., 166 Cal. 576 [138 Pac. 79]; Forestier v. Johnson, 164 Cal. 24 [127 Pac. 156].) Said patent was issued to Harbou prior to the enactment in 1909 of section 3443a of the Political Code, which withholds from sale by the state tidelands on navigable waters. The prohibition contained in section 3, article XV of the Constitution forbidding alienation to private persons of tidelands within two miles of any incorporated municipality does not invalidate the patent herein. Although the patent was not issued until after the incorporation of the City of Newport Beach, on September 1, 1906, prior thereto Harbou had applied for the patent, paid the purchase pride and received a certificate of purchase. In such circumstances a valid contract for the purchase of the land arose, which was not abrogated thereafter by incorporation of the city. (People v. Banning Co., 166 Cal. 635 [138 Pac. 101].)

*400 Upon the trial of the case herein, plaintiff introduced as exhibits 7 and 9 copies of the plat of the official survey on file in the United States General Land Office of the swamp and overflowed lands in fractional township No. 6 south, range No. 10 west, San Bernardino base and meridian. Lots 1 and 2 of section 34 in said township as shown on said plat are not the lots which are the subject of this action. Lot 1 of the swamp and overflowed lands in section 34, as delineated on said map, contains 1.42 acres. It is separated from lot 2 in section 34 on said map, containing 43.91 acres, by an arm of the bay. The two lots involved in the instant action are also located in section 34. They are designated lots 1 and 2 in said section 34 on the plat of tidelands on file in the state surveyor general’s office, entitled Location 267, State Tidelands, and contain, respectively, 14.16 and 5.10 acres. They lie south of lots 1 and 2, swamp and overflowed lands.

Said official plat of swamp and overflowed lands was prepared for purposes of segregating the lands which passed from the United States to the state of California under the Arkansas Swamp Land Act of 1850. (U. S. Rev. Stats., sec. 2479; 21 Cal. Jur. 681.) The lands which passed under said act were lands other than tide and submerged lands on navigable waters. Title to tide and submerged lands on navigable waters vested in the states not by virtue of grant from the federal government, but by virtue of their sovereignty. The lands which passed to the state by grant under the Swamp Land Act were thereafter subject to absolute alienation by the state, free of any public trust for navigation. The official surveys of swamp and overflowed lands are a conclusive determination as to the lands which passed to the state under the act. (Foss v. Johnstone, 158 Cal. 119 [110 Pac. 294] ; Bates v. Halstead, 130 Cal. 62 [62 Pac. 305, 80 Am. St. Rep. 70].) The lands which are the subject of this action are not delineated as swamp and overflowed lands on the official survey. Rather, they are marked upon the state official map entitled Location 267, State Tidelands, as tidelands, and were patented to plaintiff’s predecessor in interest as such.

In the instant ease the court applied the principle that a grant of tidelands under section 3440 of the Political Code, is subject to the public trust, in that it found that *401 plaintiff was the owner of the fee in the lots “subject to an easement in favor of the public for navigation and fishery only”. But it further found that, there was no “right in the public or any public agency to make any physical changes or improvements therein or thereon without the exercise of eminent domain”. This latter holding is erroneous under our decision in People v.

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.2d 825, 7 Cal. 2d 393, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newcomb-v-city-of-newport-beach-cal-1936.