Ocean Park Pier Amusement Corp. v. City of Santa Monica

104 P.2d 668, 40 Cal. App. 2d 76, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 69
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 11, 1940
DocketCiv. 11297
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 104 P.2d 668 (Ocean Park Pier Amusement Corp. v. City of Santa Monica) 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
Ocean Park Pier Amusement Corp. v. City of Santa Monica, 104 P.2d 668, 40 Cal. App. 2d 76, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 69 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

WARD, J.

An appeal by plaintiff and cross-defendant from certain portions of a judgment decreeing defendant and cross-complainant to be entitled to 2 per cent of the gross annual receipts derived from plaintiff’s use, operation and possession of a franchise, and the rights and privileges thereof, as described in an ordinance of the City of Santa Monica.

It appears that the ordinance granting plaintiff’s predecessor Venice Investment Company, a corporation, a franchise for the maintenance and operation of a wharf or pier, included therein a description of tide lands owned by the City of Santa Monica as well as privately owned lands of such predecessor, and that payment for such franchise was fixed at 2 per cent of the gross annual receipts of the business conducted. Subsequently, the Venice Investment Company sold, assigned and transferred its right, title and interest under the franchise to Ocean Park Realty Corporation, and later such interest was assigned by a referee in bankruptcy to the Ocean Park Pier Amusement Corporation, plaintiff herein, which company still exercises rights, interests and prvileges under such franchise.

In July, 1917, the State of California, upon certain trusts and conditions, granted to the City of Santa Monica certain tide lands and submerged lands bordering on the Pacific Ocean and contiguous to said city. Thereafter, in July, 1921, the city by ordinance fixed and determined the line of mean high tide of the ocean within the municipality and defined the boundary lines between the tide lands and submerged lands *79 granted the city by the state, and the privately owned uplands.

The complaint in this case alleged a mutual mistake between respondent and plaintiff’s predecessor in the description of the lands. The point was not made at the trial, however, and is not urged upon appeal. A cross-complaint to quiet title raised issues relative to ownership of certain portions of the land.

The complaint also alleges that the city was “without right or authority” to include in the franchise the land held in private ownership. Taken as a whole, the complaint is sufficient to raise a question of the proper interpretation of the ordinance granting the franchise. From the record on appeal, and the arguments submitted by both sides, there appears to be no effort, either by appellant or respondent, to have the whole franchise or contract declared ultra vires and unenforceable; rather the purpose of appellant is to have a provision therein relative to the income from the uplands, privately owned, declared invalid.

The court found that on February 6, 1924, one L. W. Seymour presented a written application to the City of Santa Monica for a franchise to construct, operate and maintain a wharf and pier over certain lands; that after due proceedings, the franchise was sold to the Venice Investment Company, and, on March 26, 1924, ordinance No. 270 (commissioners’ series) was passed granting to the purchaser a franchise covering the subject-matter set forth in the application. In particular, appellant’s predecessor was granted the right to maintain and operate on the lands described, a wharf or pier, for the purposes of commerce and navigation as far as might be necessary, the portions thereof not so used to be employed for amusement and recreation purposes. The court further found that the franchise was granted in conformity with and in pursuance of the provisions of the Broughton Act (Stats. 1905, pp. 777-780, as amended by Stats. 1909, p. 125; Stats. 1915, p. 1300), and subject to the limitations of Statutes of 1917, pages 90, 91, “An act granting certain tide lands and submerged lands of the State of California to the City of Santa Monica upon certain trusts and conditions.”

The court found also that the City of Santa Monica intended to include in ordinance 270 the lands therein described ; that the predecessor of appellant knew at the time of *80 the erection of the improvements upon the land, as did also appellant at the time of the acceptance of the assignment, what lands were described in the franchise. The court further found that it was not true that there had been a mutual mistake among the various parties interested as to the lands so included in the franchise; that appellant’s predecessor intended to acquire by such franchise the exact lands described in ordinance 270, including the publicly and privately owned lands, and to pay therefor 2 per cent of its annual gross income from the use, operation and possession of the franchise; and that the Ocean Park Pier Amusement Corporation, when it accepted the assignment, so understood. The court also found that the income derived from the land lying upward from the mean high tide line was not easily calculable, ascertainable, distinguishable and severable from that derived from the properties lying oceanward; that, notwithstanding the City of Santa Monica has never owned and does not now own the real property described in the ordinance which is landward of the line of mean high tide, nevertheless the franchise should be interpreted to include all property described in ordinance 270.

Separate findings were made on the cross-complaint of the City of Santa Monica, wherein the court found that the line of mean' high tide was designated on a map introduced in evidence by a wavery line a distance of fifty-five feet, plus or minus, from the ocean front promenade; that such line, by gradual and imperceptible degrees and by natural means of avulsion and sudden and perceptible accretion, has been moving seaward; that the City of Santa Monica is the owner in fee as trustee for the State of California of the lands lying seaward of the high tide line established by ordinance; that appellant by mesne conveyance is the owner of the leasehold interest in various parcels of property above the tide line set forth by reference, but that such interest is subject to the rights of the City of Santa Monica under the franchise.

Judgment followed the findings and decreed that the City of Santa Monica is entitled to all sums heretofore, now, or hereafter due and payable as in the franchise provided. The notice of appeal does not indicate any objection to the findings or judgment in so far as the cross-complaint is concerned.

Respondent contends that plaintiff, having prayed for declaratory relief, based upon the theory of mutual mistake in *81 the description of the lands set forth by metes and bounds in the franchise, in view of its later concession that there was no such misunderstanding, may not now present a different theory, namely, interpretation of the franchise grant and want of authority.

Respondent concedes that as a basic principle the City of Santa Monica did not have authority to grant a franchise over privately-owned lands. It contends, however, that the present franchise is in fact a lease of tide and submerged lands, and seeks to have the ordinance and the acceptance of the franchise construed as such, and upon that theory argues that the city was empowered to fix any price the grantee (lessee) agreed to pay. A number of cases are cited, an examination of which, however, indicates merely that a municipality, in granting the right to erect a private wharf, has the authority to enter into a lease.

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Bluebook (online)
104 P.2d 668, 40 Cal. App. 2d 76, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ocean-park-pier-amusement-corp-v-city-of-santa-monica-calctapp-1940.