Oglesby v. City of Santa Barbara

51 P. 181, 119 Cal. 114, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 864
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 151
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 51 P. 181 (Oglesby v. City of Santa Barbara) 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
Oglesby v. City of Santa Barbara, 51 P. 181, 119 Cal. 114, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 864 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Action to restrain defendants from entering upon block 56^, in the city of Santa Barbara, which it is alleged in the complaint defendants threaten to do for the purpose of grading Laguna street, on which said block fronts, and from excavating and removing soil from said block and removing plaintiffs’ fences inclosing the same. By stipulation, the case entitled Julia Gr. Baker versus the same defendants was tried upon the same evidence as that first above mentioned, and is here by the same transcript, both to be heard and determined as governed by the same questions of law and fact. The court gave judgment for plaintiffs, and the appeals are from the judgment and from the order denying defendants’ motion for new trial and upon a statement. The court found, and it is not denied, that the streets and blocks of said city, vhen a town, in 1851, were surveyed and platted upon a map by one Salisbury Haley, and that said survey was then adopted as the official survey and map of said city, by which plaintiff's block 56£ is bounded on the southwest by Laguna street; that plaintiffs are and were the owners when the action was commenced and seised in fee of said block, being one hundred and fifty yards square, and that they were and had been by themselves and through their predecessors for twenty years continuously in the exclusive occupation and possession of the premises as described in the complaint (the complaint describes the block by metes and bounds, commencing at a certain intersection of Micheltorena and Laguna streets and as inclosed, the inclosure taking in the disputed strip); that the premises have been inclosed since the year 1875 with a substantial fence; that Laguna street is an open street sixty feet wide, upon which said block fronts, running from Victoria street to Pedregosa street, in reference to which said Laguna street lots were fenced on both sides, and said street had been traveled by plaintiff and the public for more than twenty years, “but the city of Santa Barbara or its predecessors have not acquiesced in the location of said open street as constituting the true location of Laguna street according to the official map and survey of said city hy Salisbury Haley”; that defendants threaten, and will, if not restrained, excavate from the soil and grade and appropriate a portion of plaintiffs’ premises, to wit, a strip about six feet in width fronting on said street; that a number of lots abutting [116]*116on said street “have on them trees and shrubbery, residences, and other improvements, which to a great extent constitute the beauty and attractions of said thoroughfare”; that said strip of land and the improvements thereon are not embraced within the lines of Laguna street, as the same was dedicated to public use in 1851 by said city by the so-called Haley survey. The controversy involves the integrity of the lines of Laguna street for a long distance and the residence property of many lotowners—the disputed strip varying from six to thirteen feet wide.

1. Defendants present the case as arising on an action to quiet title, claiming the burden of proof to be upon plaintiffs to prove title in the disputed strip of land. In Tate v. Sacramento, 50 Cal. 242, the action was to enjoin the street commissioners from opening a certain street in the city of Sacramento. The defendant claimed that the buildings of plaintiff were in the street, and were an obstruction and a nuisance. It was there held that plaintiff’s possession was prima facie evidence of title, and must be presumed to be rightful until the contrary appears. It was further held that it was incumbent upon defendant to show that the street upon which the alleged obstructions stood had been dedicated as a public street. It was so held also, in a similar case, in Demartini v. San Francisco, 107 Cal. 402, where the question was fully discussed. Under the pleadings and proofs in the present case, it was clearly the duty of defendants to show their right to the strip of land in question after plaintiffs had proved possession and right of possession, as the evidence tended to show they did and as the court found. It is claimed by defendant that Orena v. Santa Barbara, 91 Cal. 621, is a similar case to this, involving much the same questions, and that it was there held that “the burden was upon the plaintiff to show title in himself. He can do so only by proof that the premises are within his grant. Proof of his supposed adverse possession does not make a prima facie case.” It is sufficient answer to defendants’ contention that Orena v. Santa Barbara, supra, was an action to quiet title. But the court here found, and the evidence tends to prove, title in plaintiffs as Avell as possession, as claimed by them.

2. It is claimed by the defendants that the evidence tended to show that the boundary lines of Laguna street were estab[117]*117lished by the Haley survey as contended by defendants, and that there was no evidence tending to show that they were established by that survey according to the lines of fences on that street, and therefore the court should have found for defendants. The evidence is quite voluminous; we do not feel called upon to present an analysis of it, for the reason that upon the point at issue there is a clear conflict. Defendants introduced evidence tending to show that by a correct survey, taking certain monuments and lines as established by the Haley survey as initial points from which to retrace the lines of Laguna street, plaintiffs’ fence encroached upon the street about six feet at plaintiffs’ block. The evidence of James L. Barker, a former town surveyor who made a survey in 1871, tends to show this. On the other hand, plaintiffs’ evidence tends to show that the lines of Laguna street were established by actual survey, tailing Haley’s admitted base and initial point used for his map at Carrillo and State streets as the initial for the survey, and that the fences and improvements were made in accordance therewith, leaving the street the full width of sixty feet. Such a survey was made by the witness, W. H. Norway, in 1870, who was then the town surveyor. A great deal of evidence was introduced by plaintiffs to show that along Laguna street the owners of property had, ever since 1870, built their fences and houses and improved their lots with reference to this Norway survey, and that in some instances, including plaintiff’s (Mrs. Baker’s) lots, valuable improvements had been made on this contested strip of land, and that the public had, since 1870, treated the lines as marked by Norway. It does not seem to us necessary to consider bow far the acquiescence of the public and the lotowners or the nonacquiescence of the city authorities in the Norway survey may affect the rights of the parties here. In determining the lines of the street, such considerations were deemed important and said to be sometimes conclusive in Orena v. Santa Barbara, supra. (And see, also, Payne v. English, 101 Cal. 14.) But here we have some evidence as to the true location of the lines based upon the Haley survey; the evidence is conflicting to be sure, but, being so, we cannot say which is right or which is wrong. The court found for the plaintiff upon the point, and [118]*118that finding, having support from the evidence, cannot be disturbed.

3.

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Bluebook (online)
51 P. 181, 119 Cal. 114, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oglesby-v-city-of-santa-barbara-cal-1897.