Oreña v. City of Santa Barbara

28 P. 268, 91 Cal. 621, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1145
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1891
DocketNo. 14118
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 28 P. 268 (Oreña 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
Oreña v. City of Santa Barbara, 28 P. 268, 91 Cal. 621, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1145 (Cal. 1891).

Opinion

Temple, C.

This is an action to quiet title to a strip of land about sixteen feet wide, claimed by plaintiff to be a part of block 268 in the city of Santa Barbara, and by the defendant to constitute a portion of Gutierrez Street.

In 1851 the city of Santa Barbara, being the proprietor of the ungranted lands within its limits, contracted with Haley for a map of the city, and for a survey and division into blocks and streets of a certain portion of the lands. ■ Haley agreed to divide the city into squares of 150 yards by streets sixty feet wide, and “to mark each angle of said squares with substantial redwood stakes eighteen inches long, not less than two inches in diameter, and [626]*626to sink said stakes into the ground sixteen inches; to make an accurate map of said streets and squares,” etc.

March 1, 1851, Haley reported “that the city was now surveyed in the manner pointed out in the contract.” The report did not contain field-notes, or state the initial point or base-line, or that any had been established.

In November, 1852, the city employed Wackenreuder to make certain surveys and maps, which were reported April 22, 1853, with two maps marked 1 and 2. These maps were, by ordinance passed August 8,1855, declared official maps of the city of Santa Barbara.

They were maps showing, or purporting to show, the Haley survey.

April 29, 1853, an ordinance was approved declaring certain streets, as surveyed by Haley and mapped by Wackenreuder, open; Gutierrez Street was one of these streets.

Haley made his survey according to contract, and actually located all the streets and blocks, marking each block by a stake driven at each corner. These stakes remained for several years, or at least many of them did, and were known and recognized as Haley’s stakes. Lots were sold by the city, and conveyed according to the survey; or at least such is our inference from the evidence, although the fact is not made very clear.

The plaintiff claims under a deed from the town of Santa Barbara, dated July 9, 1867, which describes his property as “one hundred varas lot situated in the southwest corner of block 268, in the town of Santa Barbara, containing 278.1 square feet, bounded on State and Gutierrez streets, and at right angles to said streets 278.1 feet.”

It does not appear that there was, at the date of grant, any official map of the town of Santa Barbara, except the Haley, sometimes called the Brady, map, and the Wackenreuder maps.

It is plain, therefore, that plaintiff’s lot is bounded by Gutierrez Street as actually located by Haley, and thé question in the case is as to this location.

[627]*627The court apparently failed to find evidence of the existence of any of Haley’s stacks upon block 268, or of the precise point where they had actually been placed.

Haley was a witness at the trial, and testified, substantially, that the intersection of Carrillo and State streets was the initial point of his survey; that the streets, as he surveyed them, were exactly sixty feet wide, with the exception of Carrillo and State streets, which were eighty feet each; and that the blocks were 450 feet square, as required by his contract with the city.

The plaintiff had been in possession of his lot for twenty-five years, and had, through tenants, fenced it. Up to about 1876, his fence along Gutierrez Street corresponded very nearly with the line of Gutierrez Street, as claimed by the defendant. At that time, a survey was made from the intersection of Carrillo and State streets, which, allowing sixty feet for the street and 450 feet for blocks, according to the projected plan of the city and Haley’s report of his survey, located his line as he now claims it. Thereupon he moved his fence out, as he testified, some fourteen feet; as defendant claims, the whole sixteen feet in dispute.

If the survey of Haley had been exact, the plaintiff would be justified in bis conclusion, whether the point measured from were the initial point or any other ascertained point in the Haley survey, for all would correspond; but so soon as it was determined that Haley’s survey was inaccurate, as admittedly it was, the value of such measurements from the initial point, or any other, as evidence, was materially impaired. For instance, a point in Haley’s survey was pretty well established, at the corner of State and Montecito streets, distant the width of one block and one street easterly from the disputed boundary; and another at the comer of Haley and State streets, the width of one block and two streets westerly. Between these two points, assuming them to have been established, there is an excess of over sixteen feet. According to the testimony of a former city surveyor, who ran the line of Gutierrez Street, by the line [628]*628of improvements and reputed monuments in the Haley survey, as he determined them, fourteen feet of this excess is between Haley and Gutierrez streets. This is in the block immediately opposite plaintiff’s premises on Gutierrez Street, and is between plaintiff’s premises and the assumed initial point. On plaintiff’s theory, he would get this entire excess. In other words, he gets the benefit of the mistakes in the survey, which, in order to make out his case, he assumes to have been mathematically correct.

But the initial point and base-line, if they had been marked on the map, and returned in the notes of the survey, instead of existing only in the memory of the surveyor, as they did in this case, would not be necessarily more controlling than other ascertained points in the survey in ascertaining the actual location of streets and blocks; whether the initial point be of greater or less importance than other ascertained points, would depend on circumstances, their proximity and relation to the point to be located.

In determining the line of the street, measurements on that street would naturally be of more value than elsewhere, and if they, or the places where they were, cannot be located, it would be important to ascertain the boundaries of the street as actually opened and used; and if such location has been generally acquiesced in by the public, by lot-owners and the municipality, in the absence of more certain evidence, it will be conclusive.

In this case, the very fact that the plaintiff has inclosed his full quantity of land within the block, as claimed by the defendant, and that, after acquiescing in this line for a number of years, he put out his fence, intruding upon the street then actually used by the public, is a strong circumstance against him. That the fences were built by his tenants makes no difference. He let' and relet the premises as inclosed, and still occupies and claims to the fences. He cannot deny his. inclosure.

[629]*629If the entire survey could be revised and made to conform to the plan of the city as projected, and the plaintiff could be awarded his lot under the revised survey, he would gain nothing. There is no reason in his contention except upon the idea that he will retain the full quantity which he now holds, and so much more.

But there is no more reason for adjusting the lines of Gutierrez Street to the supposed base and initial point than the other streets and blocks where no monuments of Haley’s survey are found.

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Bluebook (online)
28 P. 268, 91 Cal. 621, 1891 Cal. LEXIS 1145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orena-v-city-of-santa-barbara-cal-1891.