Payne v. English

21 P. 952, 79 Cal. 540, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 766
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1889
DocketNo. 12976
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 21 P. 952 (Payne v. English) 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
Payne v. English, 21 P. 952, 79 Cal. 540, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 766 (Cal. 1889).

Opinion

McFarland, J.

—Defendants are state harbor commissioners. Plaintiffs are owners (being seised of a term of years therein) of those certain premises in the city of San Francisco known generally as block 12 of South Beach water-lot property, lying between Channel Street on the southerly side, Berry Street on the northerly side, Third Street on the easterly side, and Fourth Street on the westerly side. Channel Street is an arm of the. bay of San Francisco running up from the open bay through a portion of the southern part of the city past and beyond the said block 12. It is covered by the waters of the bay; the tide ebbs and flows in it; it is navigable, and is used and navigated by vessels engaged in commerce; it has been dedicated to public use for purposes of navigation and commerce; and it is claimed by defendants to be of the width of two hundred feet up to a point beyond the said land of plaintiffs. By an act of the legislature approved March 26, 1868 (Stats. 1867-68, p. 355), it was declared that a canal 140 feet wide located in the middle of said Channel Street should forever remain open for purposes of drainage and navigation; and it is contended by defendants that there is thus left on each side of said 140-feet canal a strip thirty feet wide which is part of said Channel Street, and within their jurisdiction and [544]*544control as harbor commissioners. And upon what is claimed by defendants to be the thirty-foot strip next to plaintiffs’ block 12 — on the northerly side of what is claimed to be Channel Street—defendants entered and were about to drive piles upon and along a part of the same and to erect a wharf thereon, when plaintiffs commenced this action to enjoin them from so doing. Plaintiffs claim that this strip is a part of their said block 12.-The court below found against plaintiffs, and entered judgment for defendants; and from the judgment and an order denying a new trial, plaintiffs appeal.

The land in controversy, together with large quantities of other land in that vicinity, originally belonged to the state of California, and were granted by the state to the city of San Francisco for the term of ninety-nine years, by an act of the legislature passed March 26, 1851, and. generally known as the water-lot act. It is admitted and found that the title of the city under said act to said block 12 passed to plaintiffs on December 30, 1852, through a deed to them of that date executed by one Lewis Peck, to whom the title had regularly come through sufficient conveyances. The court found that more than twenty years ago plaintiffs erected, and still maintain, upon said block, including said strip thirty feet in width, wharves and other structures for the loading and unloading of ships and vessels and the storage of merchandise, and “have continuously, for more than twenty years next before the commencement of this action, used and occupied the whole of said lot or parcel of land, including said strip thirty feet wide, for the purposes aforesaid, and still continue to so use and occupy the same.”

But the court found that while plaintiffs’ land, block 12, is 825 feet long from Third to Fourth Street,—the length claimed by plaintiffs,—it is only 245 feet wide from Berry to Channel Street, instead of 275 feet, as claimed by plaintiff's; and that as 245 feet southerly from Berry Street would not include any of the thirty-foot' [545]*545strip, as claimed by defendants, therefore plaintiffs do not own any of the land upon which defendants propose to operate. The main issue of fact, therefore, was as to the width of plaintiffs’ laud,—whether 275 feet wide, as claimed by them, or only 245 feet, or less.

Plaintiffs contend, first, that this issue should have been found in their favor upon the evidence introduced, and upon the application of the true rules of construction to their title deeds; and secondly, that if the finding of the court on that point could be held as supported by the evidence at all, it could be so held only by taking it as based on evidence erroneously received and considered, against the objections and exceptions of plaintiffs.

If we construe plaintiffs’ deeds according to courses, distances, and quantities therein expressed, then the amount of land and its length and width are exactly as plaintiffs claim. The description in the deed to plaintiffs, dated December 30, 1852 (and the prior deeds were substantially the same), is as follows:—

“All those three certain one-hundred-vara water lots situated in the-city of San Francisco, and being subdivisions number one (No. 1), number two (No. 2), and number three (No. 3) of the block known on the official map of said city as number twelve (No. 12), South Beach water lots, bounded as follows, to wit:—

“Beginning at the point forming the southwesterly corner of Third and Berry streets, and running thence southwesterly on the line of Berry Street three hundred varas to Fourth Street, thence southeasterly along the line of Fourth Street one hundred varas, thence northeasterly at right angles along Channel Street three hundred varas, and thence northwesterly along the line of Third Street one hundredvaras to the place of beginning.” Three one-hundred-vara lots would include a piece of land 825 feet long (the length claimed by plaintiffs and found by the court) and 275 feet wide (the width claimed by plaintiffs). Moreover, the further descriptions of [546]*546three hundred varas between Third and Fourth streets and one hundred varas along the lines of Third and Fourth streets make the block of the exact length and width claimed by plaintiffs. It is argued, however, by respondents that in cases of disputed boundaries, courses and distances and quantities must give way to monuments. That is undoubtedly the general rule. But before the rule can be applied, there must not only be monuments which will stand still, and not float or fly, but the place where the alleged monuments were at the time the conveyance was made must be satisfactorily located. The monument which is claimed to be controlling in this case is the northerly line of Channel Street; but where that line was, or is, constitutes the unknown quantity of the problem. In 1852, when plaintiffs got their deed, the land in controversy and the place where Channel Street is claimed to be, and all the country round about there, was a wide waste of waters. There was not only no designation of Channel Street on the surface, but it can hardly be said to have had any definite dimensions or boundaries, even in mental contemplation. Of course if there had been proper evidence sufficient to locate the line of that street as the court must have located it, we would not be prepared to say that such line should not control the other descriptive parts of the deeds. But as to that point we think the court erroneously admitted evidence upon which it must have based its findings.

Plaintiffs received their deed and acquired their title, as before stated, in December, 1852. At that time there was a map of the city certified and indorsed by the mayor and city surveyor, in accordance with the requirement of section 5 of said act of March 26, 1851, by which the land in question was granted by the state to the city. This was called the Eddy or Red Line map; and being thus recognized by the state and city, and in existence at and before the time when the deed [547]*547was made, and being referred to in the deed itself, it was properly introduced in evidence, plaintiffs contending that it shows their land to be as they claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P. 952, 79 Cal. 540, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-english-cal-1889.