People v. Rio Nido Co., Inc.

85 P.2d 461, 29 Cal. App. 2d 486, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 368
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 30, 1938
DocketCiv. 5851
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 85 P.2d 461 (People v. Rio Nido Co., Inc.) 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
People v. Rio Nido Co., Inc., 85 P.2d 461, 29 Cal. App. 2d 486, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 368 (Cal. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

PULLEN, P. J.

This is an action brought in the name of the People of the State of California against eighty-six defendants, claiming the ownership of certain lots in a subdivision upon the Russian River in Sonoma County, known as Rio Nido, formerly Eaglenest.

Plaintiff contends the lands involved were dedicated as a public park in 1906, and that such dedication was judicially determined by a judgment of the Superior Court of Sonoma County in 1912. In reply the defendants contend that no such dedication ever occurred and that the judgment of 1912 was not determinative of the issues here presented, and is not binding upon these defendants.

Some time prior to 1906 the Russian River Land Company acquired a tract of land near Rio Nido. In 1906 the land company caused this tract to be surveyed and divided into seven divisions, which were delineated upon two maps, referred to during this trial as “Map 1 of Eaglenest” and “Map 2 of Eaglenest”. We are here concerned with map 2 only, which shows divisions 1, 2 and 3, and the land here in dispute lies in divisions 2 and 3.

Before offering the lots for sale to the public the Russian River Land Company complied with the law providing for *488 the acceptance of the map by the supervisors of Sonoma County. The certificate on the map shows the acceptance but makes no reference to any park.

The lots in divisions 2- and 3 are arranged in an ellipse built up along the hillside and fronting upon an open wooded section, and it is the contention of plaintiff that it was this open wooded section that was dedicated as a park site.

In 1912, one Mark W. Levy started to erect a house in an area expressly delineated as a park area upon the map of subdivision 6. An action was filed in August, 1912, in the name of the People of the State of California against Levy and the Russian River Land Company, and notice of Us pendens recorded. Thereafter a judgment "was entered declaring certain areas to be public parks; with respect to divisions 2 and 3, with which we are here concerned, the judgment stated:

‘ ‘ Third. That all parks in the valleys of division 2 and 3 of Rionido, formerly ‘Eaglenest’ were on the 8th. day of the said October, 1906, dedicated to the public use and has all the time since and are now public property; that said park in said Division 2 is filed in Map 2 of Eaglenest volume 19 at page 19 that Park No. 3, in valley division No. 3 is recorded in Map 2 of Eaglenest volume 19 at page 19.”

By virtue of this paragraph the trial court in the present ease now holds the land in question to be a public park.

We here have two questions to determine:

First, does the evidence support the findings and judgment; and
Secondly, is the former judgment binding upon these defendants ?

Considering the second of these questions first, we are constrained to hold that such judgment did not fix the character of the lands for several reasons.

The most obvious defect in the judgment as expressed in paragraph “Third”,—which admittedly is the only portion of the judgment that refers to divisions 2 and 3—is its certainty. It is essential that a judgment, particularly one affecting real property, be specific and certain in its identity of the lands affected. It must be so certain that a stranger may be able to clearly identify the particular tract. This elementary requirement is, we think, undisputed. (Freeman on Judgments, 5th ed., vol. 2, p. 1540; vol. 1, p. 165, and Cor. Jur., pp. 1209, 1210.)

*489 Paragraph “Third” does not attempt to mark out the portions of the valleys set aside or dedicated to public use, but only says “that all parks in the valleys . . . were . . . dedicated to the public use and has all the time since and are now public property”. The judgment then attempted to identify the map, continuing “that said park in said Division 2 is filed in Map 2 of Eaglenest, Volume 19 at page 19; that Park 2 in Valley Division No. 3 is recorded in Map 2 of Eaglenest, Volume 19, at page 19”. While the reference is to some volume 19 it is quite indefinite although accepted at the trial as referring to volume 19 of maps in the office of the county recorder of Sonoma County. An examination of this map, however, discloses nothing that can aid in locating or identifying any “park in the valleys”. There is nothing upon the face of the map to indicate parks or valleys or any dedicated lands. The map merely shows an elliptical course of lots, but nothing to indicate any contour, any valleys or any parks. Undoubtedly a judgment purporting to adjudicate the title to real property must be as clear and explicit as a deed which purports to convey real property. Certainly a deed that attempted to convey a lot in a valley and referred to a map which showed neither a lot nor a valley would have to be held too uncertain to effect any transfer.

A further defect in the third paragraph is that it fails to declare that any land was actually dedicated to public use as a park. It indirectly says that if there are any parks in the valleys of divisions 2 and 3 they are public parks. An examination of the decree with respect to other divisions wherein certain lands are found to be public parks, reveals the decree was specific in that it described with sufficient particularity the lands so dedicated.

If one interested in the construction and scope of the decree is required to examine the pleadings of the case upon which it was based to understand it, such examination is of no assistance here. The complaint in paragraph II describes the tract belonging to the Russian River Land Company. Paragraph III recites that the land company, for the purpose of founding a village or resort upon a portion of said tract caused the same to be surveyed into lots, streets, alleys and parks, that a part of the lands were surveyed into seven divisions so that each division should slope down into a natural valley 100 to 200 feet wide and a half a mile to a mile long, *490 and that a plat was made delineating the seven separate divisions and the first tier of lots fronting upon an open space.

Paragraph IV alleges that the land company thereafter sold a large number of lots with reference to the.map with the representation that the parks, marked upon the map as “Parks”, would remain open perpetually to public use and were dedicated to the public. Paragraph VIII alleges the parks were mapped, platted and recorded with the intention of the land company that they should be open parks dedicated to the public as public parks and that said dedication was never revoked.

Prom the foregoing brief summary it appears from paragraph III that “each of said divisions should slope down into a natural valley . . . ”, This does not identify any particular land as being in the “valleys” nor does it describe any “parks in the valleys”. It also is alleged in paragraph III that the first section or tier of lots fronted upon an open piece of ground, but it is not alleged that this particular piece of ground is the same as the natural valley referred to in the preceding paragraph.

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Bluebook (online)
85 P.2d 461, 29 Cal. App. 2d 486, 1938 Cal. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-rio-nido-co-inc-calctapp-1938.