Phillips v. Day

22 P. 976, 82 Cal. 24, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 795
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1889
DocketNo. 13351
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 22 P. 976 (Phillips v. Day) 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
Phillips v. Day, 22 P. 976, 82 Cal. 24, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 795 (Cal. 1889).

Opinion

Works, J.

The facts of this case, and the questions presented and tried in the court below, are thus stated in the opinion of the learned judge of the court below, which is set out in the transcript:—

“In this case the plaintiff and defendant, on the thirty-first day of August, 1887, entered into a contract in writing, by which defendant bound himself to sell to plaintiff, and plaintiff bound himself to purchase, a tract of land known as the John Fulkerson place, for the sum of eight thousand dollars; 'five hundred dollars to bind bargain, and two thousand dollars at expiration of sixty days, the balance in one or two years,’ secured by note and mortgage on the property. Upon the making of the contract, the plaintiff paid to the defendant the sum of five hundred dollars, and on the twentieth day of September thereafter paid the further sum of seven hundred dollars. An abstract of the title was furnished to the plaintiff, and upon submitting the same to his attorney, plaintiff declined to perform his part of the contract, on the ground that defendant could not give him a perfect title, and after such refusal, commenced this suit to recover the money which he had paid. Defendant answers, and by way of cross-complaint insists on plaintiff specifically performing his contract.

“It appears, from the evidence, that the land bargained for is a part of a larger tract, once the property of Richard Fulkerson, who got title from the grantee of a Mexican grant. The property was fenced and cultivated by Fulkerson for more than thirty years. He conveyed it to James B. Armstrong, and put him in possession. Armstrong laid it off into streets, blocks, and lots. The streets were marked on the ground, and the one on which the land [27]*27bargained for is situated was graded and graveled, but the fence inclosing it with the rest of the larger tract was never removed by James B. Am strong or Walter Armstrong, his successor in interest. Where this graveled street intersects the public highway leading from Santa Rosa to licaldsburg a gate was put in, but kept closed, and the inclosure, by means of the gates and fences, was maintained. No opening of any kind was made where the street north of the property in question intersects the highway. There were two gates on two other streets. James B. Armstrong, while he was owner, sold three of the lots, but none of them on the graded and graveled street. He afterward sold and conveyed the balance of the tract to Walter Armstrong, who conveyed several of the lots; four, at least, of them being on the gravel street. After these conveyances were made, Walter Armstrong filed in the office of the county recorder a map or plat of the tract, which was called Norwood, showing streets, blocks, and lots, and on the same day conveyed all of the tract which he had not sold, to Richard Fulkerson. The conveyances from James B. Armstrong to Walter Armstrong, and from Walter Armstrong to Richard Fulkerson, recognized the map, but include the streets; the latter conveyance was filed for record about two hours after the filing of the map. A. W. Riley, who purchased from Walter Armstrong, went into possession, and erected a fence on the south line of the graveled street. It does not appear how many of the other purchasers from the Armstrongs went into possession, or to what extent they used the streets. John Fulkerson testified that some of them went into possession, and used the streets to get to their lots.

“That there were three gates, and that they had to pass through one of these gates to get to their premises. All of the lots which had been sold by the Armstrongs came back by regular conveyances to Richard Fulkerson or John Fulkerson, except that portion of the tract which [28]*28had been conveyed to J. H. Abshire, which, as delineated on the map offered in evidence by the plaintiff, consists of a part of lots 28, 29, 30, 31, and 32.

“It appears from this map that no part of his claim extended to or touches the graveled street, but does include the whole of so much of a street as ran near its westerly boundary, and takes a strip off the lots on the west side of that street. The evidence does not show that the general public ever used any of the streets, nor does it appear that there was any acceptance on the part of the county authorities. Richard Fulkerson, after he got the title back in himself, conveyed to John Fulkerson. In this conveyance no reference is made to streets. John Fulkerson conveyed a right of way over the south thirty feet of the graveled street to J. H. Abshire, and moved his fence, which had marked the south line of lot 3, which is a part of the land in controversy, to the middle of the street, and the north thirty feet of the graveled street was thereafter within the' inclosure surrounding the land in dispute. This fence is now standing, and has been maintained for more than five years before the contract of sale was made. On the 14th of August, 1886, John Fulkerson conveyed to the defendant, by metes and bounds, making no reference to streets or to the map. This conveyance included a triangular piece of land on the north side of the Day tract, having the northeast corner of the tract for its apex, and about three feet on the Healdsburg road for its base, which had been previously conveyed by Fulkerson to Joseph Viles; but it appears, from the testimony, that Day had no actual knowledge, nor had Fulkerson, that the deeds overlapped. The triangle was within the inclosure of Day. On the north side of the tract described in the complaint is another street as laid down on the Armstrong map, and which, if it is a public highway, would take off another strip of thirty feet from the land bargained for.

[29]*29“The plaintiff contends that both of the platted streets north and south of the land are public streets, and that if compelled to purchase he would lose a strip of thirty feet on the south and one of the same width on the north, and for this reason, and because the title to the triangle (which contains one fiftieth part of an acre), is not in Day, he should not be compelled to purchase.”

The court below found for the defendant, and decreed in his favor that the plaintiff specifically perform the contract. There was a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and the plaintiff appeals.

The contention of the appellant in this court is, that there ivas a dedication of a part of the land to the public, to be used as public streets, or that the facts were such as to raise a reasonable doubt as to the defendant’s title to so much of said lands as was covered by these alleged streets, and that for that reason he was not bound to accept a conveyance and pay the purchase-money for the land.

We have had occasion very recently to consider fully the question as to what is necessary to constitute a dedication of lands to the public for street purposes, by platting and selling lots by reference to the map thereof. (People v. Reed, 81 Cal. 70.)

Much that is said in the opinion in that case is applicable to this, and need not be repeated. The decision in the case referred to is conclusive against the appellant as to the alleged dedication to the public. There has never been any acceptance by the public authorities, and the offer to dedicate, if there ever was one, was clearly Avithdrawn by the subsequent sale of the property in a body, including that part designated on the map as streets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P. 976, 82 Cal. 24, 1889 Cal. LEXIS 795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-day-cal-1889.