Rudolph Herman Co. v. City & County of San Francisco

99 P. 169, 154 Cal. 688, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 382
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4612.
StatusPublished

This text of 99 P. 169 (Rudolph Herman Co. v. City & County of San Francisco) 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
Rudolph Herman Co. v. City & County of San Francisco, 99 P. 169, 154 Cal. 688, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 382 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The officers of the city and county of San Francisco were about to remove the obstructions upon the lands described in the complaint so as to make them fit for use as a public street, claiming that the same constituted a part of Lyon Street in the city. It is alleged that the lands were the property of plaintiff, Rudolph Herman, who was in possession, the corporation plaintiff being the owner of an interest in remainder. The action was to restrain the defendants from entering upon said premises and from opening it as a public street. Judgment went for the defendants and *689 the plaintiffs appeal upon the judgment-roll. An agreed statement of the evidence was adopted by the court below as its findings.

The land in controversy is claimed by the defendants to be a portion of Lyon Street lying north of the northerly line of Lewis Street and south of the waters of the bay and adjoining the easterly line of the United States military reservation known as the Presidio. The claim of the plaintiffs is that the true line of the Presidio reservation is situated a considerable distance westerly of the inclosure and possession of the military authorities, that the true line of Lyon Street is immediately adjoining the true line of the Presidio and extending eighty feet east thereof, and that, if the Presidio and street are so located, the land claimed by them is not a part of Lyon Street, but is a part of the lands ceded to the city by the United States government by the act of Congress of May 9, 1876. The accuracy of this contention is the sole point to be decided in the case. A somewhat extended statement of the facts is necessary to a clear understanding of the question.

On November 6, 1850, President Fillmore made an order reserving for military purposes a tract including with the present Presidio reservation the lands lying between it and the Fort Mason reservation. One Dexter R. Wright was then pressing a claim under an alleged Mexican grant to a large tract of land covering all of the lands reserved and considerable of the adjoining lands. This claim was afterwards adjudged to be invalid. General Riley, at that time in command of the military post at San Francisco, considered it of sufficient importance to enter into negotiations on behalf of the United States with him for a settlement of his claim as far as it affected the Presidio reservation. A .provisional agreement was made between them whereby the military occupation was to be withdrawn from all the land lying easterly of a line drawn parallel with Larkin Street in San Francisco and extending on said course northerly to the bay from a certain cannon planted by Captain Keyes on May 17, 1850, on the top of the hill near the present southeastern corner of the Presidio reservation. This agreement was reported by General Riley to the war department and it was thereupon disapproved and rejected by the secretary of war. No further action was ever taken regarding it. While it was pending in *690 the war department, General Riley withdrew possession of the United States from the territory situated east of the line parallel with Larkin Street, as that line was then supposed to be located, and a fence was erected on said supposed line. In the mean time it had been reported to the president that the original reservation contained more land than was necessary for military purposes and that squatters were in possession of some of the land lying easterly of the present reservation. On December 31, 1851, the president issued another executive order changing the former order by declaring that there was reserved for the United States for military purposes on the San Francisco peninsula “all the land north of a line running in a westerly direction from the southeastern corner of the Presidio tract to the southern extremity of a pond lying between Fort Point and Point Lobos, and passing through the middle of said pond and its outlet to the channel of entrance from the ocean.” The southeastern comer of the Presidio tract had then been established as the point where the cannon had been planted by Captain Keyes as aforesaid. The line described in the order was the southern boundary of the Presidio tract as established by the previous order. The order of 1851 was understood, as its words properly interpreted should be understood, to fix, as the easterly boundary of the reservation, a line extending from the said cannon planted as the southeastern corner of the Presidio tract, due north to the bay shore. Thereafter, until the enactment of the act of Congress of May 9, 1876, this line constituted the legal boundary line of the Presidio, on the easterly side. The line was never laid off or designated by any monuments. The actual occupation of the military authorities extended east only to the line of the fence aforesaid. Private persons, presumably understanding that this was the extent of the limits claimed by the United States, entered upon the intervening lands lying east of the fence and west of the due north line,, claiming right thereto. Various surveys were made from time to time by different engineers of the United States, some acting under the authority of the interior department and some acting under the authority of the war department, but no' authoritative location of the true line of the military reservation was made. In 1870 a survey by Lieutenant Wheeler of the United States army disclosed the fact that the fence was. *691 not built on a line parallel with Larkin Street, which was on a course running north 9° 15' west, but was built on a course running north 7° 30' west. The matter had been reported to Congress by the secretary of war and on May 9, 1876, Congress passed an act for the purpose of relinquishing the land not claimed by the military authorities in San Francisco as a part of the military reservation and of enabling the persons in possession of the lands east of the fence to obtain title to their lands. By this act it was declared that all the right and title of the United States to the portion of the Presidio reservation therein described was relinquished to the city of San Francisco and its successors “for the benefit of persons who, if the said land had not been reserved for public use, would have been entitled thereto,” under city ordinance No. 800 and the act of the legislature of California of March 27, 1868. The boundaries of the tract relinquished, as described in the act, were as follows: “Commencing at the southeasterly corner of said Presidio or Fort Point reservation, and thence running in a direct line due north to the shore line of the bay of San Francisco, thence westerly along the said shore line to a point eighty feet westerly of the easterly line of the said Presidio, or Fort Point reservation, as established by the United States authorities, said eighty feet being relinquished for a public highway or street, named Lyon Street; thence southerly to a point on the southerly line of said reservation, where the west line of Lyon Street intersects said line; thence .easterly to the point of commencement, to conform as near as possible to the plan of the city map of the streets of San Francisco outside of reservation, said plan being now on file in the office of the war department of the city of Washington:

“Provided,

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99 P. 169, 154 Cal. 688, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudolph-herman-co-v-city-county-of-san-francisco-cal-1908.