Starry v. Lake

28 P.2d 80, 135 Cal. App. 677, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 458
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 9, 1933
DocketDocket No. 4931.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 P.2d 80 (Starry v. Lake) 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
Starry v. Lake, 28 P.2d 80, 135 Cal. App. 677, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 458 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

*678 PARKER, J., pro tem.

This is an election contest. Inasmuch as no question is presented concerning the conduct of the election, as such, and no point is made on the manner of conducting the election in so far as the routine thereof is concerned, we may proceed directly to the one point involved.

At a city election held in Crescent City, certain people, residents of a territory described as Randall precinct, presented themselves at the polls and were denied the right to vote upon the ground that Randall precinct, so called, was not a portion of Crescent City; in other words, that Randall precinct was without the geographical and governmental limits of the city.

Without attempt to detail all of the issues presented at the trial, it is conceded by both sides on appeal that if the said Randall precinct be within the city limits of Crescent City then the judgment is to be affirmed; if our conclusion is to the contrary, the judgment of the court below is to be reversed.

We may note in advance that our consideration is confined to the record before us and it may well be that whatever our conclusion may be, from this record, the question would still remain open. By this we mean that we are not holding the procedure here invoked as sufficient to determine the point as against direct attack by the state or by any other party interested, in any other form of action.

The territory comprising Crescent City was originally a portion of what was then called Klamath County, in California. Some time prior to 1853 a settlement was founded there and a new city born. The land embraced within the limits of the proposed town was then unsurveyed public land belonging to the United States. The residents of the then town, through the governing authority thereof, in 1853 directed the survey and platting of the territory contemplated to be embraced in and constituting the proposed city. This survey was made by one Robinson. A plat and map thereof was duly made and filed, which survey and map will be hereinafter referred to as the Robinson map.

In 1854 the legislature of the state of California enacted a statute entitled “An Act to Incorporate Crescent City.” In this act (Stats. 1854, p. 68) the boundaries of Crescent *679 City are set forth as follows: Commencing at a point established by T. P. Robinson, county surveyor of Klamath County, east of Elk Creek; running thence south to low-water mark and north twenty-five chains and - links; thence west one mile; thence south to low-water mark; and thence following low-water mark to the intersection of the east line. The territory remained unsurveyed public land the title to which remained in the federal government. The statutes then in force regulating the disposal of the public domain provided for the establishment of towns and town sites upon the public domain and for the conveying of the lands actually occupied by and in such settlements to the actual settlers and inhabitants. According to the terms of the statute and the rules of the general land office it was required that the town sites be within regular legal subdivisions and platted in accord therewith.

In 1863 and 1864, the council of Crescent City, preliminary to making application for patent to the lands embraced within "the settlement, ordered another survey which when completed was known as Randall survey. This survey coincided with the sectional lines and embraced the territory in dispute here, namely, Randall precinct. In 1886 the federal land department issued a patent to the town of Crescent City for the land embraced within the Randall survey. This patent ran as a trust for the benefit of the actual settlers and occupants of the lands embraced therein. It was issued pursuant to the provisions of the federal statutes governing the selection and location of town sites, which statutes commenced with the act of 1820 and included acts supplementary thereto as enacted in the years 1843, 1844, 1864 and 1867. By and through these several enactments the federal government has recognized the necessity of community settlement and organization and has made provision for the disposal of public lands to such communities in addition to the methods of private acquisition of the public domain.

Inasmuch as the regulations governing did provide that patents should issue to such lands only when and as occupied by actual bona fide occupants in possession of the lands for the purposes of a town site it is obligatory upon us to assume that a finding was made by a public authority authorized and directed to inquire and that before patent issued it was found that the territory sought was then aetu *680 ally occupied as a town site and that patent issued only to such lands as were actually occupied as a town. From the date of the patent (1866) the town authorities and all of the residents thereof have considered the boundaries of Crescent City as being coextensive with the Randall survey and thus including Randall precinct.

In 1883 the legislature enacted a statute entitled “An Act to Provide for the Organization, Incorporation and Government of Municipal Corporations.” (Stats. 1883, p. 93.) This act was all-embracing and did with great detail provide for the organization and classification of all municipalities within the state desirous of adopting the provisions of the statute. Crescent City, through its governing body elected to organize itself into a city of the sixth class under the terms of the statute and upon compliance with the procedure outlined Crescent City did in 1885 reorganize as a city of the sixth class and in such reorganization did include within the city limits the territory of Randall precinct.

It is an undisputed fact in the case that for approximately sixty years Randall precinct has been considered a part of Crescent City. The governing authority of the city in levying taxes, assessment for public improvements and in all •municipal affairs has treated Randall precinct as a part of Crescent City. The residents thereof have continuously voted at city elections at all elections prior to the one here in question. Without detailing the various matters of municipal cognizance in which Randall precinct and its residents participated with the remainder of Crescent City as an undivided whole it may be stated that in every respect Randall precinct and its inhabitants were a part and portion of Crescent City and its government. During all of this time the federal census authorities enrolled the inhabitants of Randall precinct as a portion of the population of Crescent City. In fact, in no* manner could it be inferred that Randall precinct had any separate existence. This condition, as outlined, continued on for more than sixty years and then the city council, apparently without any form of judicial or other determination, arbitrarily declared Randall precinct out and its residents and electors not entitled to further participate in any of the city’s affairs.

*681 The foregoing suffices to give the picture as the record before us presents the same. It may be that we have amplified minor facts so as to embrace not only the fact but the obvious inference resting therein and which is implied in the trial court’s findings. This, however, is but incidental. The facts as stated are undisputed.

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Bluebook (online)
28 P.2d 80, 135 Cal. App. 677, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/starry-v-lake-calctapp-1933.