Winchester v. Payne

102 P. 531, 10 Cal. App. 501, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 205
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 1, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 517.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 P. 531 (Winchester v. Payne) 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
Winchester v. Payne, 102 P. 531, 10 Cal. App. 501, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 205 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

TAGGART, J.

Action in ejectment. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiff appeals from judgment and from an order denying her motion for a new trial.

The complaint alleges ownership and possession by plaintiff of a strip of land fronting on Montecito street eight feet and six inches, and extending at the same width one hundred and seventy-five feet into the east quarter of block 273 of the city of Santa Barbara, along the southwesterly line of said quarter; and that the defendant, on August 1, 1906, ousted her from the possession thereof. The answer is, in effect, a general denial.

Plaintiff showed no connection with the paramount source of title, but the record contains this recital: “It is agreed by the parties hereto, plaintiff and defendant, that the basis of title is contained in a deed from Isaac J. Sparks to Ramona Trussel, which deed conveys to the grantee named therein, a tract of land known on the official map of the city of Santa Barbara as Square 273, and bounded by Ranchería, Castillo, Gutierrez and Montecito streets.” This deed is dated September 1, 1858, and was recorded September 3, 1858, in the records of Santa Barbara county. Plaintiff also introduced in evidence three other deeds of mesne conveyance through and by which the title of said Ramona Trussel to the easterly quarter of said block was, on the 10th day of October, 1885, vested in plaintiff. The particular descriptions in *503 these and each of said deeds were the same, and are in the words and figures following: “Commencing at a point in City Block Two Hundred and Seventy-three (273) at the intersection of Montecito and Castillo streets, and running thence in a southwesterly line along the line of Montecito street 225 feet; thence at right angles into said block 225 feet; thence at right angles 225 feet to Castillo street; thence along the line of Castillo street 225 feet to the place of beginning.”

Plaintiff’s respective predecessors in title, taking successively under each of said deeds, went into possession of and occupied continuously since the year 1878 a lot of land of the dimensions above given, which did not include the strip in question but adjoined it immediately to the northeast; and neither they nor plaintiff have ever been in the actual occupancy of this strip.

No objection was made to the introduction of these deeds on the ground that the description therein did not include the premises in dispute, when they were admitted in evidence. Admitted they made a prima facie showing that plaintiff held the title and was entitled to the possession of the premises therein described. But, as the ownership, possession, right of possession of plaintiff, and the ouster of plaintiff by defendant were denied by the answer, it was necessary for the plaintiff to show, after these deeds were introduced, that the description in them embraced the premises in controversy, if this did not clearly appear from such description. (Walbridge v. Ellsworth, 44 Cal. 353.)

The stipulation as to the common source of title, by consent, locates the disputed strip of land in square 273, as shown ‘ ‘ on the official map of the city of Santa Barbara, ’ ’ and this “square” is by the same instrument shown to be bounded by Bancheria, Castillo, Gutierrez and Montecito streets. No attempt, however, was made to locate the lines of the property by this map, or to determine the location of the intersection of Montecito and Castillo streets, the initial point of the description in plaintiff’s deed, by this map or the monuments of the survey which it is presumed to represent. The only monuments called for in the deed to plaintiff are the two streets last named. In the absence of any evidence to establish a different intention, the description in the deed must be construed to mean the lines of these streets as they were *504 actually laid out; in other words, according to their truo location. (Orena v. Newlove, 153 Cal. 136, 140, [94 Pac. 628].)

Appellant contends that she has done this by showing that it appears from a survey of a portion of the block made by the city engineer in March, 1906, that the frontage of the block on Montecito street is four hundred and fifty and forty-four hundredths feet, and that after deducting the disputed strip which was first inclosed by defendant in March. 1906, there remains but two hundred and seventeen and two-tenths feet between it and the east corner of t'he block at the intersection of Montecito and Castillo streets, and that as the eight-foot strip is necessary to complete the two hundred and twenty-five feet frontage to which she shows title, her right of possession is established. This survey so relied upon was based upon monuments placed in the-streets to indicate their location by one George P. Wright, who made a survey or resurvey of the streets of the city in 1889. The purpose or intent of, or authority for, the survey is not shown. The only matter in the record which can be construed as giving it any authoritative value is that the-lines of the streets as laid out in accordance therewith are-now recognized as official lines by the city and acted upon by it.

Eespondent, on the other hand, relies upon a showing that prior to the year 1903 the fence on the Castillo street side-of the plaintiff’s property was located about eight feet northeasterly from where it now stands, and that the rest of the-fence along the Trussel block, on- that street, and the fence along block No. 292, the next block to the southeast of block 273, were, at least as early as 1882, and said other-fences ever since have been, and still are, on a line with each other, and located about eight feet northeasterly from the-line of plaintiff’s fence; that when the fences were so located Castillo street was open for travel its full width between the fences on either side thereof, and that the street, so fenced was traveled as early as the year 1882. He contends that on the authority of Orena v. City of Santa Barbara, 91 Cal. 621, [28 Pac. 268], and Oglesby v. City of Santa Barbara, 119 Cal. 114, [51 Pac. 181], he has thus established the line of Castillo street so that plaintiff has her full *505 two hundred and twenty-five feet frontage on Monteeito street without the eight-foot strip in question.

In the absence of proper evidence essential to the correct official location of either the block or the streets surrounding it, the trial court was justified in accepting the best evidence the case afforded, or, if it afforded none, in applying the presumption which the law provides where there is a failure to present satisfactory evidence. In sustaining his conclusions it is not necessary that we assume that the learned judge who tried the ease construed the opinions in the two cases above cited as supporting the view of respondent that fences are original evidence of the street lines. We do not regard those cases as so holding. In both of them the respective parties to the litigation properly sought to locate the lines of an “official” survey to support title the paramount source of which rested thereon for purposes of description.

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Bluebook (online)
102 P. 531, 10 Cal. App. 501, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winchester-v-payne-calctapp-1909.