Young v. Blakeman

95 P. 888, 153 Cal. 477, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 487
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4213.
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 95 P. 888 (Young v. Blakeman) 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
Young v. Blakeman, 95 P. 888, 153 Cal. 477, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 487 (Cal. 1908).

Opinions

SHAW, J.

This is an action to recover possession of land and involves the location of the boundaries between the respective lots of the plaintiff and defendant, situated in San Francisco. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

The two principal points urged by the plaintiff are, 1. That where adjoining owners have agreed upon and established a division line, a subsequent deed by one of them purporting to convey his tract by the original description, will not convey the title to the grantee up to the agreed line, if it turns out that the position of the line, according to the calls of the deed, newly measured, is within the bounds of his possession and includes less territory on his side than the agreed line; 2. That the defendant is estopped to claim the strip in controversy.

1. The action was begun in January, 1903. The defendant’s predecessor, Miller, owned the lot which, according to his title-deeds, was bounded as follows: Beginning 195 feet easterly from the northeasterly comer of Geary and Dupont streets and running thence easterly, along the line of Geary *479 Street, twenty feet; thence northerly at right angles, parallel with Dupont Street, 122 feet and six inches, to Morton Street; thence at right angles westerly along the southerly line of Morton Street twenty feet; thence southerly at right angles 122 feet and six inches to the place of beginning. The plaintiff’s predecessor owned a lot which his deeds described in the same manner, except that the point of beginning was situated 175 feet easterly from the northeasterly corner of Geary and Dupont streets. Each owned a lot fronting twenty feet on Geary Street and by their title-deeds the boundary between them was 195 feet westerly from the corner. More than thirty years before the action was begun 'they agreed upon the location of this division line and established it upon the ground. They and their respective successors have, ever since that time, acquiesced in the location and have erected buildings on their respective lots with walls on the line and have occupied the same for many years, without dispute until shortly before the action was begun.

The buildings on the defendant’s lot were erected in 1874. In 1884 Miller, the owner, made a lease of the lot to one Apel, for a term of twenty years, at a fixed rental, inserting therein a clause giving Apel or his assigns an option to purchase the lot, at any time after fifteen years from the date of the agreement, at the price of forty thousand dollars. In pursuance of this lease and option Miller delivered possession of the lot and buildings to Apel. In 1894, Blakeman purchased the lease and option agreement and was given possession of the lot and buildings accordingly and has ever since held possession thereof up to the agreed line in question. During all this period Young and his predecessors under the original title-deeds have had possession of the lot to the west of the division line. After the expiration of the fifteen years Blakeman elected to exercise the option and buy the Miller lot at the price fixed. He made a tender, which was refused, brought suit for specific performance, obtained judgment and received from the heirs of Miller, who died before the suit was begun, a conveyance of the property. (See Blakeman v. Miller, 136 Cal. 138, [89 Am. St. Rep. 120, 68 Pac. 587].) In all the conveyances of all parties and their predecessors, and in the said lease, the respective lots were described by metes and bounds in the words above given, the *480 Blakeman lot being described as a lot beginning 195 feet west of Dupont Street and the Young lot as a lot beginning 175 feet west thereof, without mention of any monument at the •division line, or of any agreement regarding the same. Dupont Street is now known as Grant Avenue. After the •execution of the deed to Blakeman by the Miller heirs, they ■set up a claim to a strip of land on the west side of the lot 9% inches wide on Geary Street and 13% inches wide on Morton Street. This strip they quitclaimed to Young, who thereupon brought this suit for possession thereof. The subjoined plat, though not drawn exactly to scale, illustrates the position of the lots.

When the division line of adjoining owners is designated in their respective deeds as a line beginning at a specified distance from a fixed object, the only method of ascertaining the location of the line on the ground is by measuring the required distance from the object. Experience shows that such measurements, made at different times by different persons with different instruments, will usually vary somewhat. The position of the object or monument at which the course begins may also be changed and the change may not be known to the parties, or there may be no means of ascertaining its *481 original position. If the position of the line always re-' mained to be ascertained by measurement alone, the result would be that it would not be a fixed boundary, but would be subject to change with every new measurement. Such uncertainty and instability in the title to land would be intolerable. For these and other reasons the rule has been established that when such owners, being uncertain of the true position of the boundary so described, agree upon its true location, mark it upon the ground, or build up to it, occupy on each side up to the place thus fixed and acquiesce in such location for a period equal to the statute of limitations, or under such circumstances that substantial loss would be caused by a change of its position, such line becomes, in law, the true line called for by the respective descriptions, regardless of the accuracy of the agreed location, as it may appear by subsequent measurements. The court found that the line in question had been thus located by the predecessors in interest of the parties, more than thirty years before the suit was begun. The evidence of the fact, though entirely circumstantial, is reasonably satisfactory.

It is conceded that such location is binding upon the parties who own the respective lots at the time the agreement is made, while their ownership continues. The plaintiff’s theory is that the agreed line is good only between the original parties and suffices to mark the line called for by the description only with respect to the deeds under which they hold;that if one of these owners transfers his lot by a deed giving only the original description, delivering possession up to the agreed line, the vendee would not take title to the agreed line, but only to the area called for by the metes and bounds of the deed; that the subject is reopened for settlement between him and his grantor and if, upon a new measurement, it is found that part of the vendor’s holding lies outside of the newly measured line and between that and the agreed line, the vendor will remain the owner thereof and may convey it to another, or recover the possession thereof from the vendee. His argument is that the vendor, in such a case, is the owner of the intervening strip by adverse possession against the adjoining owner, and not by his original title-deeds, and that a conveyance by the original description will not carry title to the land acquired by such adverse possession.

*482 The object of the rule is to secure repose, to prevent strife and disputes concerning boundaries, and make titles permanent and stable.

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Bluebook (online)
95 P. 888, 153 Cal. 477, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-blakeman-cal-1908.