53 Cal. 190 | Cal. | 1878
Lead Opinion
The action is ejectment for a lot in the Mission Addition of the City of San Francisco, and is included in the territory embraced by the Van Ness Ordinance, so called. The. defendant was in possession at the commencement of the action, but at the trial showed no title or right to the possession, except such as is to be inferred from the fact of possession. J udgment was entered for the defendant, and the plaintiff moved for a new trial on the ground, amongst others, that the judgment and decision of the Court were not justified by the evidence. The motion was denied and the plaintiff appeals.
At the trial, the original plan or map was produced, and on inspection there did not appear on the face of it any explicit indication in terms of the lots reserved for school purposes or as sites for engine-houses. But there appeared certain spaces marked as public parks or squares, with the name of each written on the face of it; and another space with the words “ Hospital Lot” written upon it. There also appeared a large
When the map was delivered by the Commissioners to the Common Council with the report, there was upon it a certificate or inscription, subscribed by the Commissioners, as follows: “ City of San Francisco, for the location and dimensions of the streets to be laid out within the city limits west of Larkin' and southwest of Johnson streets, with the lots or grounds selected and set apart for the several public uses as hereon designated, made, selected, and presentfed for the approval of the Common Council by the undersigned City-Surveyor and Commissioners, under and in pursuance of the provisions of an ordinance of the Common Council of the City of San Francisco, entitled (An Ordinance for the settlement and quieting of land titles in the City of San Francisco,’ approved June 20th, 1855; and also an ordinance of the said Common Council, entitled ‘An Ordinance providing for selecting and designating public squares and reservations for hospitals, fire engine and school-houses, and other public purposes, and for adopting the plan of the streets in the western and southwestern portions of the city, according to the provisions of Ordinance lío. 822, and confirmatory of said Ordinance lío. 822, approved September 27th, 1855.’ ”
At the trial, the draughtsman who made the map under the directions of the Commissioners was called as a witness, and testified that, by the direction of the Commissioners, he colored certain spaces inclosed in rectangular lines with brown,
It is clear beyond controversy that the Commissioners selected twenty-eight lots for school purposes, all of which were intended and were supposed to be one hundred and thirty-seven and one-half feet square, except those on the Potrero, which were intended and supposed to be one hundred by two hundred feet, and that they also selected twenty-five lots for the uses of the Eire Department, which were intended and supposed to be in size thirty by one hundred and thirty-seven and one-lialf feet, except those on the Potrero, which were intended and supposed to be thirty by one hundred feet in size. We are to read the map as though it was now in the same condition as when it was delivered to the Common Council, and the evidence shows that the paper on which the map was made was then perfectly white, with certain spaces inclosed in rectangular lines which were colored brown, and certain other smaller spaces similarly in
In reaching this conclusion, we impute no force to the oral testimony admitted at the trial, except in so far as it showed that when the map was delivered to the Common Council the map was on white paper, with twenty-eight spaces colored brown and twenty-five smaller spaces colored red; which spaces, as it now appears on the face of the map, were inclosed in rectangular lines, with figures indicating the sizes of the lots, as hereinbefore explained. Reading the map as it then was, and construing the map with the certificate thereon, in connection with the report, we are of opinion that the report and map of themselves sufficiently identify the lots reserved for school purposes.
Nor can it be seriously questioned, we think, that under the statutes defining the rights and powers of the Board of Education, it may maintain an action to recover the possession of a school lot.
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Concurrence Opinion
The oral testimony established the condition of the map when it was filed, and at the time when it became by law the official map. A reference to and inspection of the report and map— the colors on the latter being restored—sufficiently identify the lots selected by the Commissioners as school lots; and of these the lot sued for in this action is one.