No. 12800 | Cal. | Dec 12, 1890

Paterson, J.

This is an action of ejectment. The main question involved in the issues is, whether the lands *86in controversy have ever been dedicated for the use of the public as a levee and street. The court found*, from the evidence, that the property was dedicated to public use by the owners thereof about the yéar 1850, and that ever since said dedication the land has, by direction of the owners of the fee thereof, been designated and represented on the maps of the city of Napa as public streets and levees; that the public used the same exclusively until March 1, 1875, when defendant, without authority or right, ousted plaintiff therefrom, and has ever since wrongfully held exclusive possession of the property. The plaintiff had judgment against defendant for the possession of the lands, but the defendant was permitted to remove his warehouses and fences.

1. The evidence on behalf of the plaintiff is ample to support the finding as to dedication.

2. The court found (finding 2) that the land had been dedicated by the owners, Coombs and others. This was the ultimate and essential fact; and the subsequent finding, that the land, by direction of the owners, had, after such dedication, been designated on the maps of the city, was a finding upon an immaterial matter, at least upon a matter that was not controlling. The latter finding may be excluded as not supported by the evidence, and yet the judgment will be supported by the finding upon the question of dedication. The maps were not necessary to support the finding of dedication. The evidence of the acts and declarations of Coombs was sufficient to show a dedication.

3. If it be assumed that Coombs had no title at the time he dedicated the property, he and his grantees are nevertheless estopped, from denying the fact of dedica- ■ ti on. His claim was confirmed by the board of land' commissioners in April, 1854, and a patent was issued to him in 1866. His newly acquired estate “feeds the estoppel.” (Goddard on Easements, 95, and cases cited *87in note; Tyler on Ejectment, 725, 726; Washburn on Easements, 62.)

4. When the city marshal served a notice on defendant, demanding that he deliver up possession of the premises, the defendant admitted that he held possession of the property, and said he would not surrender it. This testimony of the marshal was not contradicted by defendant. The premises were in possession of a tenant of defendant under a letting from month to month. Under these circumstances it was not necessary that the tenant be made a party defendant. (Finnegan v. Carraher, 47 N. Y. 497.)

5. It is claimed that the court erred in its ruling in regard to the Thompson and Pierce maps. If the evidence necessary to render them proper for consideration under the ruling of the court was not produced by plaintiff, the defendant ought to have moved to strike them out. Instead of calling the attention of the court, when plaintiff rested its case, to the fact that there was no evidence showing that the former owners of the land had made, filed, or adopted the maps, counsel for defendant, in the argument of the case, considered and discussed the effect of the maps as evidence on the issue of dedication or no dedication. Therefore if it be assumed that there was, at the time that the maps were offered and admitted in evidence, an express and binding understanding between counsel and the court such as is claimed, we think that the failure to move to strike them out, and the manner in which they were treated by counsel in the argument, constituted a waiver of the limitation. Furthermore, there is no exception in the record upon which error can be predicated. There is no ruling which we can review.

The court did not err in admitting the map called “Plan of Napa City, filed for record at the request of Nathan Coombs.”

6. It is said that the evidence does not support the *88finding- of dedication “as a public levee and for public street purposes,” because it shows a dedication, if any, for a public landing.

It matters but little what name is given to the place, so long as the fact appears that it was dedicated for public use. “A landing is a bank or wharf to or from, which persons may go from or to some vessel in the contiguous water.” (State v. Graham, 15 Rich. 310.) The word “ levee,” as applied to portions of the public highways bordering on navigable streams and sloughs in the interior cities and towns of this state, has the same meaning as landing.

The judgment and order are affirmed.

Fox, J., Works, J., McFarland, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.

Rehearing denied.

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