117 Cal. 298 | Cal. | 1897
Upon the face of the complaint the cause of action and relief sought are not made perfectly clear. The trial court held the action to be one to enforce a right of way by plaintiff as appurtenant to his land over and across certain parcels of defendant’s land; and respondent’s counsel agrees with the trial court as to the nature of the cause of action. Treating the action as of the character denominated, we shall consider the merits of the litigation, judgment having gone for plaintiff and defendant appealing. Viewing the action from the standpoint of the trial court, there are matters alleged in the complaint which give it no strength and may be termed surplusage; but it cannot be said that
There are some allegations of the complaint declaring that the defendant dedicated these parcels, of land to the public as highways; and as to the fact of dedication, the trial court found that defendant offered to dedicate them to the publicas streets and abandoned them as such to the public, but that the public never accepted such offer of dedication. The court further found that such parcels of land had never been used by the public as highways. Conceding, for the purposes of the case only, that the evidence at the trial was sufficient to support a finding of fact to the effect that an offer of dedication to the public was made, still many years had intervened since that offer was made, and it had not been accepted by the public, either expressly, impliedly, or presumptively. Under such circumstances the owner beyond question had a right to revoke it, and that right he exercised by placing obstructions upon the land, of which acts complaint is now made. This revocation eliminates the whole question of dedication and offer of dedication and abandonment to the public from the case, and plaintiff’s right must rest upon other principles. The finding of fact that defendant abandoned these lands to the public as streets is a purely evidentiary matter tending to show dedication, and adds no strength in support of the judgment. In saying that there is no question of dedication in the case, the term “ dedication” is used in its strictly legal sense. In that sense dedication is a matter purely between the owner and the public. There is no such thing as a dedication between the owner and individuals. The public must be a party to every dedication. Some of the cases say that platting a tract of land, recording the plat, and selling lots by reference to such plat, constitutes a dedication of the streets in favor of the purchasers of these lots, even though a dedication to the public is not perfected and completed. The statement is not correct as a legal principle, as may be seen from what has already been said.
In principle there can be no difference as to any question of streets in the legal status of a purchaser who buys a lot according to a plat made by the owner whereon streets are delineated, and a purchaser who buys as plaintiff’s predecessors bought. This land was platted upon the ground. The plat was as perfect as if pictured upon paper, and probably more satisfactory. To be sure, the blocks were not numbered and the streets were not named, as would probably have been the fact if the plat had been transferred to paper.
Dedication is but a phase of estoppel. In speaking of dedication of land to public use Herman, in his work on Estoppel, section 1141, says: “ It does not operate as a grant, but is in the nature of an estoppel in pais, which debars the owner from recovering it back.” And the-decisions of this court, where it is declared that as to the purchaser of lots adjoining platted streets such streets are dedicated by the owner, mistake the true doctrine in form rather than in substance, for it is the doctrine of estoppel in pais that gives the vendee his remedy, and prevents the practice of injustice by the vendor. In Grogan v. Hayward, 6 Saw. 498, 4 Fed. Rep. 161, Justice Field, in speaking as to the respective rights of the public and a purchaser by a plat, said: “In the one case the acceptance completes the transfer of the property or easement in it from the owner to the public; in the other case the contract with the owner estops him from asserting any interest except in common with the purchasers from him.” Again:
In' the present case these strips were outlined upon the ground, and at the date of the purchase were declared by the owner to be streets. The right to use them as such formed part of the consideration moving to the vendee for the purchase, and such right of use became appurtenant to the. land granted. The owner declared to the purchasers that the parcels were streets; the purchasers acted upon such declaration; and as to such purchasers those parcels are streets.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment and order are affirmed.
Van Fleet, J., and Harrison, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.