115 Cal. 441 | Cal. | 1896
Action to. recover a street assessment upon certain land in San Francisco. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff, and the defendants have appealed. One of the defenses to the suit is that at the time the resolution ordering the work was adopted by the board of supervisors, the street therein described had never been dedicated to public use, and was not a public street, but was held in private ownership. The resolution ordering the work to be done was passed August 13, 1877, and provided for grading Union street from Larkin street to the "westerly line of Franklin street. The court found that at that date the board of supervisors had acquired jurisdiction to order said work and the whole of it to be done; This finding is attacked by the appellant upon the ground that it is not supported by the evidence.
Union street, between Larkin and Franklin streets, is situated in that portion of San Francisco which is embraced within what is known as the Laguna survey. In
At the trial of the present case evidence was offered to the effect that the defendant, Wesson, became vested in 1872 with the title to the hundred-vara lot No. 15 that had been granted by Leavenworth in 1848. This hundred-vara lot embraced the premises of the defendant described in the complaint, and also a portion of Union street fronting thereon. Wesson testified that he remained in possession of the property until the grading was completed, and did not in any way part with his title to the land, until he made a conveyance to the city, in 1891, of that portion of Union street which was embraced in his hundred-vara lot; and it was admitted on behalf of the plaintiff that at the time the above order for the improvement of Union street was made, certain individuals were vested with the title to portions of the street which were embraced within grants in the Laguna survey made by Leavenworth. It was also shown that, until the time when the work of grading the street was begun under the contract entered into by virtue of the order, Union street was closed by fences running across it at several points.
The street improvement act, under which these proceedings were had, gave to the board of supervisors authority to order tire improvement of only public streets,
Evidence was introduced on behalf of the plaintiff, for the purpose of showing that by reason of certain conveyances in which the lot described in the complaint had been hounded by Union street, that portion of the street had been -dedicated as a public street; but, even if it be conceded that these conveyances had that effect, it would not render the assessment valid. A dedication of the street in front of this lot by the owners would not have the effect to dedicate other portions of the street which were held by different owners. The improvement -of the street from Larkin to Franklin street was an entirety, and, unless the board of supervisors had jurisdiction to order the grading of the whole of that portion of the street, no portion of the expense could be made a lien upon the defendants’ lot. The entire cost of the grading was by the act to be assessed upon the entire frontage, and each lot at a rate per front foot sufficient to cover the total expense of the work. There was no authority to charge the defendants’ lot with the burden -of any portion of the expense of grading private property adjacent thereto, which lay within the lines of the street, and an assessment which included such charges would be invalid. (Partridge v. Lucas, 99 Cal. 519; Ryan v. Altschul, 103 Cal. 174).
There was also evidence tending to show that Wesson and other property owners knew of the grading of the
The judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Van Fleet, J., McFarland, J., Henshaw, J., and Temple, J., concurred.