32 Cal. 365 | Cal. | 1867
Ejectment to recover a parcel of land, part of the Rancho San Leandro, situated in Alameda County. It was tried without a jury and comes here upon the pleadings and a special finding of facts, unaccompanied by any evidence, except a map or diagram showing the lines of the Rancho San Leandro as surveyed by the Surveyor-General of the United States and confirmed by the District Court of the United States for the Northern District of California, the lines of a patent from the State of California, under which the defendants in part claim, the lines of the tract in dispute, the line of State segregation of swamp and overflowed lands, at that point, and the lines of
Upon the facts as found the Court gave the plaintiff judgment for seventeen eighteenths undivided. The defendants claim that the judgment should have been for them as to a part of the demanded premises, if not as to the whole.
The case is as follows: In 1842 the Rancho of San Leandro was granted in colonization by Juan B. Alvarado, then Governor of Upper California, to José Joaquin Estudillo. Said grant was presented to the Board of Commissioners appointed under the Act of Congress passed March 3d, 1851, and was confirmed by said Board on the 9th of January, 1855. Said grant was also confirmed by a decree of the District Court of the United States on appeal, which decree afterwards became final. In the decree of the Board, and also of the Court, the ranch was described as bounded on the west by the bay. (“Mare”) A survey was afterwards made by the Surveyor-General of the United States for the State of California and confirmed by the District Court of the United States. The land in suit fronts on the Bay of San Francisco and is within the lines of this survey. The plaintiffs hold the Estudillo title to seventeen eighteenths undivided. #
The defendants entered upon the land in 1852. At that time, (and still,) at and near the place where the land is situated there was a salt water pond, covering several hundred acres, including a part of the land in suit, into which the tide waters of the bay flowed at flood tide and returned at ebb tide, through a slough about two feet wide and fifteen or twenty rods long. On the west side of the slough there was a ridge of sand extending from the slough along the shore of the bay in a northerly direction and connecting with a road at the main land. At the slough this ridge rose into a knoll, or mound, three or four feet higher than the surrounding ground, which, inside of the ridge, was marsh. From the knoll to the main land the ridge was broken at places and crossed by small sloughs or gullies, caused by the action of the tides, but
A part of the land in suit is covered and uncovered by the flow and ebb through the slough of the neap or ordinary tides, which occur twice every twenty-four hours. A still larger part is covered and uncovered by the flow and ebb of the spring tides, which occur at or about the new and full moon. The remainder, including the knoll and ridge, is not reached by the tides, but is all within the segregation of swamp and overflowed land m&de at that point by the State.
The defendants obtained a patent from the State on the 4th of May, 1857, which covers the land in controversy, and purports to convey it as swamp and overflowed land. .
After this action was brought they also acquired a one thirty-sixth undivided interest in the San Leandro grant.
In view of the foregoing facts the Court below held that the defendants took nothing by their patent as against the plaintiff’s title. Hence this appeal.
From the foregoing statement it is clear that there are no circumstances connected with this case which distinguish it from the case of Teschemacher v. Thompson, 18 Cal. 11. The land in suit in that case was in all respects of the same character as that involved in this, and the titles of the parties in both cases are of the same character and come from the same source respectively. It was there held in substance that the
From the foregoing it results that the State of California came into the Union with her claim to the lands within her borders, such as she took by virtue of her admission under general grants to all the States previously made by the Federal Government, and such as might thereafter be granted from the same source, and such as she then acquired by virtue of
We find no error in the record, and the judgment must be affirmed.
Ordered accordingly.