Baldwin v. Fisher

124 N.W. 1094, 110 Minn. 186, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 973
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 18, 1910
DocketNos. 16,200—(40)
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 124 N.W. 1094 (Baldwin v. Fisher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Fisher, 124 N.W. 1094, 110 Minn. 186, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 973 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

This is an action to restrain the defendants, Forest B. Fisher, Albert E. Fisher, and James E. Howes, from trespassing upon certain lands to which the plaintiff claims title, and from obstructing or interfering with a watercourse deepened and improved by the plaintiff.

(a) The plaintiff owns the south half of the northeast quarter of section 35, township 122, range 28. The record is somewhat obscure as to the north half of the quarter, but it is owned either by the defendants, Albert E.-Fisher and James E. Howes, or by Albert E. Fisher and Mrs. Howes. The plaintiff claims a natural watercourse extends in a northeasterly direction from a point near the center of the section across the entire quarter to a creek, and that he has a prescriptive right to maintain the watercourse' as deepened and improved by a ditch constructed and which drained a meadow upon his land.

(b) Plaintiff claims the defendants obstructed the watercourse and encroached upon his land, plowing up and destroying his crops. The parties do not agree as to the line dividing the north from the south half. The plaintiff claims according to a survey known as the “Jenks survey,” made in 1872, and the defendants according to a survey made by Chute in 1898. The result is to leave in dispute a wedge-shaped tract containing between two and three acres, and across which the watercourse and ditch extended.

(c) The third complaint that the plaintiff makes is that the defendants cut and broke a wire fence placed by him upon the line dividing his land from that of the defendant Albert E. Fisher in section 2, township 121, range 28. This fence extended across an arm of Otter Bake, upon which Albert E. Fisher claimed the right to enter for the purpose of fishing and boating. It is now conceded that the lake was not meandered; but it is claimed that the fence was not upon the true line, but was upon Fisher’s land.

The trial court, in substance, found that the plaintiff and his grantors had for more than twenty years “been in actual, open, continu[189]*189oils, exclusive, and hostile possession under color of title and claim of ownership,” of the south half of the northeast quarter of section 35, according to the Jenks survey. This survey, as we have said, placed the disputed wedge of land- in the south half. The court further found .that the defendants had at various times gone upon this strip of land, destroyed plaintiff’s crops, and still claimed the right to do so; that there was a natural watercourse extending from the slough on section 35 across the northeast quarter and discharging into a natural ravine on the north half of that quarter, and that in 1881 “the plaintiff constructed a ditch through said meadow, and continued it through said natural channel by deepening the same' along its course to said natural ravine; * * * that .plaintiff maintained said ditch * * * continuously from A. D. 1881 to A. D. 1902,” when the defendants obstructed it, causing the overflowing of plaintiff’s meadow, rendering it unfit for use.

In reference to the trespass upon section 2 the court found that for more than twenty years plaintiff and his grantors had been the owners and in possession of the land up to the fence already described, and that at divers times the defendant Albert E. Eisher had opened' the fence and gone upon the lake, and still claimed the right to do .so; that there was no evidence that the other defendants had opened the fence, or threatened to do so. The court also found the diminution in the rental value of the plaintiff’s meadow by reason of the overflow, but denied the plaintiff judgment for any amount. Judgment was ordered against all the defendants, forever enjoining them from opening the fence or going upon the part of the lake owned by the plaintiff, from entering upon any portion of the south half of the northeast quarter of section 35, as established by the Jenks survey, and from filling or damming or impeding the ditch from the slough to the ravine.

Upon this appeal from an order denying a new trial the defendants contend: (1) That the findings are not sustained by the evidence; (2) that the findings as to any wrongful act upon the part of the defendant Eorest B. Eisher and James E. Howes are not sustained; (3) that the court erred in admitting the Jenks plat in evidence, and (4) in receiving, evidence as to the diminution in rental value [190]*190of the meadow; and, finally (5) that there was a bona fide controversy as to the correct location of the lines dividing these tracts, thus putting in issue the title to the land in question, which dispute could not be determined in this form of action.

1. The evidence is sufficient to sustain all the findings of fact, with the exception of those which charge the defendant Forest B. Fisher with continuing acts of trespass. The only evidence which we have been able to find, or to which we have been referred, which in any way connects him with the acts complained of, is that given by himself that he had the ditch filled up some time in 1905 or 1906. Since then and before the commencement of this action he appears to have parted with his land, and while it may be true, as claimed in the brief of counsel, that his active sympathies are with his codefendants, there is no evidence that he has continued to or threatens to interfere with plaintiff’s rights.

2. The same claim is made for the defendant Howes, but he distinctly admitted taking part in the plowing up of the disputed strip, and, while Albert E. Fisher appears to have been the most active in the commission of the acts found to have been trespasses, the defendant Howes was properly included in the findings.

3. It was not error to admit the Jenks plat in evidence under the circumstances. If it was not sufficient of itself to establish the line as claimed by the plaintiff to be the true original line, it was proper to consider it in connection with the plaintiff’s testimony as to his possession of the tract actually occupied and cultivated by him.

4. It was proper for the court to receive evidence that the plaintiff sustained substantial damage from the obstruction of the ditch and consequent overflow of his meadow, - The fact that the court held that under the complaint no damages could be awarded the plaintiff makes it entirely immaterial whether the evidence as to the diminution in rental value would establish the proper measure in a case wherein damages could be recovered.

5. .This action may be maintained, notwithstanding the dispute as to the boundary lines. There can be no question that prior to the trespass complained, of the plaintiff was in the peaceful possession of the land now claimed by one or other of the defendants. It was not [191]*191necessary for the court to find the absolute fee title in the plaintiff in order to justify a judgment restraining threatened trespass. The forcible entry Into lands is forbidden by section 4036, R. L. 1905, and the defendants had the means of establishing their rights by suitable proceedings, instead of by an entry which, if not forcible, was at least in violation of the spirit of the statute; for the destruction of the plaintiff’s crops cannot be said to have been a peaceful act, even if unaccompanied by any actual violence. This is not in conflict with Mercil v. Broulette, 66 Minn. 416, 69 N. W. 218, where it was said that one entitled to possession might,’ while another is in the occupation, make a peaceable entry upon land and retain the possession so acquired. The facts in that case were materially different from those in the case at bar.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 N.W. 1094, 110 Minn. 186, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-fisher-minn-1910.