Belding v. Huttenlocher

177 Iowa 440
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 23, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 177 Iowa 440 (Belding v. Huttenlocher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belding v. Huttenlocher, 177 Iowa 440 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

®s™n- nature color of^itieT: oTrerhanging^"" Prior to the year 1898, Lovina C. Belding and J. W. Belding were husband and wife, and owned what is known in the record as Lot 1, Block 2, Allen’s Addition to Des Moines, situated at the comer of Twelfth and Locust Streets, south of Locust and west of Twelfth. This lot was 168 feet and 5 or 6 inches on Twelfth Street. Divorce proceedings were instituted between the Beldings, which resulted in their being divorced, and a decree was entered giving to the plaintiff 85 feet 11 inches on the south end of the lot, and to her husband, J. W. Belding, 82% feet on the north end of the lot, and, in this decree, each was [442]*442directed to convey to the other by proper instruments of conveyance so much of the property decreed to- him or her, and conveyances were made accordingly.

It appears that there was a building on the property decreed to plaintiff, near the north line, all on her land, but this building had a bay window, the eaves of which extended for about 9 inches over the property conveyed to Mr. Belding. These conveyances were made in 1898, and each of these, parties assumed to-, and did, occupy the property so conveyed to him or her. Later, on the 27th day of April, 1901, the said J. W. Belding conveyed his interest in the north 82% feet to the defendant Huttenlocher. On or about the 15th day of June, 1912, or immediately prior thereto, the defendant ITuttenlocher, through the other defendants, undertook the erection of a building on-the land purchased by him from Belding on the south line of the property purchased, and, in the erection of the building, removed a certain portion of the eaves of the dormer window of plaintiff’s house, removing therefrom about 9 inches of the projection, or so much as projected over his south lot line. The north side of plaintiff’s house was several inches from the south line of the portion of the lot owned by the defendant. The eaves on the north side of the dormer window on plaintiff’s house extended about 9 inches over the lot line, or over defendant’s line. She brings this action, claiming to be the owner of these 9 inches over which the eaves of her dormer window extended, and bases her right on the ground:

(1) That she has been in the peaceable, undisputed and adverse possession of it for more than 10 years. This possession is predicated on the thought that she had possession because of the fact that the eaves of her dormer window extended over these 9 inches.

(2) That the owners of the north portion of the lot had recognized and acquiesced in her ownership of it in that they permitted, the dormer window to extend over, with knowledge of the fact that it did so extend, and that she was claiming a [443]*443right to have it so extend, and she claims that, at the time this north portion of Lot 1 was purchased by the defendant from Belding, he knew of her claim, and, knowing, acquiesced in it.

(3) She further claims that, before the decree was entered, there was a stipulation made between her and her husband touching the division of property in the event of a divorce decree, and that he was to be limited to within 9 inches of the north side of the north cottage bay window. She says, therefore, that the quitclaim deed which she made to her husband conveying to him 82y2 feet is not correct, and should be reformed so as to limit the conveyance to within 9 inches of this dormer window.

Thus the plaintiff’s claim, narrowed down, is that she owns 85 feet 11 inches of the south portion of the lot in controversy, by reason of the decree entered in the divorce proceedings and by reason of the conveyance made to her by her husband; that she owns 9 inches farther north on the land decreed and conveyed to her husband, because of the fact that this bay window extended 9 inches over on that portion of the lot for more than 10 years prior to the trespass on the part of the defendant complained of, and by reason of the stipulation, which will be hereafter more fully referred to.

We take up the first proposition: Did the plaintiff acquire a right to these 9 inches by adverse possession for more than 10 years prior to the trespass complained of ?

In the decree entered in the divorce proceedings, she was given 85 feet 11 inches off the south end of the lot. Her husband was given 82 feet 6 inches off the north end of the lot. Each was directed to convey to the other, by proper instrument of conveyance, any right that he had in the property decreed to the other. In pursuance of this, she made a deed conveying her interest, whatever it might be, in the north 82y2 feet to her husband. At that time, the building stood as it stood at the time of the trespass — the eaves extending over the dormer window as they were at the time they wer'e [444]*444removed. When she made her conveyance of the 82% feet off the north portion, that conveyance carried these 9 inches. It is not claimed that these 9 inches were included in the deed made by her husband to her. The fact is that these 9 inches which she now claims were included in the land conveyed by her to her husband. Never since that conveyance was made has she made any claim to any portion of the land conveyed to her husband. Therefore, even though she had actual possession of this 9 inches after the conveyance, she could not base any right to it by adverse possession, for the reason that she made no claim of right to the possession. There must be a claim as broad as the possession to ripen into adverse possession, under the rule in Grube v. Wells, 34 Iowa 148. Mere occupancy is not sufficient, even though it be actual occupancy. The claim of right to possession must be as broad as the possession itself, in all cases where title is claimed by .adverse possession.

Moreover, the record discloses that; she never made any claim to these 9 inches now in dispute, based on any actual occupancy of the surface of the ground; nor did she occupy or use the surface of the ground covered by these 9 inches. Her whole claim of right by adverse possession to these 9 inches seems to rest solely on the thought that the eaves of the dormer window on the north side of her house extended over these 9 inches; that this gave to her a legal possession of these 9 inches, and the fact that the window was permitted to remain there with the eaves extending was evidence of her assertion of right to possession. The width of this dormer or bay window east and west was about 8 feet, and it projected ■north along this 8 feet in length. The eaves of this dormer window, but not the dormer window, projected about 9 inches over the land owned by the defendant; that is, she claims a right by adverse possession to these 9 inches, based on the fact that the eaves of this bay window, for a distance of 8 feet east and west up in the air, extended 9 inches over on [445]*445the defendant’s land. The erection of the building complained of was on a line between the plaintiff’s and the defendant’s land, and the south wall of the building was about 6 inches from the dormer window proper.

2. Adverse possession : evidence: “use:” notice of adverse claim. It does not affirmatively appear that either plaintiff or her husband at any time knew that the eaves of this dormer window extended over the line and onto the land conveyed to the husband. It does affirmatively appear that the conveyance made by the wife to the husband covered the 9 inches now claimed by the plaintiff. At the time this conveyance was máde, this building stood in the same place it now stands.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Iowa 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belding-v-huttenlocher-iowa-1916.