Beneficial Life Ins. Co. v. Wakamatsu

270 P.2d 830, 75 Idaho 232
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1954
Docket8040
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 270 P.2d 830 (Beneficial Life Ins. Co. v. Wakamatsu) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beneficial Life Ins. Co. v. Wakamatsu, 270 P.2d 830, 75 Idaho 232 (Idaho 1954).

Opinion

TAYLOR, Justice.

This action was commenced^ April 21, 1951, to quiet title to a strip of land lying along the common boundary between lands owned by plaintiffs (respondents) and lands owned by the defendants (appellants). So 1 far as record titles are concerned, both tracts are described according to government subdivisions. The record title to the *236 lands owned by the plaintiffs is in the name of the Beneficial Life Insurance Company. The plaintiffs, Hyrum Lewis and his wife, are.in possession under.a contract to purchase. Their lands are described as the SE% SW% and the S% SE<4 of Section 4. The defendants, Esam Wakamatsu and his wife, are the owners of the NE^, SW^ and the 1S% SEI4 of Section 4, subject to mortgages held by the defendants, Utah Mortgage Loan Corporation and Standard Insurance Company. All of the lands involved are in Township 2 S., Range 35 E.B.M., in Bingham County, Idaho. The annexed plat will clarify further details :

*237 No witness was produced by either party as to the date of the construction, or the circumstances of the construction, of the division fence between these properties. The witness, F. W. Keifer, who was the county surveyor from 1909 to 1912, and again from 1925 to date, testified that he made a survey in 1911 or ’12 to locate the lines of property in Section 3, adjacent to and east of the lands here involved. The survey was made for a Mr. McKenna, at that time owner of the property now owned by defendants. In making the survey the witness located the southeast and southwest corners of Section 4, and had occasion to locate and observe the division fence then existing between the properties here involved. He found a division fence in existence at that time apparently extending along the theoretically true line some distance from east to west between the NE14 of SE*4 and the SE*4 of SEj4 to a point where a - ditch or canal crosses that line in a somewhat north and south direction. The fence then jogged to the south some 45 or 47 feet and continued westerly to a point on the west boundary of the SEJ4 of SW% at a point 73 feet south of what would be the theoretically true northwest corner of the last described parcel. This witness made a subsequent survey in 1951, and testified that the fence was in the exact location in 1951, where he found it in 19.11 or ’12, from the point where it contacts the ditch or canal to the west line of these properties; that the fence from the ditch to the east line had been changed. The location of the fence from the point on the ditch to the west line, and the fact that it has never been moved, is confirmed by all of the witnesses who testified thereon. So it may be taken as established and without dispute that this division fence, extending across the northern part of plaintiffs’ two west forty acre tracts and part of their east forty acre tract, was erected sometime prior to 1911 or 1912, and, although repaired, its location has never been changed.

With respect to the fence from the ditch to the east line of the properties involved, which fence runs across the northern edge of the SEj4 of SEJ4, the record is very unsatisfactory. In presenting their defense, and to illustrate the testimony of their witnesses, counsel for defendants produced a blackboard in court and had the surveyor, Keifer, draw thereon a plat of the lands of the parties with government lines, fences, ditches and other pertinent features. The surveyor and other witnesses then illustrated their testimony by pointing out on the blackboard, or drawing thereon, lines or objects concerning which they testified. As an example, the witness, Victor Jensen, was asked by the court:

“Well, we have got in the record now, reference to a jog. Now where does the fence differ where you saw it last- year from what it was when you saw it in nineteen, sixteen?
*238 “(Witness) Well, when I saw it in nineteen, sixteen, come along right here, like this (witness indicating on blackboard), then jogged over to this little fence here (witness indicating).”

The transcript is replete- with testimony of like character. The blackboard was not offered in evidence and is not before us. It is impossible to tell from the transcript where the witnesses, testifying with reference to the blackboard, located the fences or other objects. Presumably such testimony was clear to the district judge having the .blackboard before him. Obviously we cannot review it, but will, and must, accept the district judge’s findings thereon. The finding as to this part of the fence is as follows:

“That the fence between the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter. and the Southeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of said Section Four was erected between the years 1920 and 1922 under an oral agreement or understanding that it was not all on the true.-Jine and that the true line lay north of a portion thereof at least.”

. All' of the witnesses who had knowledge of the history of the. fence line agreed that some change had been made in this easterly section of the fence. The finding, as to particulars, ‘appears to be based upon the testimony’ of one, James Jensen, a witness for the plaintiffs, in rebuttal.- As a contract purchaser, he was in pdsséssion of what is now the plaintiffs’ property, during the years 1920, ’21 and ’22. He found a stone in place on the east fence line, rep-; resenting the northeast corner of his property, and another in the west fence line,' representing the northwest corner. Just how he determined these stones to be authentic monuments, does not appear. Sighting from one stone to the other, he said the fence was two or three rods south of the true line. At that time Mr. McKenna was the owner of the west two forties of defendants’ lands. The witness said he told Mr. McKenna;

“* * * according to them surveyors that just come in, why, that it wasn’t on the line, and he says no, he says after a fence has stood for many years it come a line.”

He further testified that he regarded the fence as the true line. Mr. Jensen was, therefore, put on notice that McKenna was claiming to the fence, and he says he acquiesced.

Referring now to the east end of the fence line, the witness Jensen said that at the time he occupied plaintiffs’ lands, one, Louis Taylor, occupied defendants’ east forty (NE% SE^), and during that time Mr. Taylor built a fence, commencing about two feet from the stone on the east line, and then “he ran southwest over to the corner of my.fence, where my fence came up to a —over the- ditch.” (Emphasis added.) Then . as to his understanding with Mr. Taylor in regard to this, new section of fence, he testified:

*239 “ * * * Me and him got to talking one day, and I told him that — you know that stone going west, why that fence is way over here on me, and I said, well, I tell you what I will do, I says, I will give you the crop on that, as long as you want it, it’s worth your money to plow it up — that sage brush, so he took me up on that, and that was the contract between us, we did that, and he put it into potatoes that fall and I left the next spring.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 830, 75 Idaho 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beneficial-life-ins-co-v-wakamatsu-idaho-1954.