Brandhagen v. Burt

117 N.W.2d 696, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 94
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1962
Docket8034
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 117 N.W.2d 696 (Brandhagen v. Burt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brandhagen v. Burt, 117 N.W.2d 696, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 94 (N.D. 1962).

Opinion

STRUTZ, Judge.

This is an action to quiet title to a portion of Lot Two (2) in Block Eleven (11), Original Townsite of Cavalier, North Dakota. The action involves encroachment of a building owned by the defendant E. M. Burt and located on a lot adjoining that of the plaintiffs, but extending eighteen inches onto the plaintiffs’ property to which title is being quieted. Plaintiffs further pray for $10,000 damages for use and occupation of the eighteen-inch strip of plaintiffs’ property so encroached upon.

The answer of the defendant includes a counterclaim for specific performance of an alleged agreement between plaintiffs and defendant, alleging that the plaintiffs had orally agreed with the defendant, at the time of the construction of the plaintiffs’ and the defendant’s buildings, that the defendant could use the east wall of the plaintiffs’ building as a party wall if the defendant would pay one-half of the cost of erecting such east wall of the plaintiffs’ building. The cost of the wall later was determined to be $4,000. Defendant further alleges that it was agreed that, inasmuch as the plaintiffs’ east wall was to be eighteen inches from the plaintiffs’ east lot line, the plaintiffs would give to the defendant an easement to the eighteen-inch strip; that the parties agreed that, in consideration of the use of plaintiffs’ wall by the defendant as a party wall and in further consideration for the plaintiffs’ giving to the defendant ari easement to the eighteen-inch strip, the defendant would restrict the use of his building and would not carry on certain designated types of business therein for so long as the agreement between the parties continued to be in force; that the parties agreed that the cost of a common, or joint, sewer and water line to the properties would be shared equally; and that defendant further agreed to pay for any repairs necessary to the plaintiffs’ east wall for so long as it was being used as a party wall by the defendant.

All negotiations between the parties, however, were carried on between the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen and the defendant. The record shows that tire plaintiffs’ property is held by the plaintiff Kenneth Brand-hagen and the plaintiff Monica K. Brand-hagen as joint tenants and that, although the defendant apparently knew of the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen’s interest in such property, she was not asked to participate in these negotiations.

The plaintiffs’ and the defendant’s buildings were erected in due time. In constructing the east wall of their building, the plaintiffs caused notches to be placed in the concrete of such wall, which notches were for the express purpose of tying in’the joists of the defendant’s building. The defendant’s building then was so constructed that it made use of the plaintiffs’ east wall as the west wall of the defendant’s building. The plaintiff Monica Brandhagen, while admittedly having taken no part in the negó- ’ tiations referred to, acknowledged that, when the defendant came to the plaintiffs’ *699 residence to talk with her husband before construction of either of the buildings, she had asked the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen what the defendant wanted and was informed that he wanted to attach his new building to the east wall of the plaintiffs’ new building. The plaintiff Monica Brand-hagen further admitted that, thereafter, she saw the defendant’s building being attached to the plaintiffs’ building and that she made no protest or objection. In response to a question as to what she and the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen had done when they saw the defendant attaching his building to their wall, and encroaching upon their property, the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen testified:

“We didn’t do anything.”

For almost eleven years thereafter, the plaintiffs did nothing. Finally, in July of 1959, this action was commenced to quiet title to the plaintiffs’ property, including the strip occupied by the defendant’s building. Plaintiffs also demanded $10,000 as damages for use and occupation of the plaintiffs’ lot by the defendant’s building.

Plaintiffs contend that the oral agreement of the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen with the defendant was of no effect since the 'plaintiffs did not accept the defendant’s postdated check for $2,000 which was delivered to plaintiffs’ attorney as payment for one-half of the cost of the plaintiffs’ east wall; that, in any event, the oral agreement was not binding upon the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen since she was not consulted at any time, nor did she approve the oral agreement made by the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen with the defendant; and that the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen, not having agreed to such use of the plaintiffs’ 'property by the defendant, her failure to ob- ' ject to the defendant’s use of the property as a party wall would not be a ratification of such oral agreement since she was not a party to the oral agreement.

The postdated check delivered to the plaintiffs’ attorney, which the plaintiffs did not accept, was, after several years, returned by the attorney to the defendant, and the plaintiffs never have received payment for one-half of the cost of the wall as had been agreed between the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen and the defendant. The defendant did, however, under the oral agreement between the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen and the defendant, pay one-half of the cost of installing a common sewer and water line to the buildings of the parties, and did observe all conditions required of him by such oral agreement as to the use of the defendant’s building. Moreover, during the eleven years since the erection of such buildings, the defendant paid all repairs to the plaintiffs’ east wall.

On this record, the trial court ordered the plaintiff Kenneth Brandhagen to spe-cificly perform his part of the agreement on payment to him, as a joint tenant with the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen, of $1,000, being one-half of the amount that defendant was to pay to the plaintiffs for such use of their wall as a party wall and for such easement; that the plaintiff Monica Brand-hagen, not having been a party to the oral agreement, could riot be required to spe-cificly perform an agreement to which she was not a party; and that the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen be awarded $1,000 damages, with interest at the legal rate of four per cent per annum from and after January 1, 1949, and that such sum be paid to her upon her executing and filing an easement in favor of the defendant for the use of the party wall and the eighteen-inch strip of plaintiffs’ lot occupied by the defendant’s building, since the defendant, in good faith, had expended large sums of money on his building in reliance upon the oral agreement with the plaintiff Kenneth Brand-hagen and with the knowledge of the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen.

From this judgment the plaintiffs have appealed, demanding a trial de novo.

Under North Dakota law,. an estate in real property, other than an estate at will *700 or for a term not exceeding one year, can be transferred only by operation of law or by an instrument in writing subscribed by the party disposing of the same or by his agent who has written authority as such agent. Sec. 47-10-01, N.D.C.C.

Here, we have property held by the plaintiffs as joint tenants. Neither has disposed of any of his interests in writing. It is also agreed that the plaintiff Monica Brandhagen did not authorize her husband, in writing, to act for her.

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Bluebook (online)
117 N.W.2d 696, 1962 N.D. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandhagen-v-burt-nd-1962.