Brewer v. Schammerhorn

332 P.2d 526, 183 Kan. 739, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 418
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1958
Docket41,081
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 332 P.2d 526 (Brewer v. Schammerhorn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Schammerhorn, 332 P.2d 526, 183 Kan. 739, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 418 (kan 1958).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroedek, J.:

This is an action in ejectment tried to the court upon waiver of a jury by both parties. From a decision and judgment adverse to the plaintiff appeal has been properly perfected to this court presenting the questions hereafter discussed.

The controlling question presented is whether a deed conveying the South Half of a long quarter section of land, previously divided by a conveyance of the North 80 acres precisely, conveys all the remaining tract in the hands of the grantors or only a quantitative one-half mathematically.

With a few exceptions, which will be noted, the facts pertinent to the issue in this case are uncontradicted and have been established either by stipulation of the parties or testimony.

Prior to March 3, 1902, James McKenna and Matilda J. McKenna, his wife, were the owners of all of the Southeast Quarter of Section 31, Township 29, Range 4 West of the Sixth Principal Meridian in Sedgwick County, Kansas. They also owned other real property in the same township. The quarter section of land described was a “long” quarter containing 163.69835 acres.

*741 On March 3, 1902, the McKennas deeded to John E. Schammer-hom, appellee’s predecessor in title, the North 80 acres “precisely” of the above described “long” quarter section of land. On July 30, 1908, James McKenna applied to the county surveyor of Sedgwick County to make a survey and establish the corners of the North 80 acres of said quarter section of land. This survey was made pursuant to statute upon notice to all parties concerned and duly made a part of the Surveyor’s Permanent Record in the office of the County Surveyor of Sedgwick County. This survey correctly established the corners of the North Eighty and it contained precisely 80 acres. Cornerstones were set to mark the established corners.

On February 6, 1913, the McKennas gave a deed to D. F. Rowan, father of the appellant, Eva Brewer, conveying the South Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 31 (the same being part of the quarter section above described) and the South Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 32 (also owned by the McKennas and adjoining east of the foregoing tract in Section 31, but not involved in this case), “containing 160 acres, more or less.” ,

The question at this point is whether the deed to Rowan in 1913 conveyed all of the 83.69835 acres which remained in the long quarter section heretofore described and owned by the McKennas. The land in dispute in this lawsuit is a strip 27.8 feet wide by one-half mile long containing 1.849175 acres which lies immediately south of and adjacent to the south line of the North 80 acres established by the survey of 1908.

Appellee contends that the deed in 1913, whereby the McKennas deeded the South Half of the Southeast Quarter of Section 31 to D. F. Rowan, conveyed only the South Half of the long quarter quantitatively. In other words, it is asserted that D. F. Rowan received only 81.849175 acres by the conveyance.

Several cases have been before this court on the point in question.. The Kansas law was first announced in Gunn v. Brower, 81 Kan. 242, 105 Pac. 702: •

“• . . Where there is nothing to suggest the contrary the word “half,’ in connection with the conveyance of a part of a tract of land, is interpreted as meaning half in quantity. (Owen v. Henderson, 16 Wash. 39; Cogan v. Cook, 22 Minn. 137, 142; Hartford Mining Co. v. Cambria Mining Co., 80 Mich. 491; Jones v. Pashby, 62 Mich. 614.) But where a tract has previously been in some manner divided into two parts of approximately equal size the usual presumption is that one of these parts is referred to.
“ ‘The words “east half” and “west half” in a deed, while naturally importing an equal division, may lose that effect when it appears that at the- *742 time some fixed line or known boundary or monument divides the premises somewhere near the center, so that the expression more properly refers to one of such parts than to a mathematical division which never has been made. The expression in the deed is controlled by the situation existing upon the premises themselves, and the manner of their use, and the monuments and boundaries existing,’ (People v. Hall, 88 N. Y. Supp. 276, 279.)” (pp. 243, 244.)

The foregoing case was quoted with approval in Hoyne v. Schneider, 138 Kan. 545, 27 P. 2d 558, which quoted in addition thereto 4 Thompson on Real Property, § 3153, as follows:

“ ‘. . . The term “eastern one-half,” in a deed conveying one-half of a tract of land, in the absence of admissible parol evidence disclosing a different intention, would mean the eastern half, formed by a line to be run due north and south through the tract; but if it appears that before the deed was executed a division into two parts, supposedly equal in area, had been made by a line, having a different bearing actually marked on the ground by stakes and fences, according to which possession had been held for a number of years, and the parties have since held possession according to such line, the words,must be taken to mean the eastern one-half as so laid off and held in severalty.’” (p. 551.)

The Hoyne case also quoted from 18 C. J., Deeds, § 269, which now appears with minor changes as 26 C. J. S., § 104f, p. 901, as follows:

“Ordinarily a conveyance of half of a tract of land will be construed as a conveyance of a half in quantity, and a like rule has been recognized where other fractional units are referred to; but there is no universal rule that a conveyance shall be so interpreted; and, where the intent of the parties to ■employ the term ‘half’ as describing a particular tract other than a half in ■quantity is apparent from the context or surrounding facts and circumstances, it will be given such meaning. So, where a tract has previously been in some manner divided into two parts of approximately equal size, the usual presumption is that one of these parts is referred to. Where the description of a parcel forming part of a larger tract is otherwise sufficient, an inaccuracy in the statement of the proportion between the area of the parcel and that of the entire tract does not affect the title conveyed.”

Gunn v. Brower, supra, was quoted in McHenry v. Pence, 168 Kan. 346, 212 P. 2d 225, but upon application of the rule it was determined by the court that there were no circumstances to indicate that a quantitative one-half was not intended.

Other facts in evidence before the trial court, not heretofore jelated, disclose the situation existing upon the premises themselves, the manner of their use, and clarify the existence of monuments and boundaries. After the original conveyance in 1902 by *743 the McKennas to John E. Schammerhorn of the North 80 acres “precisely,” a fence was built dividing these two properties.

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Bluebook (online)
332 P.2d 526, 183 Kan. 739, 1958 Kan. LEXIS 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-schammerhorn-kan-1958.