Buckner v. Russell

1958 OK 237, 331 P.2d 401, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 435
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 14, 1958
Docket38169
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1958 OK 237 (Buckner v. Russell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buckner v. Russell, 1958 OK 237, 331 P.2d 401, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 435 (Okla. 1958).

Opinion

HALLEY, Justice:

This is an action by Ernest O. Russell against Thomas Buckner and wife; seeking a permanent injunction restraining defendants from trespassing upon adjoining land, removing fences, building new fences thereon and attempting to appropriate plaintiff’s land to their own use. We shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court. The trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiff and the defendants have appealed.

This controversy arose from the following facts. Defendants acquired title in 1955 to Lots 3 and 4 and the southwest of the northwest quarter of Section 1, Township 3 N, Range 13 E in Pittsburg County. This was about two years before this action was filed by plaintiff. The plaintiff owns the adjoining land south and east of defendants’ land, except Lot 2 which joins defendants’ Lot 3 on the east.

Plaintiff alleged that at the time he purchased his land in 1944, and for many years prior thereto, there was a fence along the established and recognized line completely surrounding and enclosing his land; that since defendants purchased their adjoining land in 1955, they have engaged in moving back the long existing, established and recognized fence lines onto his land, and are trespassing thereon, and have placed a corner post thereon and are threatening to build a new fence some distance from the established fence line upon the north and west sides of plaintiff’s land, which will deprive plaintiff of the use of portions of his land which he and his predecessors in title have held and used for more than fifteen years, and that the existing fence has been recognized and acquiesced in by plaintiff and his predecessors in title and defendants and their predecessors in title for a period of more than fifteen years.

Defendants answered and alleged that the plaintiff was hindering them in fencing their land along the correct dividing lines as established by the official survey by the County Surveyor of Pittsburg County, and prayed that their title be quieted along the correct lines thus established, and that plaintiff' be restrained from interfering with their ownership and control of their property, including the fencing thereof.

Defendants submit the following assignment of error:

“That the judgment is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law and judgment on the evidence should have been rendered on behalf of the defendants.’.’ *403 on the evidence as to the possession and occupancy of the plaintiff and his predecessors in title of the land up to the fences between the land of the plaintiff and defendants, and especially whether there has been a continuous recognition and acquiescence in such fences for at least fifteen years prior to the institution of this action. The land in dispute consists of only about two acres and defendants claim that these strips of their land are included wrongfully within the old fences which plaintiff claims have been recognized as the true dividing lines, and are such in fact.

*402 The plaintiff relies upon Section 93, 12 O.S.1951, in claiming title by prescription, and the principal factual issue depends up-

*403 We have examined the entire record and weighed the evidence with a view of determining whether the findings and judgment of the trial court is against the clear weight of the evidence. This being a case of equitable cognizance, it is well established that unless the judgment of the trial court is found to be against the clear weight of the evidence it should be affirmed.

Many decisions of this Court have established the rule that where there is privity between successive occupants of real property, holding adversely to the true title continuously, the successive periods of occupancy may be united or tacked to make up the time of adverse holding prescribed by statute, as against the true title. Ellis v. Williams, Okl., 297 P.2d 916. This rule is also clearly set out in City National Bank of Duncan v. Soderberg, 171 Okl. 369, 43 P.2d 495, at page 498, as follows:

“ * * * It is fundamental law that the possession of real property carries with it the presumption of ownership, and it is the duty of those purchasing such property from others than those in possession to ascertain the extent of their claims, and the open, actual possession of such property gives notice to the world of such interest as the purchaser actually has therein. Shaffer v. Turner, 43 Okl. 744, 144 P. 366; Adams v. White, 40 Okl. 535, 139 P. 514; Hass v. Gregg, 52 Okl. 51, 152 P. 1126; Wilkinson v. Stone, 82 Okl. 296, 200 P. 196; McCormick v. Stonebraker, 133 Okl. 34, 270 P. 1098.’’

We note that the plaintiff testified that he had been familiar with the lands involved and the fences separating his land from that of the defendants for a period of 33 years; that the dividing fence has been in the same place for all these years and recognized and acquiesced in by the owners on each side of the fence as the true dividing line; that the only change made in the location of the fence was the moving of a corner post a few feet to avoid a washout because located in a small draw; that he had walked the fence line' often; that the County Surveyor made three different surveys which varied widely as to the fence line; that he did not'agree to pay for any survey nor abide by any of them; that no owner had ever questioned the fence lines until defendants had acquired the land.

Seven other witnesses who had been familiar with the land involved for from 20 to 43 years testified for plaintiff. All testified that the present fence lines are in the same place they have occupied for all the years they had known the land. Until the present controversy arose they had never heard the owners complain or question the fence lines, or deny that they were the correct dividing lines between the lands of plaintiff and the. defendants.

A number of plaintiff’s witnesses had leased some of the land involved, cultivated it right up to the fence, hunted upon it and picked berries thereon. No witness knew who located the fence lines originally; some had helped repair the fences, put in new posts, and fastened the wires to trees in timbered areas. The witness T. O. Trammell testified he had known the land for 26 years and was asked on cross-examination :

“Q. That fence there has varied through the years, hasn’t it ? A. Well now I couldn’t say, just like I told *404 you, it’s just like it was when I moved there.
“Q. Well while you were there it varied, didn’t it? A. No, nothing only a post hole one way or the other.
“Q. All right, when the post would be put up, you wouldn’t put it back in that same hole that it had been pushed out of, would you? A. Well if you couldn’t do that, maybe you would put it that far over that way, or that far over that way,
“Q. Yes. and sometimes it would be a foot or two? A. No it never go that far.”

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Bluebook (online)
1958 OK 237, 331 P.2d 401, 1958 Okla. LEXIS 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buckner-v-russell-okla-1958.