Burr v. House

3 Alaska 641
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedNovember 16, 1909
DocketNo. 358
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 Alaska 641 (Burr v. House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burr v. House, 3 Alaska 641 (D. Alaska 1909).

Opinion

OVEREIEDD, District Judge.

This action presents for the court’s determination, from the pleadings and all the evidence, the question, among others, whether the lot in dispute [643]*643belongs to the plaintiff Burr, or the defendant House; whether the plaintiff has proved all the material elements and allegations set out at length in her complaint, or has a preponderance of evidence in her favor. If she has failed in either, then the defendant must prevail in this case.

While the defendant House is now in .possession of the lot in question, has inclosed the same with a substantial board fence and erected thereon a five-room dwelling house, and since July 1, 1908, lived therein with his family, making this lot and house his home, we must not lose sight of the fact in issue; i. e., was House a trespasser on June 8, 1908, as against this plaintiff, or was the lot in question open and unoccupied public domain ?

To determine this point under the pleadings, we must see if defendant House has established his allegation that the plaintiff had previous to June 8, 1908, abandoned the lot in question. If this contention be proved by a preponderance of all the evidence submitted, then the question becomes at once solved, and judgment must be for the defendant House.

Abandonment consists in the intention to abandon, and the external act or acts by which the intention is carried into effect. The abandonment of possessory rights upon the public domain is a question of fact, as well as of intent.

To find that real property has been abandoned, the evidence must show that the premises were left vacant without any intention of claiming possession, and with an intention to leave them open for the occupation of any one who might choose to enter. The evidence in support of the charge of abandonment must be clear and convincing, and the burden of proof is upon the one alleging the abandonment, where the one claiming title has not been absent for an unreasonable length of time.

The evidence shows that plaintiff first came to Valdez, Alaska, in 1901, going out to the States in September of the same year, returning to Valdez in April, 1902, and remaining [644]*644until September 1905, when she was obliged to leave Valdez again for the States owing to the illness of her son. She returned to Valdez in July, 1906, and remained until August 24th of the same year, when she again left for the States to secure medical treatment both for herself and son, intending, as the plaintiff testified, to return to Valdez in the spring of 1907.

She was prevented from so returning by the fact that her son became afflicted with appendicitis in Portland, Or., where the husband and father has since remained. The plaintiff also alleges her illness during the summer of 1907. However, the plaintiff did return to Valdez with her son on June 19, 1908.

Both the plaintiff’s testimony and that of her alleged agent, Waldron, shows that the plaintiff left the property inclosed with a fence and with a 10x12 building thereon, and during the summer and fall of 1907 plaintiff wrote the said Waldron not to sell the lot in question, as she had decided to make it her home, and use the house formerly so occupied by her in Valdez for'a business house or shop, and that she also wrote Waldron to the same effect at.other times during the winter and spring of 1908, and as late at May.

Waldron’s testimony further shows that he was interviewed by several wrould-be purchasers of this lot in question during the fall of 1907 and winter of 1908, and refused to sell the lot in compliance with orders received from plaintiff, above referred to.

• The further evidence of Waldron shows that he personally repaired the fence around the lot up to and as late as one week prior to June 8, 1908, and by request of plaintiff, through the letters referred to, employed John Cantillon to fix and keep the fence in repair, both in 1907 and 1908, as well as during the previous years subsequent to plaintiff’s alleged possession in 1904.

[645]*645It conclusively follows that the evidence shows by a clear preponderance that the plaintiff herein had not abandoned the said lot in question by any overt act or acts (and there are no other allegations) on June 8, 1908, .and .the defendant’s contention as to that allegation fails.

The question, then, properly arises: Did the plaintiff have a sufficient title, possessory or otherwise, to prevail against the defendant House in this action ?

Town lots of the character in question in this action can be held only by one in the actual use, occupation, or possession thereof, which may be evidenced by stakes, fencing, buildings, residence, clearing the ground, and other improvements showing the fact.

It is a recognized rule of law that a plaintiff, to recover possession in an action of ejectment, must do so upon the strength of his or her own title, and not on the weakness of the defendant’s title, and in this connection the authorities have held that a person in the territory of Alaska, who is in possession of a lot by actual use, occupation, or possession, may maintain an action of ejectment to recover possession from an intruder who has ousted the settler.

Settlement on the public lands of Alaska vests in the settler a property right against every one but the government, and where two persons claim, adversely to each other, the possession of government land, the one having the prior possession has the'prior right; no abandonment having been shown. Possessory rights so acquired may be conveyed from one person to another, and written conveyances are admissible as tending to show a right in the last grantee.

The plaintiff’s claim to the lot in question originated in obtaining possession of the same under a bill of sale from one Andy Olsen, dated May 23, 1904, and witnessed by the agent, Waldron. At that time the lot in question was in its native [646]*646state, covered with brush, fallen logs, and some large trees in the rear part thereof.

Immediately thereafter the uncontradicted testimony shows that the plaintiff, with the aid of her husband and son, cleared the front part of said lot, cutting and burning the brush and logs, and erected a fence about said lot; the fence on the front part of the lot. being made of 2x4 posts set about 8 feet apart, and two rows of boards 1x3, and the sides 'by cutting and setting poles and fastening thereon one strand of wire. She also erected on the lot a building 10x12 feet in dimensions, made of lxl2-inch boards, containing one door, unhung, and a window composed of a sash and four panes of glass. In 1906 split rails and boards were placed on the sides of the lot, and the fence generally repaired, leaving the one strand of wire in the rear, with interlocking stakes and poles.

' Thus the property stood when the defendant House entered in 1908, if the testimony of the plaintiff and her witnesses, several in number, is to be credited, except for an opening on the front corner and' side, permitting teams to cross the lot in order to avoid a log pile in the adjoining roadway.

The defendant House, and several witnesses called by him, who live in the vicinity of the lot in question, deny in toto the existence of a fence, or say that little evidence of it remained on June 8, 1908.

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Related

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546 P.2d 570 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1976)
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536 P.2d 116 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
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11 Alaska 406 (D. Alaska, 1947)
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4 Redf. 451 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Alaska 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burr-v-house-akd-1909.