Chandler v. Hopson

188 Iowa 281
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 Iowa 281 (Chandler v. Hopson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Hopson, 188 Iowa 281 (iowa 1919).

Opinion

Preston, J.

1. A number of cases are cited by both parties. We think there is but little dispute as to the law. Being a question of fact, wherein we do not usually set out the evidence at any considerable length, perhaps as good a way as any is to set out the claims of each of the parties, as given by them in their briefs, without restating, in so far as they are alike. The statements are short. Appellant states:

Plaintiff is the owner of about 8 acres of land in Section 26, the north boundary line of which land coincides with the north boundary line of said section. Defendant owns a large tract of land in Section 23, bordering plaintiff’s said land on the north. Old fences of many years’ standing separated these tracts. Defendant claims that originally it was a board fence throughout its entire length. But a barbed wire at the west end and a hedge at the east replaced [283]*283it, some 35 years ago, and have continued till the present. Defendant never had a survey made, to locate his line. He planted the hedge fence about 45 years ago. He thought he was planting it on the line of his property,' and he still thinks the hedge is on the section line. The wire fence west of the hedge fence has been in its present position for some 30 years. The surface of the ground at each end of the boundary line is nearly level, and the middle sector declines sharply from the west. The hedge fence, starting from the east end of the line, follows the section line on the level land for about 150 feet, then gradually veers to the south, and at the end, near the middle of the boundary line, it is 4 feet south of the section line; and the said barbed wire fence, commencing at the west end of the line, follows the section line also, about 150 feet, then digresses to the south, being attached to convenient trees, till it joins said hedge fence. The hedge-fence has become useless, from age and decay. Defendant abandoned it, and built a hog-tight fence north of it from the east, following the section line at first, then angling north of the section line, till, at its west end, it was 4 feet north of the section line and 8 feet north of his old hedge line. Defendant’s land, along the east half of their boundary line, was under cultivation. Along the west half of said line, it was a timber pasture. Adjoining defendant’s pasture at the west end was- plaintiff’s pasture. From plaintiff’s pasture, a lane along the boundary line led to plaintiff’s barn; thence to the highway. These old fence lines were never recognized by plaintiff or his grantors* and there had always been a dispute about the true line. Defendant built a new wire fence along the line of his old hedge fence. In removing the old hedge, he piled the brush and refuse on plaintiff’s land, and burned it there, He cut and carried away a valuable walnut tree.

Appellee says that he denies the section line as the true boundary line, and contends that the true boundary line is [284]*284marked by a fence between the premises of appellant and appellee, which fence has been where it now stands for a period of 70 years. The title to the property of appellee was originally in. his father, but, for the last 45 or 50 years, has been owned by appellee, who inherited the premises from his father. The original fence between the tracts of ground in dispute was built about 72 years ago, and was located exactly where the present fence is now located. That is to say, in the last 70 years, the partition fence between the premises in dispute has been on identically the same line, and the present fence is identical in location with the original fence, built 70 years ago. The original fence was built throughout its entire length of boards and posts with one wire on top. Appellee further alleges that, about 45 years ago, he planted a hedge fence, about four inches north of the original board fence, and on his own land, said hedge fence connecting with the original board fence on the east end thereof; that prior to the building of said hedge fence, there never had been a dispute or any contention between the respective owners of the premises as to the partition or boundary fence; and that, since the building of said hedge fence, and up to September, 1915, there had never been any dispute or contention between appellee and any of the various owners of the property south of his land; that ap-pellee was born on the premises now owned by him, and never lived anywhere else, and is still living on said premises ; that, in the spring of 1915, appellant and appellee had a discussion about the partition fence, the appellant claiming that the fence should be located on the section line, and set off the east half of the fence to be taken care of by appellee, and the west half by appellant; that, at about this time, appellee cut out the old hedge fence, and erected the partition fence substantially on the line of the old hedge fence, though, in one place, a few inches to the north of the old hedge fence, and on his own premises; that the new fence [285]*285thus built by appellee connected with the west part of the original fence, built 70 years before, on the east end thereof; that appellant refused to build his portion of the fence, to wit, the west part thereof, and continued to refuse to build his portion of said fence until after the decision of the court in this case.

It is also true that there never was any fence on the section line between the premises of appellee and appellant, and that the location of the original fence has never been changed, and stands today where it has stood for the last 72 years or more. It is further alleged that, a short time before appellee built his part of the fence, appellant had erected a gate at the extreme east end of his premises, and that, in building said gate, which swings on two posts, appellant planted the north post about one and one-half foot to the north of the east end of the old original fence, and that, because thereof, the appellee, in building his fence in the year 1915, and to avoid trouble with appellant, located the east end of his new fence about one foot north of the east end of the original fence, and on the ground of appellee; that, except as to this change, made necessary by appellant, there is absolutely no change between the location of the present fence and the original fence built more than 70 years ago; that, until about September, 1915, the fence, in its present location, was recognized and acquiesced in as the true boundary line, and this continued for a period of about 70 years, during all of which period appellee exercised full rights of ownership of the land on the north up to said, fence, and pastured and cultivated said land up to the fence; that the grantors of appellant, during said period of time, also cultivated the 8-acre tract up to the fence line, and never questioned the fence as the true boundary line between the two tracts of ground.

A commissioner was appointed, and additional testimony taken by the court. During the pendency of the case, [286]*286Elsie Obandlex* intervened, alleging that she and plaintiff were joint owners and tenants in common of the property described in the petition. By the decree the court found that plaintiff and intervener are the owners of the property described in the petition, and further found and determined that:

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188 Iowa 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-hopson-iowa-1919.