Chandler v. Jackson

714 P.2d 477, 148 Ariz. 307, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedJanuary 30, 1986
Docket1 CA-CIV 7556
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 714 P.2d 477 (Chandler v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chandler v. Jackson, 714 P.2d 477, 148 Ariz. 307, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 408 (Ark. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

BROOKS, Judge.

The plaintiffs-appellants Lula M. Scher and Martha Jane Chandler, mother and daughter, filed suit to quiet title to a half-mile long, narrow strip of property located along the western edge of property to which their family, the A.J. Squires, had held title for many years. They claim that they have acquired the strip of property by adverse possession. Their claim to adverse possession rests on their contention that their family has considered a fence along the western side of their property to be their boundary and have used all the land up to the fence as their own since the 1940’s. So too had A.J. Squire’s parents who had been on the land for many years prior to that time. A survey performed in 1980, when plaintiff Scher was selling a portion of the property, revealed that the fence was not located on the true boundary, but in fact, was several feet inside the neighboring lands to the west, 15 feet at the narrowest point and 59 feet at the widest point.

The plaintiffs named as defendants the several persons who hold record title to the various portions of the disputed strip of. property. The strip of property (parcels 1, 2, and 3) and the ownership of the sur *309 rounding land is depicted in “Exhibit A” attached to the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law which is reproduced herein.

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The trial court made findings of fact regarding ownership of land in the area and positioned the disputed strip of land as follows:

2. The plaintiff Scher is the holder of record title to those portions of Exhibit A designated as 2A and 2D.
3. Rogers (not a party to this lawsuit) is the holder of record title to that area designated as 3 and 2F on Exhibit A.
4. Plaintiff Chandler is the holder of record title to that parcel designated as 4B on Exhibit A.
5. Defendant Tibshraeny is the record owner of Parcel IB on Exhibit A.
6. Defendants Jackson are the record owner of Parcel 1J on Exhibit A.
7. Defendants Ronald H. and Karen Pratte, husband and wife, are the record owners of Parcel 1H and acquired the property from Lionel and Margaret F. Davison, husband and wife, on July 8, 1981 by Warranty Deed.
8. Defendant Wilhelm Rosemann is the record owner of Parcel 1M on Exhibit A.
*310 9. Defendants Anthony and Steven Savarese, as joint tenants with right of survivorship, are record owners of the east 320 feet of Parcel IF.
10. Plaintiffs claim that they have acquired by adverse possession a strip of property running north to south bounded by a barbed wire fence on the west and the legal boundary on the east, and designated as Parcels 1, 2, and 3 on Exhibit A. Legal descriptions of these parcels are attached to plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint on file herein.
11. The plaintiff Scher formerly owned Parcels 2F and 3 shown on Exhibit A, but sold those parcels to Rogers in 1980. Scher acquired her rights to the property in question in January of 1972 from the estate of her deceased husband, A.J. Squire.
12. The plaintiff Chandler is the daughter of the plaintiff Scher and acquired her rights in the property in question from her father, A.J. Squire, by deed in August of 1967.

The event which led the plaintiffs to file suit to quiet title to this strip of property at this particular time was Lula Scher’s sale of a portion of her property to Rogers. The property sold to Rogers was landlocked and therefore Mrs. Scher granted him a 83 foot wide easement along the western border of the property she retained. A house is located on Mrs. Scher’s property, 15 feet from the true boundary line on the west. Unless the plaintiffs can establish claim to the strip of property between the fence and the true boundary, the easement apparently will run through the house on Mrs. Scher’s property.

After trial to the court, the trial court made lengthy findings of fact, including those set forth above. The trial court concluded that the plaintiffs had not established a claim to adverse possession of the property in question and granted judgment for the defendants. The plaintiffs appeal from the judgment and the denial of their motion for new trial.

The lands being referred to in this case lie within a quarter section of land near 51st Avenue and Lower Buckeye Road in Maricopa County, Arizona. Some discussion of the history of ownership and use of these lands is necessary for a review of the issues presented in this case.

The land in the eastern half of the quarter section was acquired by George Squire and his wife, most of it in 1928 and the southern most portion in 1936. George Squire farmed and maintained a dairy on the land with his three sons, two of whom were Rey Squire and A.J. Squire. In 1934 A.J. Squire married Lula M. Scher. That same year A.J. and Lula began leasing the lands in the western half of the quarter section from the owner of those lands. When the lease expired in 1936, A.J. and Lula returned to the eastern land owned by A.J.’s father. Rey Squire and his wife Charlie Mae then entered into a lease of the western lands. A.J. Squire inherited the eastern land after George Squire died in 1943. A.J. and Lula continued the dairy operation on the land until 1961. After selling the dairy herd at that time, A.J. and Lula then merely farmed and kept a few cattle on the land for their personal use. In 1967, A.J. and Lula deeded the southern portion of their property to their daughter, Martha Jane Chandler. In 1971, A.J. died and Lula inherited the remainder of the eastern land. From approximately 1973 to 1979, Lula and Martha leased their property to Gomez who farmed the land. In December, 1980, Lula sold a portion of her property to Rogers and shortly thereafter the plaintiffs filed the present suit to quiet title to the strip of land between their true western border and the fence.

Meanwhile, the land in the western half of the quarter section had been leased by Rey and Charlie Mae Squire from 1936 until 1946 at which time they purchased the property. Throughout the years they were on the land, they also farmed and maintained a dairy herd. In 1958, Rey and Charlie Mae divorced and divided the western property. Charlie Mae took title to the northern portion where she continued to live and farm the land until she sold to Tibshraeny in 1979. Re^ received, title to the remainder of the property which he *311 sold in 1962. Thereafter, the portion sold by Rey was subdivided and resold to various persons. In 1966, defendants Davison acquired the parcel which they subsequently sold to defendants Pratte in 1981 after this suit was filed. Defendants Rosemann and Savarese acquired their respective parcels in 1972 and defendant Jackson in 1976.

Before determining whether the evidence supports the trial court’s ruling that adverse possession had not been shown, we consider a preliminary issue raised by defendants Pratte and Davison, challenging Scher’s standing to bring this action.

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Bluebook (online)
714 P.2d 477, 148 Ariz. 307, 1986 Ariz. App. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chandler-v-jackson-arizctapp-1986.