City of Marquette v. Gaede

672 N.W.2d 829, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 222, 2003 WL 22960865
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 2003
Docket02-1008
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 672 N.W.2d 829 (City of Marquette v. Gaede) 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
City of Marquette v. Gaede, 672 N.W.2d 829, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 222, 2003 WL 22960865 (iowa 2003).

Opinion

CARTER, Justice.

Steven A. Gaede and Ruth Gaede, who claim ownership of a thirty-three-foot strip of land that the City of Marquette claims is a city street, appeal from a decree quieting title to the disputed strip in the city. The Gaedes urge that (1) the platted street that forms the basis for the city’s claim never extended far enough east to coincide with the area in dispute, (2) the city’s claim is barred by a forty-year chain of title in the Gaedes and their predecessors in interest, and (3) the city is estopped from claiming title to the disputed strip. We reject each of these contentions and affirm the district court’s decree quieting title in the city.

We make the following findings of fact on our de novo review of the evidence at trial. The plat that forms the basis for the city’s claim to the disputed strip was filed of record on August 12, 1858. The city (town) was incorporated on June 15, 1874, and the articles of incorporation filed with the secretary of state referenced the August 12, 1858 plat. As originally incorporated, the city was known as North McGregor. The name was changed to Marquette on March 29,1920.

The city streets shown to be running east and west on the 1858 plat include North Street, Main Street, Milwaukee Street, and Madison Street. All of these streets are shown on that plat as extending to the west bank of the Mississippi River. These streets are shown on the plat to be sixty-six feet wide. The property the Gaedes are now claiming coincides with the south thirty-three feet of North Street (as shown on the 1858 plat) lying between the river and a railway right-of-way. The tract at issue extends west of the river approximately eighty feet on its north boundary and 131 feet on its south boundary.

On January 4, 1870, John and Catharine Lawler executed a deed conveying certain real estate to The Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company. The land described in that deed included the strip now in dispute in the present litigation. That deed was not recorded. Another deed from the Lawlers to the same railway company was executed on the same date and recorded on March 14, 1870. That deed conveyed “a narrow strip of land situated directly *832 east of Blocks numbers one (1), seven (7), and eight (8) and lots number one (1), two (2), three (3), and four (4) in Block number nineteen in the Town of North McGregor.” The property thus described would intersect North Street directly east of the eastern most platted lots in the city. The distance between that point and the river would allow for a 100-foot railway right-of-way lying entirely west of the disputed property.

The property conveyed in the 1870 Lawler deed appears to have been disposed of in a subsequent federal court reorganization of an entity called the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway Company. There is nothing in the chain of title to indicate whether this was the same entity as The Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company. The Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul Railway Company conveyed property described only as “railway extending: From Green Island, State of Iowa, in a northwesterly direction along the west bank of the Mississippi River to River Junction, State of Minnesota and other real estate” to the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific Railroad Company in 1927. In 1977 the Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul, and Pacific Railroad Company went through federal bankruptcy proceedings. All of its property was conveyed to a corporation known as SLRC, Inc. on February 19, 1985. Through a series of transactions, a portion of this property was conveyed to a corporation known as CMC Real Estate Company, a Wisconsin corporation. Nothing in the 1977 or 1985 conveyances indicates that the property at issue here was included among that being conveyed.

CMC conveyed the north thirty-three feet of a strip coinciding with the platted North Street and other property to Darwin and Violet Johnson on June 11, 1987. The Johnsons later sold their thirty-three-foot strip to Roger and Connie Halverson. The Halversons were originally included as parties in this quiet-title litigation but reached a settlement with the city, allowing them to acquire ownership of the north thirty-three feet of North Street east of the railway right-of-way subject to certain easements in favor of the city.

CMC conveyed the south thirty-three feet of North Street east of the railway plus additional land to Henry S. Wilder-muth on December 20, 1988. This thirty-three-foot strip was approximately eighty feet long on the north and 131 feet long on the south. Wildermuth conveyed this same property to Leslie and Margery Stansberry on September 28, 1992. The Stansberrys conveyed that property to the Gaedes on August 5, 1998. The property that the Gaedes received is described, commencing at a point approximately fifty-two feet east of the railway centerline (the extent of the right-of-way) and then south from the centerline of North Street 137 feet parallel to the railway right-of-way, east 115 feet to the river, north 131 feet along the river, and then west eighty feet to the point of beginning. As so described, the property lies outside of the railway right-of-way.

North Street has always been a main downtown street in Marquette. No portion of it has ever been vacated. The portion of this public way between the railway and the river has never been surfaced. For many years, there was a boat ramp where North Street intersected the river. This ramp was at all times maintained by the City of Marquette. City personnel performed a considerable amount of maintenance in relation thereto. It was annually coated with asphalt, driftwood was removed, and snow was plowed by the city to permit access for boaters in the wintertime.

*833 Mary Jo Pire, who at the time of the trial had lived on North Street for fifty-seven years, testified that she used the portion of the street east of the railroad as a route to the river for boating and fishing. She testified that she had used the boat ramp regularly between 1955 and 1993. Gerald Ploog, who was eighty-six years of age at the time of trial, testified that -he had used the boat ramp as early as 1921 and that the strip of land, designated as North Street on the 1858 plat, was the route to the ramp. We credit the testimony of both Pire and Ploog. In 1981 the existing bridge between Marquette and the State of Wisconsin was closed awaiting the building of a new bridge. As a result, a ferry service was maintained that used the North Street ramp for access to the river.

After receiving their deed from the Stansberrys, the Gaedes placed a considerable amount of fill dirt on the disputed parcel and constructed a retaining wall along the riverbank. This work was done pursuant to a permit issued to them by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources. The application for this permit required approval by the city, which was granted. After Leslie Stansberry, the Gaedes’ predecessor in interest, obtained a deed to the disputed property in 1992, he interfered with the public use of the ramp. The Halversons and the Gaedes continued that practice. There was much public agitation concerning the Halversons’ and Gaedes’ use of what had been regarded as a public area. In the fall of 2000, the city formally declared its claim to ownership of the sixty-six-foot strip east of the railway right-of-way adverse to the Gaedes and the Hal-versons.

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Bluebook (online)
672 N.W.2d 829, 2003 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 222, 2003 WL 22960865, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-marquette-v-gaede-iowa-2003.