Cooley v. Henderson

228 P. 923, 112 Or. 258, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 57
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 228 P. 923 (Cooley v. Henderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooley v. Henderson, 228 P. 923, 112 Or. 258, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 57 (Or. 1924).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to three small tracts of land in the Donation Land Claim of William Wilson, No. 51, in township 16, south, range 5 west of Willamette meridian. The first of these tracts, designated for convenience as the “strip,” contains three fourths of an acre; the second, called the “half-moon,” contains one and one-fourth acres; and the third, called the “triangle,” contains three fourths of an acre. The Wilson Donation Land Claim is a right-angled parallelogram dimensioned north and south 50 chains, and east and west, 64 chains. The geographical line dividing the claim into the north and south halves, and running due east and west will be called the “true line.” At about 952 feet west of the east boundary of the claim, the Long Tom River flowing north and east impinges upon this true line; then curving to the south returns again and crosses the division line about 150 feet west of the east boundary, thus forming the half-moon in the bend of the stream south of the true line. The triangle is formed by the 150-foot segment of the true line above mentioned, as the base, the east line of the claim as the perpendicular, and the river cutting the division line and the east boundary of the claim north of the true line as the hypotenuse. The strip lies immediately south of the division line and west of the river, and the south boundary thereof is formed by beginning nine inches south of the northwest corner of the south half of the claim and running, with a variation of a few minutes at successive stations, south 89 degrees east, a distance of 3,275 feet to a point 17.51 feet south of the true line.

[260]*260About August 27, 1917, the defendants purchased from the then owner the south half of the claim by that description. Four or five years thereafter the defendants became dissatisfied with the situation whereby the plaintiff Cooley was occupying and cultivating the north half of the claim tog-ether with the strip, whereupon Cooley and his son, Reginald C. Cooley, to the latter of whom the father had conveyed an undivided interest in the land, commenced this suit to quiet title to the three tracts.

Thus called upon to declare their interests in the three parcels, the defendants averred in substance that they were the owners in fee simple of the south half of the claim. They disclaimed all interest in the triangle, lying as it does, north of the true line, and hence being- in the geographical north half of the claim. They maintained that the plaintiffs should be estopped from claiming anything- south of the true line, for that, on the insistence of the defendants, the plaintiffs agreed in November, 1921, to have the center line dividing the claim established, agreeing- to pay one half the expense thereof, in pursuance of which the county surveyor did establish the line so that geographically it divided the claim into two equal parts, north and south halves, which survey showed the strip and half-moon to be on the south side of the true line. Plaintiffs disputed this by the reply, which in turn sets up an estoppel against the defendants to claim title to the strip, for that their predecessors in title agreed with the plaintiff N. W. Cooley the then owner of the north half of the claim, that the division line should be the south boundary of the strip and the center line of the Long Tom River to the east side of the claim, and that the plaintiffs ever since then, for 15 or 16 years had occupied up [261]*261to the conventional line thus agreed upon, claiming title to the land of which it was the south boundary.

From a decree dismissing the suit the plaintiffs appealed. A word-for-word recital of the testimony would occupy too much space and would not add anything to the value of the reports for future cases. We can only give our conclusions as to the weight of the testimony.

At the outset, owing to the disclaimer of the defendants of any title or interest in the triangle, that tract will he laid out of consideration, and the plaintiffs will be decreed to be the owners thereof in fee simple, and entitled to possession thereof.

By a deed dated March 31, 1896, N. W. Cooley acquired title in fee simple to the north half of the Wilson Donation Claim and by that description. About that time the south half by that description was owned by one Ramo, under a deed conveying that tract to him. In the absence of surveys, the division line being at that time uncertain, Cooley and Bamo had a survey made being the south line of the strip. Beginning on the west boundary of the claim they went along the south boundary line of the strip to the river. For want of time the surveyor stopped at that point and informed them that from thence east, the river would serve as the boundary line. They thereupon built a fence on the south line of the strip being the line thus surveyed, and agreed that that should he the boundary line between their sevéral premises, so far as it extends, and for the remainder of the way across the claim to the east, the river should serve as the boundary line.

The testimony confirms almost without any question whatever, that pursuant to the agreement between Ramo and Cooley, a fence was constructed from the,west boundary of the claim along the South [262]*262boundary of the strip to the Long Tom River, and that Cooley continuously from that time forward occupied and cultivated as his own, all of the strip up to the fence on the south boundary line thereof. As to the part of which the river was to form the south boundary, there is a dearth of testimony indicating that any marked change took place in the actual possession of the half-moon. It is true that the plaintiff’s son, the father having died, says that the Cooleys occupied that tract, but nothing is said of anything done there prior to the advent of the defendants to indicate such an occupancy. Whatever the rights of the plaintiffs were, they were fixed and established prior to the acquisition of the title to the south half by the defendants. That cannot be affected by what occurred subsequently except by conveyance or by a prescriptive title based upon a successive ten years adverse possession. The latter cannot be considered because the defendants have not attempted to occupy or control anything north of the fence. Moreover, they were there only four or five years before the commencement of the suit, not long enough to establish title by prescription.

It is competent for adjoining owners to agree that the boundary line, although not the true line, shall be as agreed upon as separating the two tracts, but in order to effect the actual title without written conveyance, the agreement must be followed up by the exercise of acts of ownership up to the line agreed upon on each side continued for ten years. This must be true to avoid an infringement upon the law requiring a conveyance to be in writing- under seal and acknowledged by the grantor. The title inuring from the agreement plus the occupancy up to the line on both sides is title by prescription independent of the statute of frauds. The principle affecting title [263]*263by adverse possession based upon an agreed or conventional line is discussed in Caufield v. Clark, 17 Or. 474 (21 Pac. 443, 11 Am. St. Rep. 845); Ramsey v. Ogden, 23 Or. 347 (31 Pac. 778); Gist v. Doke, 42 Or. 225 (70 Pac. 704); Thiessen v. Worthington, 41 Or. 145 (68 Pac. 424); Gardner v. Wright, 49 Or. 609 (91 Pac. 286); Moore v. Fowler, 58 Or. 292 (114 Pac. 472); Dunnigan v. Wood, 58 Or. 119 (112 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 923, 112 Or. 258, 1924 Ore. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooley-v-henderson-or-1924.