Derham v. Hill

57 Colo. 345
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1914
DocketNo. 7666
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 57 Colo. 345 (Derham v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Derham v. Hill, 57 Colo. 345 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Chief Justice Musser

delivered the opinion of the court:

In 1892, there was made and filed for record, in Mesa County, a plat of more than two hundred acres of land designated as The Grand. Junction Orchard Mesa Land Company’s Orchard Subdivision. The plat showed the land subdivided into numbered tracts or lots of about ten acres each, with various portions, forty feet wide, marked as roads. The particular lots, with which this lawsuit has to do, appeared on the plat as follows:

One Mrs. Powers became the owner of Lots 28 and 29, by deed, wherein the land was described as Lots 28 and 29 in the subdivision.^ In May, 1905, she made a deed to one Joynson, containing a description as follows :

[347]*347“The north nine (9) acres, more or less, of Lot twenty-eight (28) of The Grand Junction Orchard Mesa Land Company’s Orchard Subdivision, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of Lot twenty-one (21) of The Grand Junction Orchard Mesa Land Company’s Orchard Subdivision; thence east six hundred forty feet (640); thence south six hundred and five (605) feet; thence west six hundred and forty (640) feet; thence north six hundred and five (605) feet to the place of beginning:”

In July, 1905, Joynson made a deed to the Hills, defendants in error, wherein the land intended to be conveyed was described the same as in the deed from Mrs. Powers to Joynson. At the time these deeds were made, the road between Lots 21 and 28, shown on the plat, did not appear on the surface of the ground. Lot 28 was covered by fruit trees set in rows east and west and these rows of trees continued north and occupied the road. The Hills went into possession of the land under their deed from Joynson. On the south part of what they supposed was their land, there was first a row of apple trees and next, south, a row of prune trees. There was no fence between Lots 28 and 29, nor any division fence between the land claimed by the Hills and the portion south of it. Just south of the row of prune trees and about a foot or a foot and a half from the trees there was a furrow or ditch and from this the trees on the land were watered,' the slope being to the north.

No survey or measurement of the land was made. The Hills supposed that the irrigation ditch south of the prune trees was their southern line or near it. When the dispute arose, measurements were made and it was found that the center of this ditch was about 585 feet south of the north line of Lot 28. In December, 1907, Mrs. Powers conveyed to the Derhams, the plaintiffs in error, Lot 29 and the south thirty-five feet of Lot 28. In the fall of .1911, the portion marked above as “road” was opened up as the result of an action brought for [348]*348that purpose by owners of adjoining tracts. The evidence seems to show that the parties here did not know of the existence of a roadway until it was forced open. Soon after getting their deed, the Derhams made some claim to the row of apple trees and the row of prune trees, just north of the irrigation ditch, which claim was disputed by the Hills and the latter remained in possession of and cultivated the two rows, and gathered the fruit therefrom. The Derhams testified that at the time they bought the land in 1907, Mrs. Powers showed them a plat which she had caused to be made, on which there were shown 42 rows of trees on Lot 29 and part of Lot 28, and she represented that she proposed to convey these 42 rows to the Derhams.- It was claimed that these 42 rows took in the south two rows north of the irrigation ditch. There was also evidence that the Derhams set out a row of trees just south of the irrigation ditch and on the land in controversy. If there were 42 rows already set out from the south line of Lot 29 to the row of apple trees north of the irrigation ditch, it is not explained why there happened to be a vacant space south of the irrigation ditch on the land in controversy, on which to set out another row. As no measurements had been made, it is safe to say that none of the parties knew exactly where the dividing line was.

After making the deed in 1907 to the Derhams for Lot 29 and the south thirty-five feet of Lot 28, Mrs. Powers moved away from the neighborhood, evidently to California. Thereafter, the Derhams made claim upon her for more ground, and after some controversy, in December, 1910, she made a quit-claim deed to the Derhams for the south seventy-five feet of Lot 28. The north forty feet of the south seventy-five feet of Lot 28 is the land in controversy. In February, 1911, the Derhams took posession of this forty feet and erected a fence on its northern line about two feet north of the row of apple trees above mentioned, so as to include these apple trees as well as the row of prune trees. About June, 1911, the Hills began an action to recover [349]*349the possession of the forty feet in controversy, which resulted in a judgment in their favor. The court found that by the deeds from Mrs. Powers to Joynson.and by the latter to the Hills it was the clear intention of the grantors to convey the land in controversy and that from the receipt of their deed the Hills were in the exclusive possession thereof, and farmed the same until dispossessed by the Derhams.

It is the claim of the Derhams that the deed from Mrs. Powers to Joynson, and from the latter to the Hills conveyed the north 565 feet only of Lot 28, and that the remaining forty feet included in the deeds was embraced in the road. They claim that the description “the north nine (9) acres, more or less, of Lot 28” must be disregarded and the description by metes and bounds with the place of beginning at the southwest comer of Lot 21 must be accepted as the true description of the land conveyed. They say that the words “nine acres, more or less,” are merely descriptive and do not control the location by metes and bounds and that the description by quantity must yield to the more certain description.

We do not, in any manner, dispute the many authorities cited to sustain this contention. Had the description in the deed been “nine acres more or less described as follows,” and then the point of beginning, and the metes and bounds given as in the deed, or had it started with the point of beginning and the metes and bounds and ended with the words, “containing nine acres, more or less, ’ ’ the quantity might have been of little importance, and the authorities cited might have been applicable.

What is said in this opinion, as is the case in every other opinion, is said in the light of all the surrounding facts and circumstances existing in the case, and each of these facts and circumstances are given weight in arriving at the conclusion reached. When the Derhams took their quit-claim deed they took it with full knowl[350]*350edge, either actual or constructive, of the facts and circumstances which are mentioned, and having done so they ought to have been apprized with certainty of the land that was intended to be conveyed to the Hills. Where there are two repugnant descriptions in a deed, “the court will look into the surrounding facts and will adopt the description which is most definite and certain and which in the light of the surrounding circumstances can be said to effectuate most clearly the intention of the parties.”— 2 Devlin on Deeds, sec. 1038; Wade v. Deray, 50 Calif. 376.

In construing a deed, the object is to discover and effectuate the intention of the parties to it.

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Bluebook (online)
57 Colo. 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/derham-v-hill-colo-1914.