Dormer v. Dreith

18 N.W.2d 94, 145 Neb. 742, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 38
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1945
DocketNo. 31877
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 94 (Dormer v. Dreith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dormer v. Dreith, 18 N.W.2d 94, 145 Neb. 742, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 38 (Neb. 1945).

Opinion

Paine, J.

This is an action brought by plaintiffs and appellees to enjoin defendants from preventing the plaintiffs using a road across their land and to quiet title in the plaintiffs to a strip of land 25 feet wide across defendants’ land. A hearing was had upon the application, the defendants introducing no evidence, and the court granted a temporary injunction on April 14?, 1943, upon the plaintiffs executing an undertaking in the sum of $300. On March 30, 1944, defendants filed their amended answer and a cross-petition praying that plaintiffs be enjoined from using the road. Trial was had. Judgment was entered for plaintiffs.

The defendants and appellants set out seven errors relied upon for reversal, which may be summarized as follows : That the court erred in finding the issues in favor of the plaintiffs, and such decree is not supported by the evidence, and is contrary to the evidence and contrary to law.

The last four assignments of error charge that the court erred in failing and refusing to make separate findings of fact and conclusions of law, as requested, and intermingling findings of fact and conclusions of law, and that the supplemental findings of the court numbered 1 to 7 are contrary to the evidence and to the law, and are erroneous.

In this case the trial began on May 5, 1944, and a journal entry by the judge sets out that he had viewed the premises on that date.

The evidence discloses that the 40 acres of plaintiffs is [744]*744the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 34 and, being an inside 40 acres, has no road out to a section line except this road in controversy. The plaintiffs acquired the land in 1937 and the defendants acquired theirs in 1940, so the plaintiffs must depend upon their predecessors to establish any right to the road, and the large amount of evidence was to bring out the use of this road by their predecessors.

When the land was first homesteaded by Richard A. Cawley, he drove out in any direction; he began to farm the land in 1912, while none of defendants’ land was farmed until 1916.

In 1916 an irrigation district constructed a ditch on the east side of the defendants’ land, and a bridge was erected over this irrigation lateral, and after that bridge was constructed the road over defendants’ land ran to that bridge, as they went out to the section line road on the east side of their land. It is admitted that the prescriptive period did not Commence to run until the year 1917, as that was when the land was improved, and it was not until that year that those using defendants’ land had to farm along this lateral.

Plaintiff Dormer inspected the land and the road before he bought it. Defendant Dreith moved onto his land in 1941, and up to this date there had never been any objection made to those who owned and used plaintiffs’ land using this road as their only egress to the section line on the east side of the section, being the shortest way to any section line road.

On the day of the trial the attorneys for the defendants filed a request for separate findings of fact and conclusions of law, as follows:

“Come now the defendants in the above entitled cause at the close of the testimony and prior to the arguments of counsel in said cause, and respectfully request the court to make separate findings of fact and conclusions of law.
“Said defendants further request the court to make specific findings of fact concerning the following:
“1. The date that each owner of defendants’ land ac[745]*745quired title thereto and the date when he conveyed said real estate or was entirely divested of his title.
“2. The period or periods of time that plaintiffs’ land was occupied by the owner or owners, and the period or periods of time that said land was. occupied by tenants of the owner or owners thereof.
“3. The period or periods of time that defendants’ land was occupied by tenants of the owner thereof.
“4. The date that the lateral ditch along which the road involved in this case is located, was constructed, and the purposes other than going to and from plaintiffs’ land for which said road was used.” : •

In response to such demand for separate findings, the court on May 16, 1944, filed separate findings of fact and conclusions of law. In response to paragraph 1, the court finds that on May 22, 1895, George S. Arnold received a patent from the United States government for land now owned by defendants, and then followed a chain of eleven conveyances, beginning with patentee, giving the date of the conveyance and the grantors’ and the grantees’ names,- and ending with February 24, 1940, when J. L. Witters and wife conveyed said real estate to David Dreith and Anna Dreith as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, being the defendants herein.

In response to paragraph 2 of defendants’ request, there are set out by the court certain facts which were stipulated as to ownership of plaintiffs’ land, and evidence covering the period from 1911, Richard A. Cawley receiving his patent February 26, 1916, and setting out what the evidence shows as to the owners thereafter, and whether they lived on the premises or not, and what years the evidence failed to show who occupied the premises.

As tp paragraph 3, definite answer is made by the court of facts shown by the evidence. As to paragraph 4, answer is set out that the lateral ditch along which the road in this case is located was in use in the year 1917, and that the road along this lateral ditch has been used by the owners and tenants and others in going to and from what is now the [746]*746plaintiffs’ land, and that it was also used by the Farmers Irrigation District for the purpose of maintaining and inspecting said lateral by its ditch riders, and that it was used as well by the owners and tenants of the defendants’ land in connection with all farming operations of that portion of the premises lying north of said lateral and in the harvesting of crops raised thereon by all persons who had occasion to go to that portion of the defendants’ land.

Thereafter on May 18, 1944, there was filed by the trial judge supplemental findings of fact and conclusions of law, setting out that the court finds that the plaintiffs have sustained the burden of proof of the user of said road, either by themselves or their predecessors in title, for a period of more than ten years prior to the bringing of this action.

It further finds that on the question of “tacking” there can be no dispute that the road in question has been used by the parties heretofore enumerated for a period of more than 20 years prior to bringing the action, and that the use was open, adverse and notorious, and that by such use a right to use the road by prescription obtained, notwithstanding the fact that no conveyance of plaintiffs’ land ever included this road as appurtenant to that land; that it has been held that an easement will pass by deed or grant if it is apparent to an ordinary observer and naturally and necessarily belonged to the premises, and that, while no mention of the road in question has been made in the deeds, the court is of the opinion that the period of a tenant’s use can be tacked to the use of the landlord or subsequent owner to complete the period essential to such prescriptive right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 94, 145 Neb. 742, 1945 Neb. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dormer-v-dreith-neb-1945.