Dykes v. Arnold

129 P.3d 257, 204 Or. App. 154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 8, 2006
Docket015185; A121699
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 129 P.3d 257 (Dykes v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dykes v. Arnold, 129 P.3d 257, 204 Or. App. 154 (Or. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*156 LINDER, J.

Plaintiffs and defendant, who own several adjacent lots in a rural area in Lincoln Comity, dispute the location of one of their boundary lines and, as a result, the ownership of a strip of property. Plaintiffs brought this ejectment action seeking possession of the disputed strip. In addition to their claim for ejectment, plaintiffs also sought a declaration that they had a permanent easement to draw water from a spring on defendant’s property. Defendant counterclaimed to quiet title in his favor on the basis that he was the fee owner of it. 1

Relying principally on the testimony of defendant’s expert surveyor, the trial court agreed that the boundary was where defendant claimed and that the disputed property belongs to him. The court therefore dismissed plaintiffs’ claim for ejectment and quieted title to the property in defendant. The trial court also declared that plaintiffs have a perpetual easement to draw water from the spring on defendant’s property. Plaintiffs appeal, challenging the trial court’s conclusion that defendant owns the disputed strip of land. Defendant cross-appeals, asserting that the trial court erred in granting the easement to plaintiffs. We reject defendant’s cross-appeal without discussion. On plaintiffs’ appeal, for the reasons we explain below, we affirm.

I. THE DISPUTE

The parties own a total of 12 parcels of property (lots) that lie around the center of a segment of land that is most easily referred to as “section 12” in Lincoln County. 2 This particular controversy involves four of those lots — three owned by plaintiffs and one owned by defendant. Although the following diagram is not to scale and is not precise in the shapes of what it depicts, it illustrates the basic “lay of the land” involved in the general area of the dispute.

*157 [[Image here]]

Defendant owns lot 1401, as well as property north, east, and northeast of that lot (indicated in a general way by the lighter shaded areas). Plaintiffs own lots 1400, 1402, and 1403 that border lot 1401 to the south, as well as other property to the south and east of those lots (the latter indicated by the darker shaded areas). A county road — Tomjack Road — runs through the area and borders several of the parcels.

The crux of the dispute is over the location of the center of section 12. The deed for lot 1401 specifies the center of section 12 as the beginning point of the lot’s boundaries. From that beginning point, pursuant to the deed’s metes and bounds description, the boundaries basically run west, then south, then east, then north back to the starting point — that is, back to the center of section 12. 3 *SThus, the description puts the northeast corner of lot 1401 at the center of section 12 and sets all of the other boundaries by specific distances and directions from that point. The property descriptions to plaintiffs’ tax lots 1402,1400, and 1403 either start at the center of section 12 or have calls to the south line of tax lot 1401. The parties therefore agree that the disputed boundary between their respective lots depends on identifying the location of the *158 southern boundary of lot 1401, which in turn depends on the location of the center of section 12.

As we discuss in greater detail later, the parties each commissioned a licensed surveyor to locate the center of section 12 and, based on that location, to identify the southern boundary of lot 1401. The two surveyors took dramatically different approaches to the task. Defendant’s surveyor, Nyhus, aware that the center had been surveyed and marked (“monumented”) in 1899 by the Lincoln County Surveyor, attempted to locate the center as set by that survey. He believed that he succeeded and that the section’s center, as set in 1899 by the county surveyor, Derrick, coincided with the accepted boundary lines in the area as reflected by the deeds, county road location, fence lines, and lines of occupation of the last 100 years. Plaintiffs’ surveyor, Denison, made no effort to retrace that prior survey because he thought it was flawed in its methodology. He therefore set out to locate the center anew, using the legally prescribed methodology and modem survey techniques and disregarding any evidence of the boundaries as reflected in the deeds, fence lines, county road location, and lines of occupation.

Plaintiffs’ survey yielded different results. Plaintiffs’ surveyor placed the center of section 12 about 71 feet northwest of where defendant’s surveyor placed it. That, in turn, would mean that the southern boundary of defendant’s property was north of where defendant and his predecessor in interest believed it to be, an approach that would make plaintiffs the fee owners of the disputed property. The following not-to-scale diagram illustrates how the boundaries of lot 1401 would shift, depending on which survey is deemed correct.

[[Image here]]

*159 II. BACKGROUND

With that description of the dispute as context, we turn to a more detailed examination of the facts and circumstances that bear on its resolution. In particular, we describe early surveys of section 12 during the late 1800s, beginning with an overview of the system that the federal government used for those surveys. We then discuss the original conveyances of property in section 12 from the federal government to private parties; several of the subsequent conveyances involving property and easements in the area; evidence pertaining to fences and other potential lines of occupation; and evidence about where long-time residents in the area have understood the center and center lines of section 12 to be. We also further examine the surveys made by the parties’ experts, Nyhus and Denison, and their conclusions as to the location of the center of section 12. Our review of the record is de novo. See Nedry v. Morgan, 284 Or 65, 67, 584 P2d 1381 (1978) (ejectment claim is an action at law, but granting an equitable counterclaim to quiet title makes appellate review that of an equitable decree). To the extent that the facts are disputed or the parties disagree about what inferences should be drawn from certain facts, our description is based on the facts and inferences that we find persuasive.

A. The method of subdividing lands for conveyances from federal government ownership into private ownership

As is true of all land in the United States north of the Ohio River and west of the Mississippi River, title to land in Oregon was originally vested in the federal government, and much of it was conveyed into private ownership pursuant to federal land “patents,” or grants, issued by the General Land Office (GLO). Before the federal government would transfer title through those original grants, the land first had to be surveyed by a federal government surveyor. Once surveyed, a plat of the survey, together with the surveyor’s field notes, had to be filed with and approved by the federal government. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 257, 204 Or. App. 154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dykes-v-arnold-orctapp-2006.