Evert v. Turner

184 Iowa 1253
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 14, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 184 Iowa 1253 (Evert v. Turner) 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
Evert v. Turner, 184 Iowa 1253 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

1. Adverse possession: possession by mistake. The plaintiff and the defendant are the owners of adjoining lots, each lot consisting of five acres. The plaintiff’s land adjoins the defendant’s immediately on the south, and the strip of land in controversy lies along the north side, and is a part plaintiff’s lot, as shown by the deeds under which the parties acquired title. The defendant is in possession of this strip, and claims to be the owner of it. The action is to quiet the plaintiff’s title against this claim.

The defense is a general denial of plaintiff’s title, and a claim: (1) That the defendant has been in adverse possession for more than ten years, under color of title and claim of right; and (2) that, for more than ten years before the commencement of this action, a division fence was erected as a boundary between the tym lots, and that this fence has been acquiesced in by both parties for more than ten years, as the true boundary line; that, though this fence is 30 feet down on plaintiff’s land, yet the plaintiff .has acquiesced in it as the true boundary line for the statutory [1255]*1255period, and is now estopped to claim that it is not the true boundary line.

One Pierson owns land immediately south of the plaintiff’s. A roa<b known as the Lakeport Road, forms the east line of these lots. There is another road on the north line of defendant’s land, used and traveled, but never laid out and established as a highway or a road. Plaintiff purchased his lot in September, 1903, and took possession in October, 1903, and built the fence which it is now claimed is the true line.

There is some conflict in the evidence as to the exact date when this fence was' built. Some of the testimony shows it to have been built in the spring of 1907. Other testimony tends to show that it was built in the fall of 1906. Defendant purchased his land in October, 1906, and took possession on January 1, 1907. There is no claim of adverse possession on the part of any of defendant’s grantors, nor is there any claim of acquiescence in any line prior to the building of this fence by the plaintiff in the fall of 1906, or the spring of 1907. The adverse possession, therefore, if any there is, must date from the taking possession by the defendant, and the acquiescence must date from the time of the building of this fence.

As said before, one Pierson owned the land immediately south of the plaintiff’s. In 1911, a controversy arose between Pierson and the plaintiff, in which Pierson claimed that the plaintiff was occupying 30 feet along the north line of the lot owned by him, and a surveyor was called out, to ascertain by survey the true line between all these tracts. This survey was acquiesced in by the plaintiff, by the defendant, and by Pierson. The defendant contributed towards paying the expense of the survey. This survey developed the fact that the defendant was 30 feet too far south, and on plaintiff’s land, and that the plaintiff was 80 feet too far south, and on Pierson’s land. The correctness of this [1256]*1256survey is not disputed. It appears that the surveyor was one skilled in the art of surveying. Some effort was then made to adjust these differences between the parties. It finally resulted in á compromise or settlement between Pier-son and the plaintiff, the plaintiff conceding that, under the survey, he was too far south, and on Pierson’s land, as shown by the survej. Plaintiff, at the time, insisted that the defendant was just as much too far south of his line as he (the plaintiff) was too far south of Pierson’s line.

There was some talk between the plaintiff and the defendant of compromise, which was never effected. The plaintiff, however, disputed defendant’s right to hold this 30 feet which was in controversy, and the defendant maintained his right to hold it after these controversies arose, and finally insisted, when suit was commenced, that he had a right to hold it, either on the claim of adverse possession, or on the theory of acquiescence.

The trial court found that the plaintiff Avas the owner of the land, and that defendant had acquired no right to it, either by adverse possession or acquiescence, and entered a decree in favor of the plaintiff, as prayed, quieting the title to this strip of land in the plaintiff. From this action, the defendant appeals.

For a better understanding, and an explanation somewhat of the way in which the conditions arose, out of which this controversy developed, we will say that the record shows that the land owned by these three parties is in the west half of the southwest quarter of Section 5; that there is a road on the half-section line, running east and west through the section, and another road running south along the east line of these tracts, known as the Lakeport Road; and the defendant’s land extends north to the half-section line. His deed gives him a strip of land enclosed as follows: Commencing at a point on the half-section line running east and Avest; running thence south, 20 rods along [1257]*1257the Lakeport Road; thence west, 40 rods; north, 20 rods; east to the point of beginning. Plaintiff’s land commences on the Lakeport Road 20 rods south of the half-section line, extends south, 20 rods, west, 40 rods, north, 20 rods, east, 40 rods, to the road. As said before, on this half-section line running east and west, abutting defendant’s property on the north, is a road, or street, traveled, but not laid out; and we take it from this record that this road is 60 feet wide. After these parties purchased, in measuring south to ascertain the location of the lots, the plaintiff started at the south side of this latter road, and then measured his twenty rods still farther south, and then west, north, and east again, as required by his deed. This brought, according to his measurement, the north line of his lot 30 feet south of where it should have been if it had been measured from the middle of the road, or from the half-section line, and then, of course, brought his lot 30 feet south on Pier-son’s. The mistake was in the starting point of measurement. The lot that plaintiff claims now, measured from the half-section line, would bring his land 30 feet north of where the fence was placed. Defendant’s lot, measured from the south side of the highway, 20 rods, would bring defendant’s lot to the fence; but, measured from the middle of the road, or the half-section line, the point from which his deed starts, it would bring defendant’s lot 30 feet north of the fence; and we think this is where the mistake occurred, out of which the controversy arises.

So we start with the proposition that, under the deeds, this 30 feet properly passed to the plaintiff; that the building of the fence occurred through a mistake in measurement, in that the measurement was made from the south side of this east and west road, rather than from the half-section line.

This brings us to consider whether the plaintiff has lost his rights to this land, either by adverse possession or by [1258]*1258acquiescence. To secure a right to this strip, he must show either that for ten years he has been in open, adverse, continuous possession of this strip, under claim of right' or color of title, or that the line has been established by acquiescence, at the point claimed. As to the first claim, it has frequently been held that possession is not sufficient.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Collins Trust v. Allamakee County Board of Supervisors
599 N.W.2d 460 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1999)
Boyle v. D-X Sunday Oil Co.
191 F. Supp. 263 (N.D. Iowa, 1961)
Kennedy v. Oleson
100 N.W.2d 894 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1960)
Trimpl v. Meyer
71 N.W.2d 437 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1955)
Lannigan v. Andre
44 N.W.2d 354 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1950)
Swim v. Langland
11 N.W.2d 713 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1943)
Kotze v. Sullivan
231 N.W. 339 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1930)
Poleske v. Jones
192 Iowa 1015 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 Iowa 1253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evert-v-turner-iowa-1918.