Geiger v. Uhl

180 N.E. 10, 204 Ind. 135, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 14
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1932
DocketNo. 26,175.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 180 N.E. 10 (Geiger v. Uhl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Geiger v. Uhl, 180 N.E. 10, 204 Ind. 135, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 14 (Ind. 1932).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The appellees bought a lot on the west side of North Meridian Street, south of Twenty-second Street, in the city of Indianapolis and erected thereon a brick business building. The appellant, who owns the north forty feet of the lot which adjoins appellee’s lot on the south, claims that the building erected by appellees extends over upon his lot a distance of 4% inches and brought this action against them in four paragraphs. The first paragraph was for possession and damages; the second, to quiet title; the third, in ejectment. The fourth paragraph prayed for all the relief sought in the other paragraphs and alleged that in laying out the Lazarus and Pierce Meridian Place addition to the city of Indianapolis a mistake was made in the measurements, in that in the tier of lots bordering on the west side of Meridian Street there is a shortage on the east frontage of about one foot and four inches and on the west end of that tier of lots of about one foot; that no adjustment of this shortage had ever been *138 made by the owners of these lots but that each had claimed and is claiming the full frontage as the same is shown on the plat and that the appellees, in the erection of their building, did not take into consideration any portion of such deficiency, which should be apportioned among the owners of that tier of lots. To the complaint appellees filed an answer in general denial. (None of the other owners of lots in the tier of lots mentioned in the fourth paragraph of complaint were made parties to the action.)

After a trial by the court a finding was made and judgment was rendered in the defendants’ (appellees’) . favor. The alleged error relied upon for reversal is the overruling of appellant’s motion for a new trial, wherein it is alleged that the decision is. not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law.

The following facts are shown by the evidence. (There is not a great deal of conflict in the evidence, but where there is conflict, that submitted on behalf of the prevailing party below is stated) :

A gasoline filling station is located on lot 32 at the southwest corner of Twenty-second and Meridian streets (50 feet east frontage on Meridian Street with a brick business building located on the rear of the lot); south of the corner lot is the 50 foot lot (Lot 31) of appellees on which they have erected a brick building containing three store rooms facing on Meridian Street; each of these lots are of even width throughout their length and extend from Meridian Street west to an alley. South of appellees’ lot is appellant’s lot which was described in his deed as “beginning at the northeast corner of lot 30, thence south on the east line of said lot 40 feet, thence west parallel with the north line of said lot to the west line thereof, thence north-on the west line to the north line of said lot (thence east) to the place of beginning.” Lot 30 was an irregular lot with a *139 frontage of 78.4 feet on Meridian Street and 45.4 feet wide in the rear; lot 29, the next lot south of lot 30, is also an irregular lot having a frontage of 54 feet on Meridian Street and being 87 feet wide in the rear. Lots 28, 27 and 26 lying south of lot 29 are each 45 feet wide throughout their length from Meridian Street to the alley. A street named McLean Place runs west from Meridian Street along the south line of lot 26. The addition in which all these lots are contained—Lazarus and Pierce’s Meridian Place Addition to the city of Indianapolis—runs south to the first alley south of McLean Place and west to Illinois Street (the first street west of Meridian). The dividing lines between all the lots mentioned herein run east and west, except between the irregular lots 30 and 29, which line runs northwest from Meridian Street on the line of the Old State Ditch, which was once an open ditch 12 or 16 feet wide and 6 or 7 feet deep (but which no longer exists as an open drain) , 1

The gasoline station (and the brick building west of it) occupy the full width of lot 32, viz: 50 feet south of Twenty-second Street and the foundation of appellees’ store building is 49.64 feet wide extending south from lot 32 (lot 31 being 50 feet wide). There is a hedge between appellees’ and appellant’s lots extending east from the alley in the rear (on the same line an old fence formerly stood), which hedge is 100 feet south of Twenty-second Street. -There is a hedge in the front and a board fence in the rear on the appellant’s south boundary line—extending all the way from Meridian Street to the alley—and such hedge and fence are each 140 feet south of Twenty-second Street.

These are actual distances measured on the ground, *140 and are also the exact distances as shown on the plat, and it follows that there was no compensation or allowance made therein for any shortage (of actual ground as against the distance shown by the plat) that might exist in the tier of lots of which they were a part. The distance along Meridian Street south from Twenty-second Street to McLean Place, as shown by the plat, is 367.4, but actually the distance is 366 feet, being short 1.4 feet. Along the alley line the shortage is 1 foot. (It follows that if such shortage is not absorbed in the irregular shaped lots or elsewhere and if a proportionate part of the shortage must be taken from all lots in the tier, including appellees’ lot, then appellees’ south wall is over 4 inches south of their property line—unless the limits have been otherwise fixed by adverse possession or in some other manner. In such case their north property line would be over 2 inches north of the present dividing line between their lot and the corner lot at Twenty-second Street.)

The appellees purchased lot 31 in December, 1924, from Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Johnson, who had owned and lived on the property continuously for about twenty-five years. When appellees erected their building in April or May, 1925, they placed its south wall north of what their surveyor informed them was their property line. The bay window of the stairway landing and the eaves of appellant’s house project 2 or 3 inches north of the line of this wall and appellees made an inset of 2 or 3 inches in their wall in order to get around the bay window. A dormer of appellant’s house overhangs the wall of appellees’ building 3 or 4 inches.

Appellant in February, 1904, leased for 3 years with option to purchase, the forty feet off the north part of lot 30 and the house located thereon. He later purchased the property. Appellant, five or six years after he moved into the property, constructed a concrete retain *141 ing wall 12 inches high along the front thereof and this wall extends 6 or 7 inches north of the line on which appellee built his building. But the wall was constructed “probably as much as six inches” north of the slope or line of demarcation between the lots. This line of demarcation was plainly marked and was practically on the same line extended as that of the hedge in the rear. Mr. Johnson, appellees’ grantor, testified that in cutting his grass and otherwise caring for his yard he had for more than twenty years exercised ownership and control over all of the property as far south as the line of demarcation mentioned.

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Bluebook (online)
180 N.E. 10, 204 Ind. 135, 1932 Ind. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/geiger-v-uhl-ind-1932.