Gensler v. Kooi

687 N.W.2d 548
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedAugust 26, 2004
Docket03-3277
StatusPublished

This text of 687 N.W.2d 548 (Gensler v. Kooi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gensler v. Kooi, 687 N.W.2d 548 (Wis. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Gregory A. Gensler, Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
Doris J. Vander Kooi, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 03-3277.

Court of Appeals of Wisconsin.

Opinion Filed: August 26, 2004.

Before Deininger, P.J., Dykman and Vergeront, JJ.

¶1 VERGERONT, J.

Doris Vander Kooi appeals the circuit court's judgment in a boundary dispute with her neighboring property owner, Gregory Gensler. Vander Kooi argues that the circuit court erred in construing the deeds describing two parcels of real estate she owns. We conclude that the court erred in construing the location of the beginning point in the description of the northern parcel as the intersection of the centerlines of Hackbarth Road and City Highway 14. The deed unambiguously provides that the beginning point is the intersection of the centerline of Hackbarth Road and a line drawn along the "Westerly line of the concrete highway, now known as City Highway 14." We remand to the circuit court for the purpose of resolving this ambiguity in the deed: does the "Westerly line of the concrete highway, now known as City Highway 14" mean the western edge of the concrete portion of the highway as it existed in 1925 or the western edge of the right-of-way as it existed in 1925? Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

¶2 Gensler initiated this action, contending that Vander Kooi constructed a shed on his property and otherwise occupied his property. He sought a declaration of his interest in the disputed real property under WIS. STAT. § 841.01.[1] Vander Kooi's answer alleged that she was the owner of the disputed area. She also filed a counterclaim, alleging in the alternative that she owned the disputed land by adverse possession. The following testimony was presented at trial.

¶3 Vander Kooi and Gensler both own land in Rock County that was once owned by an individual who deeded land to the predecessors of the parties. Vander Kooi obtained a warranty deed for her parcels on June 23, 1995. Gensler obtained a warranty deed for his land on January 29, 2002. The description included in Gensler's deed was a general description of land bounded by roads and limited by exceptions for parcels carved out of this area by other deeds, including the parcels owned by Vander Kooi. Thus, Gensler owns all the land not contained in the exceptions that were deeded to others.

¶4 The deed to Vander Kooi's property included a metes and bounds description of two parcels, one from a 1925 conveyance and the other from a 1930 conveyance. These parcels carve out the northern section of the land described in Gensler's deed. The deed describes Vander Kooi's northern parcel as the following:

That part of the East ½ of the Northwest ¼ of Section 15, Township 3 North, Range 12 East, described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at the point of intersection or junction of the concrete highway known as number 13, now known as City Highway 14, with the old gravel public highway running directly North and South in said section, now known as Hackbarth Road, said commencing point being about 100 rods South of the public highway running between Sections 10 and 15, now known as Highway 14, thence running South along the center of said old gravel highway, now known as Hackbarth Road, 240 feet, more or less; thence Easterly in a direct line, 130 feet, more or less, to the Westerly line of the concrete highway, now known as City Highway 14, thence Northwesterly along said concrete highway, now known as City Highway 14; 240 feet, more or less, to the place of beginning; meaning to describe a triangular parcel of land lying Southwesterly of said concrete highway, now known as City Highway 14, and between the highways described.[2]

The deed uses the northern parcel as a point of reference for determining the southern parcel. That description states:

Also that part of the East ½ of the Northwest ¼ of said Section 15, described as follows: Commencing at a point on the Westerly margin of the concrete highway known as number 13, now known as Hackbarth Road, which point is the Southeast corner of the above described parcel of land, and running thence Southerly along the Westerly margin of said concrete highway, now known as Hackbarth Road, 132 feet; thence Northwesterly in a direct line to the center of the gravel highway which runs North and South thru said Section, now known as City Highway 14 to a point 132 feet southerly from the Southwest corner of said triangular tract; thence North along the center of said gravel highway, now known as City Highway 14, 132 feet to said Southwest corner of said triangular tract; thence easterly along the Southerly boundary line of said triangular tract to place of beginning.[3]

¶5 Before the trial, the parties stipulated that the construction of the language of the deed was "a purely legal issue to be decided by the court" that would be "submitted for decision on stipulated facts." At trial, both parties agreed that no two surveyors they had spoken to interpreted the legal descriptions in the deed to arrive at identical dimensions for the parcels. Nonetheless, each side called a witness to give an interpretation of the legal descriptions: Gensler called the Rock County planning director and Vander Kooi called a surveyor. Both witnesses agreed that the beginning point was the intersection of the centerline of the two roads, but they had differing views on how the legs of the triangle should be determined. The planning director drew the first leg (west leg) from the beginning point south along the centerline of Hackbarth Road approximately 240 feet; the second leg (south leg) at what appears to be less than a ninety-degree angle from that point 130 feet to the western paved edge of City Highway 14; and the third leg (east leg) approximately 240 feet from that point back to the beginning point at the intersection of the centerlines, with the result that the east leg did not run parallel to the paved edge of City Highway 14. The surveyor drew the west leg from the beginning point south along the centerline of Hackbarth Road approximately 240 feet; the south leg at an obtuse angle from that point approximately 125 feet over to the westerly right-of-way of City Highway 14; and the east leg 240 feet along the westerly right-of-way to the center line of Hackbarth Road, with the result that the ending point was not the beginning point but approximately 60 feet south of the beginning point.

¶6 In its decision, the circuit court stated that the deed was unambiguous and therefore it could not consider extrinsic evidence to construe the legal descriptions of the parcels, although it also stated that "there was consensus" that the beginning point of the northern plot, described as the "point of intersection or junction" of Hackbarth Road and City Highway 14, was the intersection of the centerlines of the two roads. The court described the northern parcel in this way:

[It] ... is without question in the shape of an isosceles triangle, meaning it has two equal legs of 240 feet commencing at the point of beginning. One leg [the west leg] goes 240 feet straight down the centerline of Hackbarth road; the other [the east leg] goes straight down the westerly line of the concrete highway, now City Highway 14, which the court interprets to be the edge of the pavement itself, not the right of way.... The court finds that connecting [the end points of each of these legs] draws the southern boundary, which most closely meets the intent of the original conveyance.

The court then determined the southern parcel was "unmistakably ...

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Bluebook (online)
687 N.W.2d 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gensler-v-kooi-wisctapp-2004.