Glenn v. Wagner

90 P.2d 734, 199 Wash. 160
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1939
DocketNo. 27404. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 90 P.2d 734 (Glenn v. Wagner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Wagner, 90 P.2d 734, 199 Wash. 160 (Wash. 1939).

Opinion

Millard, J.

JPlaintiffs as owners of government lot 10 and that part of government lots 8 and 9 lying *161 east of the most westerly thirty rods of said lots, all in section 6, township 17 north, range 6 W. W. M., in Grays Harbor county, brought this action against the defendants, who own government lots 4, 5, 6, and 7 of the same section, township, and range in which plaintiffs’ lots are located, under Rem. Rev. Stat., §§ 947 to 949 [P. C. §§7412 to 7414] inclusive, to establish the boundary lines of the above-described lots. Plaintiffs alleged that the boundary lines as originally established by the United States government were lost, and that the loss of the boundary lines was caused by the avulsion of the Satsop river.

By their answers, defendants admitted that plaintiffs own, according to their legal description only, the lands described in the complaint, and admit the ownership of the plaintiffs as to those portions still lying west of the Satsop river. As an affirmative defense and cross-complaint, defendants alleged that their lands extend from the east boundary of their lots Nos. 4, 5, 6, and 7, to the Satsop river; and that they, and their predecessors in interest, have held those lands continuously and uninterruptedly in open, notorious, hostile, and adverse possession for the required period of more than ten years next preceding the commencement of this action. As a second affirmative defense and cross-complaint, the defendants alleged that whatever land they now have in their possession and which may have been originally a part of the government lots of the plaintiff accrued to the defendants’ lands by a gradual accretion; and that, as the accretions formed, defendants extended their dominion over the same.

The cause was tried to the court, who expressed the view, but made no findings of facts and conclusions of law, that the change in the Satsop river in 1885 *162 was an avulsion; that the next change (which occurred in 1915) the court was not prepared to say was an avulsion, but, assuming that it was, that was the last change which, by any stretch of the imagination, could be regarded as an avulsion. The court said:

“The changes in 1934 and 1935 and 1936 can not be called avulsions in any sense of the word. You will recall that when I asked the plaintiffs’ witnesses what happened to the soil which was washed off the west bank of the river they all said it was carried down the river and out to the bay. That is not avulsion. The evidence does not show a sudden, violent, avulsive change in this stream during the past fifteen or twenty years.
“The growth and size of trees and timber and other conditions along the east side of the river which I observed when I examined the premises, would strongly indicate to my mind that such changes in the river as took place in the last fifteen or twenty years at least were the result of erosion and not avulsion.
“On the issue of adverse possession, the testimony shows that the Wagners have been in actual, open, notorious and adverse possession of the lands east of the Satsop river for around forty-five years. They have used this land to pasture their cattle, they have cut their wood from it, they have cut the thistles on it and have planted it to seed. They have made every use of it that the nature of the land would permit. There was some testimony that the Glenns also used the land across the river to pasture their cattle, but I am satisfied that only an occasional stray went across. The evidence further shows that the Wagners have paid the taxes on this land. This is further evidence of their ownership.
“The defendants are entitled to judgment quieting their title to the lands in question east of the Satsop river.”

Decree was entered adjudging defendants to be the owners of all of the lands in dispute in this action, and that the boundary of the defendants’ property on the *163 west is the Satsop river as the same now exists, and that the defendants own all of the land in dispute lying east of the Satsop river, which, as it now exists, forms a natural boundary towards the west of the defendants’ property, which is described as all of lots 4, 5, 6, and 7 in section 6, township 17 north, range 6 W. W. M., lying on the east side of the Satsop river, which river forms the westerly boundary thereof. Plaintiffs appealed.

The statute respecting the establishment of lost or uncertain boundaries of lands between two or more adjoining proprietors provides that,

“Whenever the boundaries of lands between two or more adjoining proprietors shall have been lost, or by time, accident, or any other cause shall have become obscure or uncertain, and the adjoining proprietors cannot agree to establish the same, one or more of said adjoining proprietors may bring his civil action in equity, in the superior court for the county in which such lands, or part of them, are situated, and such superior court, as a court of equity, may, upon such complaint, order such lost or uncertain boundaries to be erected and established and properly marked.” (Laws of 1886, p. 104, § 1; 2 H. C., § 668; Rem. Rev. Stat. §947 [P. C. §7412].)

The succeeding section (Laws of 1886, p. 105, § 2; 2 H. C., § 669; Rem. Rev. Stat., § 948 [P. C. § 7413]) of the statute provides for the appointment by the court of three commissioners to establish the boundaries between the adjoining land owners.

The third section (Laws of 1886, p. 105, § 3; 2 H. C., § 670; Rem. Rev. Stat., § 949 [P. C. §7414]) of the statute provides that the proceedings shall be conducted as other civil actions, and that the costs (which shall be apportioned equitably) of the proceedings shall be a lien upon the lands involved in the litigation.

There have been, it is clear, during the three- *164 quarters of a century since the government survey, many changes in the channel of the Satsop river flowing between appellants’ land west of the river and respondents’ land east of the river. The evidence does not preponderate against the decision of the trial court that the change in the river in 1885 was an avulsion, and that, subsequent to 1915, if it be assumed that the change in that year was an avulsion, there has been no change which may be denominated an avulsion.

There has been a widening of the river and much land washed away and carried down the river and out to the bay.

Most of the land which was washed away was from that bank of the river where the appellants’ land is located, but it was not all on that side of the river. Practically all of lot 7 on respondents’ side of the river was washed away, and a substantial portion of lot 6 on respondents’ side of the river was also carried away by the wash of the river.

One of the witnesses, testifying on behalf of the appellants, testified that the new channel cut in 1885 was caused by log jam, and that the channel so changed followed a course around a piece of land of eighteen or twenty acres, but that the soil of this eighteen or twenty acres was not cut by the river or removed; that is, the river channel cut around this body of land.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.2d 734, 199 Wash. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-wagner-wash-1939.