Griffith v. Murray

166 Iowa 380
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 20, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 166 Iowa 380 (Griffith v. Murray) 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
Griffith v. Murray, 166 Iowa 380 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Preston, J.

The land in controversy consists of about fourteen acres east of the creek and west of the west line of the east seventy-eight acres of lots 4 and 5. The following plat will give a better understanding of the situation than a statement of it:

Plaintiff brought suit to quiet title. All defendants, except T. N. Murray, filed disclaimers. Plaintiff bases his claim on a quit-claim deed executed to him in 1909 by the heirs of James Peckham. This deed was executed more than forty years after James Peckham and wife had conveyed to Jacob M. Murray, by warranty deed, land described as follows: East parts of lots 4 and 5 in section 2&emdash;69&emdash;5, containing seventy-eight acres. It was supposed at that time, and fór many years thereafter, that there were but seventy-eight acres east of the creek. Defendant T. N. Murray is a son of Jacob M. Murray, who died about the year 1908. Defendant had purchased and has deeds from the heirs and widow of Jacob M. Murray, deceased.

About 1908 or 1909, when one Harvey, who owned land west of the creek, had a survey made, it was discovered that there were more than seventy-eight acres of land east of the creek; that is, that there was a tract of fourteen acres east of the creek and west of the east seventy-eight acres of lots 4 and 5. Some of this surplus is accounted for by accretions. [383]*383Taking the measurements of the lots, as shown by the government field notes, there was more land than recited in the patents, and more than stated in the government plat; there is no claim, however, that James Peckham or Jacob M. Murray had any knowledge of this fact. Prior to 1867, James Peck-ham became the owner of the seventy-eight acres at least, and it is the claim of the defendant that, by the deed, he became the owner of all the land east of the creek.

The defendant T. N. Murray claims title to all of said lots 4 and 5 east of the creek on three grounds: First, that the deed of James Peckham to Jacob M. Murray, before referred to, and which was executed in 1867, conveyed all of said lots 4 and 5 east of the creek, and that the evidence shows that it was the understanding and intention of the parties to said deed that all land east of the creek was conveyed; second, that Jacob M. Murray, through whose heirs appellee obtained title, was the owner of said land by adverse possession, or acquiescence, and that appellant and his grantors were barred by the statute of limitations; and, third, that subsequent to the deed to Jacob M. Murray by James Peckham and wife, through whom plaintiff claims title, said James Peckham leased or rented from the said Jacob M. Murray the same land in controversy in this suit. This last fact is pleaded as an estoppel by the defendant, and he also claims it is a circumstance bearing on the question of the intention of the parties. To sustain his contention as to these three grounds, appellee shows that the original patent from the United States government to Peter Peckham, from whom James Peckham obtained title, recited that lot 5 contained 52.10 acres, according to official survey; that the original patent to lot 4 ,from the government recited that it contained sixty acres, according to official survey, and that the person to whom said patent was issued so conveyed the same to Peter Peckham in 1839; that on the original government plat said lot 5 was marked as containing 52.10 acres, and said lot 4 was marked as containing sixty acres, the two together containing 112.10 acres; that in 1843 [384]*384Peter Peckham conveyed by deed to one Lansing the west one-third of lot 4, which would be twenty acres, as shown by the government patent and plat, and in the same deed conveyed land described as follows, fourteen and one-half acres on the east side of the west one-third of lot 4, bounded on the east by a creek, separating it from the remaining part east of said creek, all in section 2, etc. Thus Peter Peckham, having sold thirty-four and one-half acres out of the 112.10 acres contained in lots 4 and 5, as recited in the patents, and as shown by the government plat, had remaining 77.60 acres, practically seventy-eight acres.

As before stated, James Peckham became the owner of the land, and in 1867 negotiated with Jacob M. Murray for the sale of said land. At the time of this transaction, i Real peop-acquiescence';5' evidence. testimony shows that James Peckham told Jacob M. Murray there were seventy-eight acres according to the government survey, the west line of which was the creek. With this knowledge as to the number of acres, James Peckham and wife conveyed to Jacob M. Murray the land under the description heretofore quoted. Upon the execution of the deed, James Peckham ¿surrendered to said Jacob M. Murray the possession of all the land in said lots 4 and 5 east of the creek. The evidence shows, without any substantial conflict, that after the conveyance just referred to, and up to the time of his death, Jacob M. Murray used and occupied all of said land in lots 4 and 5 east of the creek, and claiming that his land extended west to the creek; that he farmed a part of the fourteen acres in controversy and pastured other parts of it; that during a part of the time there was a residence, sugar camp, and cane mill on a part of the land at least, and there was a river landing known as Murray’s Landing; that he cut timber for wood and lumber; that about twenty-six years ago he fenced it, the fence on the west being next to the creek, always claiming and contending that he owned all of the land so fenced and used in lots 4 and 5 up to the creek on the west; that [385]*385about four or fivevyears after the conveyance James Peckham rented the land in controversy and the sugar trees thereon from his grantee and paid to said Murray a part of the proceeds as rent; that after James Peckham executed the deed he stated that he did not own a foot of land; witnesses testify that at the time of conveyance James Peckham stated to Jacob M. Murray that the land, extended to the creek. Jacob M. Murray paid all the taxes which were paid on the land east of the creek until 1909, when plaintiff obtained his deed from the heirs, and for 1909, 1910 and 1911 plaintiff has paid the taxes on the fourteen acres. Before plaintiff received his deed, the defendant, who had then become the owner of the ■land inherited by him from his father and purchased by him from the other heirs, told one of the heirs of James Peckham, in the presence of plaintiff, and while plaintiff was negotiating for the purchase of the land, that James Peckham and wife had sold all the land east of the creek forty years before. Por more than forty years, Jacob M. Murray claimed to be the owner of all the land east of the creek, and during that time no other person made any claim thereto.

These are some of the circumstances relied upon by the defendant to show that all adjoining proprietors and all persons interested acquiesced in the creek as being the west boundary of all the land east of the creek, and acquiesced in the creek as the true line, and that it was the intention of James Peckham, by the deed, to convey, and to Jacob M. Murray to receive and claim, all of the land east of the creek, rather than only the seventy-eight acres mentioned in the deed. Indeed, it is conceded by the appellant in argument that the evidence shows that the defendant • and his father had used the land clear up to the creek practically for the last twenty-six years, and that the plaintiff would not be here contesting the title of the defendants were it not for two facts: First, the declarations of Jacob M.

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166 Iowa 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-murray-iowa-1914.