Grimstad v. Dordan

471 P.2d 778, 256 Or. 135, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 298
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 471 P.2d 778 (Grimstad v. Dordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grimstad v. Dordan, 471 P.2d 778, 256 Or. 135, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 298 (Or. 1970).

Opinion

McAllister, j.

This is a suit in the nature of a quiet title proceeding, ORS 105.605, in which plaintiffs claim to be the owners of certain land and ask the court to determine the adverse claims of the defendants to that land and enjoin them from asserting those claims *137 in the future. Plaintiffs’ claim of title is based on adverse possession. The trial court held that plaintiffs had faded to prove their claim, and decreed defendants to be the owners of the property.

The property in dispute is part of a large tract once owned by Prank Johnson, bounded on the south by the Alsea River and extending north 812 feet. The Alsea Highway crossed the property from east to west about 340 feet north of the river.

The easterly portion of the Johnson tract was conveyed in 1933 to Larsons and in 1942 inherited by Larsons’ daughter, a Mrs. Lake. The Lakes moved onto the Larson property in 1942 and, at the time of the trial, Mr. Lake was still living on that part of the Larson tract north of the highway. In 1962 the Lakes conveyed that portion of the Larson tract lying south of the Alsea Highway to Yaple, who, in turn, sold to Leekley, from whom the defendants Dordan purchased by contract in 1964.

The westerly portion of the Johnson tract was conveyed in 1938 to Evans. In 1956 Evans’ daughter, Rosemary Nichol, and her husband purchased the west tract from her father’s estate. In 1964 the Nichols conveyed the Avest tract to plaintiffs.

The property in dispute is a strip 27 feet wide and about 340 feet long between the Alsea Highway on the north and the Alsea River on the south. Plaintiffs claim title by adverse possession to the line of an old fence which stood for many years 27 feet east of the record boundary between plaintiffs’ tract on the west and defendants’ tract on the east.

There is no doubt that the fence was maintained between the east and west tracts, both north and south of the highway, from 1935 until 1961 when that portion *138 of the fence south of the highway was removed. Mr. Lake testified that in 1935 he visited his wife’s parents, the Larsons, who then lived on the easterly tract. Lake testified that the fence was then two years old and pictures taken on that visit by Lake showing the fence in place were received in evidence.

Lake testified that when he visited the property in 1935 and again in 1936 the Johnsons, who owned the west tract, used the area up to the fence to pasture pigs and cattle. Lake moved onto the easterly tract in 1942. By that time the westerly tract had been conveyed to Evans and had been planted to bulb crops. The fence was still there and was treated as the boundary between the two properties, with Lake farming up to the fence on his side and Evans farming up to the fence on the other side. According to Lake that situation continued at all times after Evans acquired the west tract in 1938.

The evidence does not disclose who built the fence, but Lake testified that he maintained it for about 20 years until that portion of the fence south of the highway was removed in 1961.

Along the west side of the fence, from the highway to the river, there was an unsurfaced farm road or lane used by the owners of the land west of the fence for access to their fields south of the highway. A number of witnesses testified that the road had been there continuously and in the same location throughout the years. There was some variance in the testimony as to the distance between the road and the fence, but it appears that the road was as close to the fence as the movement of farm machinery and farming operations permitted. The land was cultivated to the edge of the road and the road provided a turning space for equipment working in the planted area.

*139 Rosemary Nichol testified that her parents, the Evans, had farmed the tract west of the fence since the 1940’s and since 1946, possibly earlier, had planted bulb crops right up to the road adjoining the fence. Both Mrs. Nichol and her husband testified that after they acquired the property they continued to use it for bulb crops and used the land, including the road, up to the fence.

The testimony contains no serious conflicts in the facts, and few discrepancies among the witnesses. The testimony of Lake and the Nichols as to the use of the land up to the fence by the occupants on both sides is fully corroborated by other disinterested witnesses and pictures, including aerial photographs. It is undisputed that the fence was standing for a period of twenty-five years or more, from at least 1935 to 1961. There is ample testimony of a continuous use of the land during this same period, and the evidence is especially clear as to the use after 1942. The natural inference from the evidence is that the owners of the westerly tract thought the fence was their boundary and occupied and used the premises upon that assumption.

To establish ownership of land by adverse possession, it must be shown that the possession was actual, open, notorious, hostile, continuous, and exclusive, under a claim of right or color of title, for a period of ten years. Reeves et al v. Porta, 173 Or 147, 149, 144 P2d 493 (1944); ORS 12.050. There seems to be in this case no serious claim that whatever use plaintiffs’ predecessors made of the property was not open and notorious, or that it was not continuous for a period of at least ten years.

In Norgard et al v. Busher et ux, 220 Or 297, 304, 349 P2d 490, 80 ALR2d 1161 (1960) it was held that *140 the element of adverseness or hostility is established when it is shown that the land was occupied under the mistaken belief on the part of the occupier that the land in question belonged to him. Plaintiffs contend that the facts in this case bring it within the rule of Norgard, while defendants claim that case does not control because there is evidence that Mrs. Nichol was aware that there was a question about the correct boundary line between the two properties. Mrs. Nichol did testify that she and her husband had discussed with Mr. Lake the possibility of having a survey made of the boundary between the two properties. She denied that the reason for this discussion was any uncertainty as to the proper location of the line. Mr. Nichol testified that he had no doubt about the correct line between the tracts, but that he was aware of a probable error in the legal description in his deed, which would, he said, have “put the line across the river.”

The opinion in Norgard distinguished cases of “pure mistake” from those of “conscious doubt” as follows :

“"Where an occupant of land is in doubt as to the location of the true line it is reasonable to inquire as to his state of mind in occupying the land in dispute. If, having such doubt, it was his purpose to hold the disputed area only if that area was included in the land described in his deed, then it is reasonable to say that the requisite hostility is lacking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
471 P.2d 778, 256 Or. 135, 1970 Ore. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grimstad-v-dordan-or-1970.