Hammer v. Bell

1964 OK 57, 390 P.2d 492, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 282
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1964
Docket40353
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1964 OK 57 (Hammer v. Bell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hammer v. Bell, 1964 OK 57, 390 P.2d 492, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 282 (Okla. 1964).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Chief Justice.

Plaintiffs in error, hereinafter referred to as “defendants”, and the defendant in error, hereinafter referred to by name, or as “plaintiff”, are adjoining home owners in' Tulsa,' Oklahoma. Plaintiff’s home is at 4520 W. 56th Street, and was described in her deed as the WV2 of Lot 2 in Block 1, Bozarth Acres. Defendants’ residence number is “4524” on that Street, and its legal description is Lot 3 of the same block.

The principal issue in this action was whether the fence line, or the survey line, should be the governing boundary line between the two properties. The background facts relative to the parties’ controversy ate substantially as hereinafter related.

From 1927 to 1954, the defendants, Mr. and Mrs. Hammer, owned and resided on the W½ of Lot 2, supra. This homesite was part of a tract, the remainder of which was for years, beginning in 1927, owned by Mrs. Hammer’s sister, Mrs. Mabel Zaner, and was eventually subdivided into the El/2 of Lot 2 and Lots 3, 4, 5 and 6. During at least part of this period, Mrs. Zaner re *494 sided on the south side of the tract facing what is now Fifty-Seventh Street.

The original fence between what is now the W½ of Lot 2, and Lot 3, ran along the east side of a lane, six feet wide, that traversed Lot 3, beginning south of what is now 56th Street, and extending to an enclosure on the south side of the tract near Mrs. Zaner’s home, where cattle were pastured.

In 1932 defendants built the fence from 56th Street extending 87 feet along the east side of this former lane, and parallel to the west side of their house on Lot 2. Immediately after this first segment of the fence was built, defendants extended it back south the full length, of Lot 2. This fence remained in substantially the same location until shortly before this action was commenced. Defendants also planted trees along the f.e.nce. line, two of which still stand, and have grown to be quite large. Defendants also built other fences on Lot 3, which they testified were to enclose cattle.

For a period beginning in 1938, plaintiff and her husband rented, from Mrs. Zaner, and resided in, a small house which then stood on the eastern portion of Lot 3.

In 1953, defendants, after having contracted to purchase Lot 3 from Mrs. Zaner, replaced the portion of the old fence from the front corner of their residence to Lot 2’s rear, or south, edge, with a new fence that varied from one, to one and a half feet, east of the original one. Then in 1954, defendants purchased Lot 3 from Mrs. Zaner, and constructed their present residence on it.

The same year, a Mr. Winston, who apparently was .then the owner of Lot 4, whose east line coincided with Lot 3’s west line, had that line surveyed. Through that survey it was discovered that the fence, that had extended along that line for about 3(5 years, encroached on Lot 4 a distance of about 2½ feet. That old fence was then torn down.

In the .Fall of 1955, defendants entered into negotiations to sell plaintiff and her husband (Mr. and Mrs. ’Bell) their former home on the W½ of Lot 2. These negotiations were consummated by defendants’ conveyance of said property to the Bells for the sum of $5,000.00, during July of 1957. Thereafter, the Bells employed one Carl Carter, a carpenter who had worked on defendants’ new house, to install an attached car port at the northwest corner of the house on their newly purchased premises. A gate was installed in the now controversial fence near this car port.

Thereafter, in 1958, the Bells procured the County Surveyor to survey the eastern and western boundaries of their property. This survey revealed that these property lines were actually east of the fences on either side of their residence, and that the front 87 feet of the fence (as hereinbefore described) between the Bells’ and defendants’ residences, was as much as 2½ feet west of the true line. In conformity with the findings of this survey, the fence along the east side of the Bells’ property was moved east to the surveyed line, with the cooperation of the McCumbers, who owned the adjoining £½ of Lot 2. No steps were then taken, however, to move the subject fence running along the west side of the Bells’ home. The Bells did construct a curbing to mark the west edge of the driveway they built from the new car port to 56th Street, and part of this curbing covers the stake driven by the surveyor to indicate the true line between theirs and defendants’ properties.

, In 1960, defendants took to their attorney their complaints against the Bells, and caused another survey to be made o'f the disputed line. This survey showed the true line to be the same as had the survey the Bells had caused to be made two years, earlier. In September of that year, defendants’ attorney wrote the Bells demanding that they move, over east, and off of Lot 3,. their car port, driveway, fence, and certain so-called “water lines” within 30 days from that date, and threatening them with suit if they did not do so. When the Bells did *495 not comply with these demands, defendants procured some boys to start moving the fence.

Thereupon, the Bells instituted the present action, as plaintiffs. In their petition, they alleged, in substance, that the subject fence had been constructed more than 15 years; and that, when they purchased their property from defendants, the latter represented that it was the boundary between the two properties. They prayed, among other things, for a restraining order against defendants’ removal of the fence, and (from evidence subsequently adduced at the trial) it appears that the fence removal operation ceased near the rear end of plaintiffs’ car port, when a temporary restraining order was served on defendants, for that purpose.

Plaintiffs’ petition also prayed for damages in the sum of $5,000.01) against defendants, and that defendants be permanently enjoined from interfering with plaintiffs’ property rights.

In their answer, defendants alleged, in substance, among other things, that they advised plaintiffs before they purchased their residential property that the fence did not represent said property’s boundary line, and that the true line was located wholly upon defendants’ Lot 3. They denied that they had interfered with any property rights of plaintiffs. In a cross petition accompanying their answer, defendants alleged that the posts supporting the west side of plaintiffs’ car port roof were entirely on their lot, and that the erection and maintenance of. same constituted a trespass thereon. They made substantially the same allegations concerning the hereinbefore mentioned concrete driveway curbing.

They also alleged that plaintiffs maintained certain gutters and water sewers on their buildings and car port that were so located as to cause a great amount of water to flow onto, and across, a portion of Lot 3. They further alleged that, at the time plaintiffs purchased the adjoining property, there were certain water lines benefiting the residence thereon, that extended across a portion of Lot 3, and that, when plaintiffs purchased said'property, they had promised to move the lines over on it, but plaintiffs had refused to keep this -promise, and said refusal resulted in a trespass on defendants’ property.

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Bluebook (online)
1964 OK 57, 390 P.2d 492, 1964 Okla. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hammer-v-bell-okla-1964.