Harrington v. Foster

264 N.W. 51, 220 Iowa 1066
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 17, 1935
DocketNo. 43095.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 264 N.W. 51 (Harrington v. Foster) 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
Harrington v. Foster, 264 N.W. 51, 220 Iowa 1066 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

The sole question here is: Which of the parties hereto is the owner of certain accretion lands? The record is such as to render extremely difficult and hazardous any attempt to arrive at definite and certain conclusions regarding many of the facts in the case. The plaintiff filed a petition and two amendments. She describes the land which she claims differently in each document. The land awarded her in the decree does not correspond in terms with any of the descriptions in the petition or amendments. Difficulty arises from several sources. One is that descriptions contained in the documents upon which the issue, to some extent, depends, are not very complete or comprehensive. There are references to monuments, the locations of which do not appear. Moreover, a large part of the tes *1068 timony in the case has reference to a plat, and the answers of the witnesses frequently consisted of indicating on the plat various locations called for by the questions. Under such circumstances, a court that is unable to see where the witness is pointing on the plat is unable to get much benefit from the answers. Effort seems to have been made to obviate that difficulty to some extent by having marks made on the plat by the witness. The plat, however, is not before us. It appears to have been lost. No effort was made to replace this missing and important part of the record. Under such circumstances, extreme caution must be exercised in reaching a different conclusion on some of the facts than the conclusion reached by the trial court. Where the complete record on which the trial court reached its conclusion on a proposition is not before us, and where the contrary does not appear, the presumption must be indulged that the trial court properly performed its duty and reached a proper conclusion. Garner v. Pomroy, 11 Iowa 149; State v. Orwig, 27 Iowa 528.

The controversy is over lands in a 40-acre tract described as the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 24, township 74, range 44, west of the 5th P. M., Pottawattamie county, Iowa, and the accretions appurtenant thereto. This description would indicate that there had been originally a government survey of this property. The property appears to have been included also in what the appellants call a “wild cat plat” of Lafayette addition to the city of Council Bluffs. This plat does not appear in evidence. We know nothing as to its date or what it shows as to the location of the river. The property also seems to have been embraced within an auditor’s plat made about 1918. It shows the river 1,122 feet from the northern boundary of the 40-aere tract. Neither party claims through any government grant. The rights of each party, originally at least, seem to have been acquired by possession only.

The record is silent as to the history, ownership, and possession of this property prior to about 1881. It appears that about that date this entire 40-acre tract of land had been washed away by the Missouri river, except possibly about 5 acres along the northern boundary. On a part of this 5-acre tract, a man by the name of Batchelor settled. Later appellant Foster seems to have settled on this same tract east of Batchelor. In July, 1919, Batchelor brought an action to quiet title against Foster *1069 based, on adverse possession to a part of the 40-acre tract containing about 8 acres and described as follows:

Commencing at a point 411 feet west of the northeast corner of the above-described forty; thence south 1,131 feet; thence west 505 feet to the bank of Mosquito creek; thence northeasterly along the east bank of Mosquito creek to the north line of the 40-acre tract; thence east 80 feet to the place of beginning.

What claim Foster had at that time to any part of the 40-aere tract does not appear. No part of the record in that case is before us. The abstract of record in the instant case contains the statement that the decree in that case quieted the title in Batchelor to the property as above described. The circumstances seem to indicate that Foster was occupying and had at that time, by reason of such occupancy, a superior claim to the east 411 feet of the 40-acre tract, the part lying east of the Batchelor land. The appellee in the present case is the grantee of Batchelor. There is some dispute in the evidence as to whether, when the Batchelor case was decided the Missouri river constituted the south boundary of the tract. It appears that the river is now some half mile further south than the southern limit of the description in the Batchelor decree, and it is this additional land that is in controversy. The court in the trial of the instant case found that at the time the Batchelor decree was entered, the south boundary of the land was the Missouri river, that the land had a riparian boundary, and that all accretions resulting from the river working further south belonged to the appellee as the successor to the Batchelor title. The court found that the appellants owned the east 411 feet of the 40-acre tract and that all accretions south of and within the limits of the extended lines on the east and west boundaries of that tract belonged to the appellants; that the remaining accretions south of the 40 belonged to the appellee. The trial court further found that the appellee had been in adverse possession of the accretions for more than the statutory period of ten years. The grounds on which this decree is challenged will be separately noticed.

I. Appellants claim that the southern boundary of the tract in which title was quieted in Batchelor was not a riparian boundary at the time the decree in the Batchelor case was entered and, therefore, there could be no accretions to said tract. The evidence satisfactorily and without dispute shows that prior to the time Batchelor instituted his action, he had a survey made *1070 and that the survey extended from the north boundary of the 40-acre tract to the river and then west along the river to Mosquito creek, a distance of 505 feet. Batchelor commenced his action in July, 1919. The case was not tried, however, and the decree was not entered until February, 1921. There is evidence from which it may properly be inferred that during that interval the river worked some distance further south. From this appellants argue that it was not riparian land at the time the decree was entered establishing the Batchelor title and, therefore, there could be no accretions.

It appears that the Batchelor title was based on adverse possession; that all of the land, title to which was quieted in him, was accretion land except a few acres at the north where his buildings stood and on which he settled in 1881, when the river occupied all the rest of the forty. If Batchelor was entitled to the accretions appurtenant to the tract on which he settled, it is unreasonable to suppose that the court intended to stop part way to the river. If he was entitled to accretions at all, he certainly was entitled to them extending clear up to the river, and we think it quite clearly and satisfactorily appears that the decree intended to accomplish that purpose. The fact that some accretions may have been, and probably were, added between the time the survey was made on which the petition was based and the time the decree was entered, would not defeat that purpose, and would not deprive the land of its riparian boundary.

II.

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Bluebook (online)
264 N.W. 51, 220 Iowa 1066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-foster-iowa-1935.