Hartwig v. Berggren

140 N.W.2d 22, 179 Neb. 718, 1966 Neb. LEXIS 706
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1966
Docket36085
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 140 N.W.2d 22 (Hartwig v. Berggren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hartwig v. Berggren, 140 N.W.2d 22, 179 Neb. 718, 1966 Neb. LEXIS 706 (Neb. 1966).

Opinion

Carter, J.

This is an action by Conrad Hartwig against the defendants Robert E. Berggren and H. Jerry Berggren, and their respective spouses, and the Island Cattle Company, a copartnership, to- enjoin the use of certain lands claimed by the plaintiff, and to quiet title to the lands in the plaintiff. Oden Wrenn, W. A. McCain and wife, and Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States were impleaded as defendants, claiming or having some interest in the lands in question. James A. McCain and wife and A. C. Wrenn intervened, also claiming an interest in the ownership1 of some of the disputed lands. The trial court found against the plaintiff and for the defendants and interveners, and quieted title to the lands in the defendants and interveners. The plaintiff has appealed.

The plaintiff is the owner of riparian lands on the south side of the North Platte River in Sections 6 and 7, Town.ship 22 North, Range 55 West of the 6th P. M. in Scotts Bluff County, Nebraska, which he acquired by warranty deed from M. B. Quivey in 1953. Patents to- plaintiff’s lands were issued to his predecessors in title before the islands in the river, the titles to which are the subject matter of this dispute, were in existence. The evidence shows that, before the construction of irrigation dams and reservoirs and modern bridges, the river was approximately one-half mile wide, carrying a full stream between its banks. Reservoir and bridge construction, *720 commenced in 1909, reduced the flow of the river and the islands appeared for the first time.

This litigation involves three of these islands, two of which lie in Section 7, and one of which extends from Sections 6 and 7 into Sections 5 and 8 downstream to the east. The plaintiff makes no claim to any land east of the east boundary of Sections 6 and 7. The three islands involved are referred to> in the record as Goat Island, Beaver Island, and Island No'. 6. The claimed lands of the parties are described in the judgment of the district court by metes and bounds, descriptions which we shall not repeat here. For convenience we shall refer to them as Goat Island, Beaver Island, and Island No. 6.

Defendant Oden Wrenn is the owner of Island No. 3, which lies mostly in Section 8 but extends over into Section 7. Plaintiff1 has produced no evidence of title in himself as against Wrenn. Intervener A. C. Wrenn owns lands on Island No. 3, subject to a life estate in his father, Oden Wrenn. The trial court correctly found that plaintiff had no interest in the Wrenn lands and quieted title in the Wrenns as against the plaintiff.

The defendants H. Jerry Berggren and Doris L. Berggren, husband and wife, both as individuals and as the sole partners, in the Island Cattle Company, assert ownership in the Berggrens of Island No. 4, which lies mostly in Section 8, but extends into Section 7. Plaintiff produced no evidence of ownership’ in any part of Island No. 4 and the trial court correctly quieted the title in the Berggrens to their lands on Island No. 4 as against plaintiff.

The contentions of plaintiff as against the McCains are identical and will be treated as such. The original government survey of the area, made in 1877, shows the north meander line of the river to' be a considerable distance north of the present bank of the river. The south meander line is some distance south of the south bank in the western half of Section 7 and is close to the *721 present bank in the eastern half, in fact a channel of the river is south of the original south meander line in the northeast quarter of Section 7. The mean line of the river as established in 1877 is north of the western end of Goat Island. This island and its accretions are claimed by the McCains. Plaintiff contends that he is the owner of lands south of the 1877 mean line of the river by virtue of his ownership of the south bank of the river. Goat Island was not patented until February 8, 1938, as a result of a government survey made in 1933. It is contended that plaintiff’s rights as a riparian owner extended to the thread of the stream which he asserts is presumed to be the mean line fixed by the original government survey in 1877. But we do not think these contentions are valid in this case because of proof of adverse possession of the lands in question for more than 10 years.

Goat Island was not in existence when the government survey was made in 1877. In fact the river was nearly a half mile wide at that time and devoid of any islands in the area. Goat Island was surveyed in 1933, and in 1938 a patent was issued to Arthur Savard. In August 1939, M. B. Quivey, plaintiff’s immediate predecessor in title, conveyed that part of Goat Island lying south of the thread of the stream to Blanche Scoggan, McCain’s grantor. In March 1940, the district court for Scotts Bluff County in a case entitled Blanche Deutsch Scoggan v. Arthur Savard, quieted title to the lands here involved in Blanche Scoggan as against Savard. No* appeal was taken from this judgment. Pursuant to the title thus acquired, McCains took possession of said lands. They fenced in their lands, including Goat Island and its accretions, and used said lands actually, openly, exclusively, and continuously under claim of ownership for more than 20 years. Walker v. Bell, 154 Neb. 221, 47 N. W. 2d 504; Worm v. Crowell, 165 Neb. 713, 87 N. W. 2d 384. The decision on this phase of the case is controlled by Burket v. Krimlofski, 167 Neb. 45, 91 N. W. 2d 57, wherein it is said: “The established rule is: Title *722 by prescription may be acquired to an island in a stream, which otherwise would belong to a riparian owner. Accretions to an island so held and occupied for more than the statutory period belong to the owner of the island, and not to the riparian owner to whom the island or a part of it would otherwise belong.”

While there is some evidence that some of the lands were trapped for beaver and muskrat by lease or permission of M. B. Quivey, plaintiff’s immediate predecessor in title to' his riparian lands, it appears to have been done without the knowledge or consent of the McCains. Plaintiff never made a claim to the lands prior to 1960. The evidence preponderates in favor of the McCains on the issue of adverse possession, irrespective of all other considerations. The trial court properly quieted title in Goat Island and its accretions in the McCains.

Plaintiff also* contends that he is the owner of Island No. 6. The island is also claimed by Robert E. Berggren and Sandra H. Berggren, husband and wife, H. Jerry Berggren and Doris L. Berggren, husband and wife, and the Island Cattle Company, or some of them, whom we shall refer to as the Berggrens. The Berggrens acquired title to Island No. 6 in September 1946 fromM. B. Quivey, the deed reciting 16.47 acres, more or less, according to government survey. The island was surveyed in 1960 by the county surveyor of Scotts Bluff County, its acreage then was shown as 35.14 acres, indicating the extent of accretions to the island. The accretions belonged to the owner of Island No. 6 under the authority of Burket v. Krimlofski, heretofore cited. The evidence shows that Berggrens took possession of the island in 1946 under the deed of conveyance to them. The island was fenced at that time. In 1947 and 1948 the fence was removed and a new fence placed around the extremities of the island.

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Bluebook (online)
140 N.W.2d 22, 179 Neb. 718, 1966 Neb. LEXIS 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartwig-v-berggren-neb-1966.