Houska v. Frederick

447 S.W.2d 514, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 670
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedDecember 8, 1969
Docket54167
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 447 S.W.2d 514 (Houska v. Frederick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houska v. Frederick, 447 S.W.2d 514, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 670 (Mo. 1969).

Opinion

LAURANCE M. HYDE, Special Commissioner.

Action to reform deeds to change the described boundary line between plaintiffs’ land and land of defendants Sinak, alleged to have been incorrectly described due to mutual mistake of plaintiffs and defendants Frederick who originally owned all of the land. The court found against plaintiffs’ claim, as to the boundary line between their land and the land of the Sinaks, but found a correction should be made in the description of the western boundary described in the deed to them from the Fred-ericks. All parties agree to this change in the western boundary line and it is not involved in this appeal. The court also entered judgment for $3,500.00 for the Sinaks on their counterclaim against plaintiffs for damages caused by filing lis pendens. We have jurisdiction because title to real estate is involved. Art. V, § 3, Const., V.A.M.S. Plaintiffs have appealed from the judgment against them.

Plaintiffs bought land from the Fredericks in 1956. The land owned by Fredericks was in a tract designated as Lot 6 of Boli tract. The sale contract dated September 5th was signed by Mrs. Houska using her maiden name Warren so their identity would not be disclosed. This contract described the land in general terms as fronting approximately 400 feet on Mentz Hill Road stating “accurate survey to govern this contract” ; and further stated: “cost of survey to be divided between purchaser and seller.” A survey was made by L. M. Shaw for them, dated September 14, 1956, after the parties had agreed to a longer frontage on Mentz Hill Road to include the junction of the driveway to the buildings on the land with Mentz Hill Road. The Shaw survey showed the south boundary line of the land as running from this agreed southwest corner diagonally to a “chiseled cross on ledge” and then continuing this same straight line northeast to the east boundary of the tract. This made the eastern side of the tract only 279.25 feet wide. Plaintiffs wanted more land there and a supplemental agreement, dated November 1, 1956, was made in the form of a letter to the realtors handling the transaction, signed as Dorothy A. Warren by Mrs. Houska, stating among other matters: “It is further agreed that survey made by L. M. Shaw dated September 14th, 1956 is acceptable with the exception that the South line running East from the chiseled cross on the ledge is to be parallel to the North line of said property and that the East line of said tract shall be 400 feet instead of 279.25 feet.” A second Shaw survey plat was drawn to show this longer eastern boundary, and the total acreage was shown to be 13.5 acres. The warranty deed from the Fredericks to plaintiffs used the Shaw survey description as to courses *516 and distances as did trust deeds made by plaintiffs in 1957 and 1958 for financing a house they built on the land. The description in these trust deeds concluded with the statement “according to a survey made by L. M. Shaw on September 14, 1956.” However, none of them mentioned “the chiseled cross on ledge,” but in each case the courses and distances of the Shaw survey were used to go “to a point” and then to the next point.

The controversy in this case is due to the fact that the designated monument on the south line “the chiseled cross on ledge” is only 384.34 feet from the north line so it is not possible for the south line of the tract to be parallel to the north line thereof from “the chiseled cross on ledge” to the southeast corner of the tract which is 400 feet south of the northeast corner. A parallel line going west from the southeast corner of the tract, marked by an iron pin, would miss the “cross on ledge” by 15.64 feet. This disputed area is in or along the bed of a creek.

No controversy arose until the Frede-ricks conveyed to the Sinaks the land (22.45 acres) south of plaintiffs’ land November 16, 1962. This deed described the north line (the south line of plaintiffs’ tract) of the land conveyed as going east by courses and distances “to a cross on the rock ledge as marked by L. M. Shaw Surveyor; thence continuing along the Southwestern line of the property of Hou-ska, South 45 degrees 57 minutes east 605.04 feet.” This distance was shown on the Shaw survey plat as 605' ±. The Sinaks held title for Mrs. Sinak’s mother, Mrs. Anne Chura, who was a real estate broker. After the conveyance to them, Mrs. Chura took over the operation and development of the property, had it subdivided by a surveyor and had a plat of the subdivision, called Mentz Hill Acres, recorded on June 22, 1964, before this action was commenced. Mrs. Chura later sold three lots along the disputed boundary line after plaintiffs filed lis pendens, conveying by quitclaim deeds, and claimed damages of $7,500.00 for having to sell them at less than actual value.

Plaintiffs claim an agreement with Frederick, when their frontage on Mentz Hill Road was increased, that they were to get the entire bed of the creek which ran south of the ledge where the cross was chiseled. This would have included two springs and Houska said he told Frederick he wanted them for water for horses he would raise and would want to build a fence on the south side of the creek. Frederick testified the line of the Shaw survey would be along the middle of the creek and would give plaintiffs one spring on the north side and that he intended to keep the one on the other side. Plaintiffs did not build a fence along the creek until after the conveyance of the adjoining land to the Sinaks six years later. Houska said he had never seen the cross on the ledge until Mrs. Chura pointed it out after the conveyance to Sinaks in 1962. However, Mrs. Houska, in whose maiden name the sale contract was made and who signed the November 1, 1956 modification agreement, testified as follows:

“You knew where that chiseled cross on the ledge was on your survey, did you not, when you signed it?
“A We knew there was a marker here.
“Q You knew there was a chiseled cross on the survey when you signed the modification?
“A Well, yes.”

After the controversy with the Sinaks arose plaintiffs and Mrs. Chura each had new surveys made. The Lyman survey was made for plaintiffs on the basis of a south line parallel to the north line to the point 15.64 feet south of the chiseled cross and this would have given plaintiffs an additional triangular strip in each direction from that point. Another survey by the Elbring Surveying Company was made for Mrs. Chura and was used for preparing the deed from Frederick to the Sinaks.

*517 The court made findings of fact on the disputed issues between plaintiffs and Frederick, as follows:

“5. That the surveyor L. M. Shaw, in surveying the line which was to divide the property of plaintiffs, William Houska and Dorothy A. Houska, his wife, from the property retained by the defendants, John M. Frederick and Mabel M. Frederick, his wife, erected monuments and markers in the field commencing at an iron pin in the Eastern line of Mentz Hill Road then following the natural contour of a ditch existing on said property and erected a chiseled cross on the rock ledge as shown in the survey prepared by him and dated September 13 and 14, 1956. An iron pin was placed in the Southeast line of Lot 6 of the Boli Tract, four hundred feet distant from an old stone at the Eastern corner of Lot 6 of the Boli Tract. The cost of the survey executed by L. M.

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Bluebook (online)
447 S.W.2d 514, 1969 Mo. LEXIS 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houska-v-frederick-mo-1969.