James B. House Living Trust Ex Rel. House v. Thompson

217 P.3d 228, 230 Or. App. 595, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 9, 2009
Docket052200; A135110
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 217 P.3d 228 (James B. House Living Trust Ex Rel. House v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James B. House Living Trust Ex Rel. House v. Thompson, 217 P.3d 228, 230 Or. App. 595, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1357 (Or. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

*597 LANDAU, P. J.

This is a dispute over the ownership of a parcel of timber property located in Columbia County. Plaintiffs contend that they acquired the property by deed. Defendants contest plaintiffs’ reading of their deed and contend that it was defendants who actually acquired the property by deed from a common grantor. In the alternative, defendants contend that they acquired the property, if not by deed, then by adverse possession based on their logging of the property in 1967 and 1968. The trial court held that, although plaintiffs acquired deeded title to the property, defendants acquired the property by adverse possession by virtue of their logging activity.

Plaintiffs appeal, arguing that the trial court erred in determining that defendants’ single season of logging suffices to establish that they acquired the property by adverse possession. Defendants cross-assign error to the trial court’s determination that they had not acquired the property by deed. We agree with defendants on their cross-assignment that the trial court erred in construing plaintiffs’ deed to include the disputed parcel, and, because we further conclude that defendants’ deed encompasses the disputed parcel, we affirm the trial court’s judgment on that ground and do not reach the issue of adverse possession.

The relevant facts are not in dispute. Unfortunately, that does not mean that they are easy to follow. The issues in this case turn on deeds that contain some anomalous wording. So we are required to proceed carefully through a somewhat technical description of the property involved.

We begin with a description of the property. Tax Lot 100 is a 21.25 acre tract of timberland in the northeast corner of Section 15, Township 7 North, Range 4 West, Willamette Meridian, in Columbia County. The parcel is shaped as a somewhat irregular, upside-down right triangle. The right angle of the triangle forms the northeast corner of Section 15. A utility easement of approximately 122 feet in width runs along the north leg of the triangle (the northern boundary of Tax Lot 100 and Section 15), from the northeast corner of Section 15 and Tax Lot 100. The second leg of the triangle is *598 the east boundary of Tax Lot 100 and Section 15. The southern boundary of Tax Lot 100 (the hypotenuse of the triangle) is a county road known as the “E. J. Lindberg County Road P-56” (Lindberg Road).

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Lindberg Road has been in existence since before 1940, but is of unknown origin. As it turns out, a 1913 survey shows a survey line for a road also described as “E. J. Lindberg Road P-56” at a different location from the actual Lindberg Road, running northwest from the southeastern corner of Tax Lot 100 up to and through the Highway 30 right-of-way. But such a road was never built. The dispute in this case turns on the fact that deeds to the property at issue refer to Lindberg Road as a boundary; the question is whether the deeds refer to the Lindberg Road that actually exists or the road that is referred to in the 1913 survey but was never built. Plaintiffs, who own property to the south of the disputed parcel, contend that they were deeded the land up to the 1913 survey line; defendants, on the other hand, who own property to the north of the disputed parcel, contend that they were deeded the land down to the Lindberg Road that has existed since at least the 1940s.

With that in mind, we turn to the deeds themselves. At one point, all of the land in the area, including all of what is known as Tax Lot 100, was held by Michael and Mathilda Doran. In 1940, the Dorans conveyed a utility easement to the United States government along the northern 122 feet of *599 Tax Lot 100. The easement was expressly made “subject to the rights of the public in and to Lindberg County Road, County Road No. P-56.”

In 1944, the Dorans deeded part of their property to plaintiff James House’s parents, J. B. and Lucy House (who, in 1982, deeded the property to plaintiff James House). The deed from the Dorans describes the property as “[a]ll that portion of the Northwest quarter of Section 15 * * * lying South and West of Lindberg County Road No. P-56.” The deed excepted from that description a rock quarry owned by the county. The problem is that the rock quarry was located to the north of Lindberg Road. Property to the north of Lindberg Road was not the property being transferred, at least if the reference in the deed to “Lindberg County Road No. P-56” is taken to refer to the only Lindberg Road that existed at that time.

In 1947, the Dorans conveyed to their son John Doran “[a]ll that portion of the Northeast Quarter of Section Fifteen * * * lying North of the County Road known as E. J. Lindberg Road.” In 1958, John and Jennie Doran conveyed to Erling and Agnes Ericksen that portion of Section 15 “lying Northerly of the County road known as E. J. Lindberg Road as it existed in March, 1944[.]” The deed to the Ericksens also included an exception for the rock quarry. That same description was carried forward to the deeds of defendants’ two immediate predecessors, and defendants acquired their interest in August 1967.

So, to summarize, we have, on the one hand, a 1944 deed to plaintiffs’ predecessors for land south of “Lindberg County Road No. P-56,” and, on the other hand, a 1947 deed to defendants’ predecessors for land north of “the County road known as E. J. Lindberg Road.” Obviously, we need to determine what the deeds mean when they refer to Lindberg Road.

Plaintiffs contend that the reference in the 1944 deed from which they claim title to “Lindberg County Road No. P-56” must mean not the actual Lindberg Road, but the road that was planned back in 1913 but never actually built, as shown on the 1913 survey. They acknowledge that no such *600 road actually existed at the time of the 1944 deed. But, they insist, that is the only way to make sense of the deed’s exception of the county’s rock quarry. To read the deed to refer only to the actual Lindberg Road means that the deed was mistaken in excepting the rock quarry.

Defendants contend that the references in all of the deeds to Lindberg Road reasonably can be taken to refer only to the county road that actually existed at the time. The fact is, defendants note, there was no other Lindberg Road at the time of the deeds in question. What plaintiffs describe as the real “Lindberg Road” for the purposes of their deed, defendants insist, actually was nothing more than a proposed road on a survey from 31 years earlier, a road that was never built and never certified as an actual county road. As for the rock quarry, defendants contend that the deed’s exception of that site is simply mistaken, one of several mistakes in the deed, defendants note. (Defendants note that, among other things, the 1944 deed also mistakenly described part of the property as being in the wrong Range, necessitating the later issuance of a correction deed.) Any other reading of the deeds, defendants contend, requires the words “Lindberg County Road No. P-56” to mean something that simply is not true, namely, that the words refer to a county road that never existed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
217 P.3d 228, 230 Or. App. 595, 2009 Ore. App. LEXIS 1357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-b-house-living-trust-ex-rel-house-v-thompson-orctapp-2009.