Johnston v. McFerren

3 N.W.2d 136, 232 Iowa 305
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 7, 1942
DocketNo. 45899.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 N.W.2d 136 (Johnston v. McFerren) 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
Johnston v. McFerren, 3 N.W.2d 136, 232 Iowa 305 (iowa 1942).

Opinion

Garfield, J.

On February 27, 1920, appellant Johnston became the owner of Lot 12, Block 105, Dubuque & Pacific Railroad Addition to Webster City, together with the south half of the vacated alley running east and west adjacent to the north end of said lot. North of Lot 12 is Lot 11. The official plat shows Lots 11 and 12 each 92 feet north and south by 66 feet east and west. Between the two lots is'the vacated alley above referred to, which is 16y% feet wide. On February 26, 1940, appellees Mc-Ferren, who are husband and wife, contracted to purchase from the then owners, named France, the south 42 feet of Lot 11, together with the north half of the vacated alley adjoining said Lot 11 on the south. While the deed from the Frances to the McFerrens, dated March 20, 1940, recites that it covers the north half of the vacated alley, it refers to it as 8 feet wide, rather than 8% feet, half the true width of the alley. The McFerrens bought this parcel for $600 for the purpose of erecting a home thereon. The home was built during the spring and summer of 1940 at a cost of $5,600. The boundary line in dispute is between appellant Johnston on the south and appellees McFerren on the north.

*307 Lot 12, the Johnston property, was purchased in 1881 from the then owner by Mary J. Simons. On September 12, 1901, Mrs. Simons acquired from the city a deed to the south half of the vacated alley adjacent to Lot 12. Mrs. Simons sold Lot 12 and the south half of the vacated alley to one Buell in 1917, who in turn sold to appellant in 1920. It is appellant’s claim, and testimony of Mrs. Daniels, a daughter of Mrs. Simons, tends to show, that soon after receiving the deed from the city to half the vacated alley, Mrs. Simons caused her newly acquired north line to be surveyed by one Fox, and built a wooden fence on the line so surveyed. It is the line of this fence which appellant seeks to have established, on the theories of acquiescence and adverse possession. The petition alleges that the McFerrens attempted to deprive appellant of a strip 3]4 feet wide south of the fence line.

In 1896 or 1897, before this fence was built and before Mrs. Simons acquired half the alley, a shed for fuel had been built by Mrs. Simons. The shed is about 12 feet east and west and about 6 feet north and south. The west end of the shed is about 12 feet east of the west line of Lot 12. The fence was built a few feet — the exact distance being in dispute — north of the shed. The fence was pretty well dilapidated when appellant purchased Lot 12 in 1920, and had largely disappeared not later than 1925. Appellant claims, however, that the stumps of some of the posts were still in place when appellees excavated for their new home.

About March 23, 1940, soon after appellees purchased their parcel of ground, they caused a survey to be made by Surveyor Little, who found that the true boundary line was approximately 2 feet south of the north side of the shed. This is the line for which appellees contend and which the trial court established in its decree. Appellees claim that appellant acquiesced in the Little survey and orally agreed to move the shed to the south so that it would not encroach upon appellees. They also claim that their house was laid out and constructed in reliance upon appellant’s acquiescence in the Little survey and his agreement to move the shed. The McFerren house faces east, as does the Johnston house. The McFerren garage is attached to the north end of the house. There are approximately 2 feet between the *308 north side of the garage and the north line of the McFerren parcel of ground, and about 4 feet between the south side of appellees ’ new house and the line of the Little survey. It is thus apparent that the house and garage occupy substantially the full width of the McFerren parcel of ground. The space between the north side of appellant’s home and the Little line is about 17 feet, although there is a rear porch on the northwest corner of the house, the north side of which is but about 11 feet south of the Little line.

Appellant, according to appellees, had agreed that the shed would be moved on or before Decoration Day, 1940, so that it would stand south of the Little line. Appellant did not move the shed, however, and at least eventually refused to abide bj^ the Little survey. On the night of August 4, 1940, appellees organized what appellant, with some justification, refers to as a mob, which, by working practically all night, forcibly moved the shed to the south about 2 feet. They then planted steel bars set in concrete behind the shed so that it could not be moved again to the north. Appellees testified that their attorneys advised them to take the law into their own hands and move the shed in this manner. The advice should not have been given. There is enough lawlessness without attorneys giving their clients such advice.

As heretofore stated, Lots 11 and 12 were' each 92 feet long, according to the official plat. Surveyor Little testified, however, that the actual length of the two lots, by measurement, plus the width of the alley (which is 16% feet), was 203 feet. The measured distance, therefore, exceeds the distance shown on the plat by 2% feet. Measurements taken by Surveyor Currie were substantially the same as those taken by Little. The Little survey divides this “overrun” of 2% feet equally between Lots 11 and 12, leaving each lot 93% feet long, rather than 92 feet. This, together with the 8% feet, the width of the south half of the alley, leaves áppellant’s ground 101% feet long. Both Currie and Little testified that this method of dividing the overrun between the two lots accords with the usual practice of surveyors. This court has, in effect, so recognized such practice as far back as 1855. Moreland v. Page, 2 (Clarke) Iowa 139, 153.

The Little survey closely corresponds to a survey made in *309 1916 by Currie, when he located the center of the vacated alley north of the northwest corner of Lot 12 and there placed an iron stake. Currie first testified that the stake was placed at the northwest corner of the lot but later said the marker was placed in the center of the alley. Currie also testified that his survey corresponds to that made by Fox, whom the former owner, Mrs. Simons, employed about 1901. There is little doubt that the boundary established by the trial court is substantially the true line according to survey.

Appellant relies upon the rule, repeatedly followed in this state, that a line marking the boundary between adjoining' owners, which is recognized and acquiesced in as such for a period of at least 10 years, becomes the true boundary, notwithstanding it is not the line fixed by survey. Sieck v. Anderson, 231 Iowa 490, 497, 1 N. W. 2d 647, 650, and cases cited; Thompson v. Schappert, 229 Iowa 360, 294 N. W. 580, and cases cited; Miller v. Mills County, 111 Iowa. 654, 82 N. W. 1038. For the distinction between acquiescence and adverse possession, see Patrick v. Cheney, 226 Iowa 853, 285 N. W. 184.

There is much to support the conclusion that at the time appellant purchased his property in 1920, the fence in question had become by acquiescence the boundary between it and the France property, the south part of which was purchased by appellees in 1940. However, the fence practically disappeared about 15 years before appellees bought their ground and there was little, if any, evidence of its existence in 1940.

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3 N.W.2d 136, 232 Iowa 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-mcferren-iowa-1942.