Lawrence M. Gary and Margaret W. Gary v. Ernest B. Dane, III

411 F.2d 711, 133 U.S. App. D.C. 397, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 8959
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 12, 1969
Docket21721_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 411 F.2d 711 (Lawrence M. Gary and Margaret W. Gary v. Ernest B. Dane, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence M. Gary and Margaret W. Gary v. Ernest B. Dane, III, 411 F.2d 711, 133 U.S. App. D.C. 397, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 8959 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinion

LEVENTHAL, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a dispute over a strip of land two and one-half feet wide immediately south of appellants’ home. Record title is in appellants’ name, but the District Court held appellee obtained ownership through adverse possession. Our judgment is essentially one of af-firmance, though we remand for provision of a paragraph in the decree to provide appellants certain protection.

The houses now owned by appellants and appellee, on the east side of 29th Street, N.W., in the Georgetown area of Washington, have been separated, since at least 1938, by a brick walkway that is five feet wide, and runs eastward back from the street some 90 feet. The strip in dispute is the northern half of this walk, the part immediately adjacent to appellants’ home. A ten inch drain is depressed in the northern portion of the walkway and parallels appellants’ south wall, draining their backyard into* the street sewer. In the rear (east) of appellants’ house, extending the line of their south wall, is a wooden fence running east to a brick fence at the rear of the two lots. The disputed strip consists of the two and one-half feet between the record title line, which runs down the middle of the brick walk, and the east-west line of appellants’ south wall and wood fence.

Shortly after appellants acquired their premises in February, 1964, they cut a gate in the wood fence so that they could use the walkway south of their house. 1 Two years later, in May, 1966, while placing a new surface on the southern face of the wood fence, appellee 2 nailed *713 shut this opening in the fence. Appellants sued in the District Court for damages and for an injunction restraining appellee’s use of the strip. The District Court granted judgment to appellee on his counterclaim, holding appellee’s title to the strip established by adverse possession, 3 but inserting a condition requiring appellee to reimburse appellants $139.20 for back taxes.

Our scope of review is to determine whether the trial court's decision was clearly erroneous, in regard to the inferences reflected in its fact findings, 4 or rested on unsound doctrine so far as legal rulings are concerned. We find no such error and accordingly affirm.

Under the District Code, a person obtains valid title to land by adverse possession which is actual, exclusive, continuous, open and notorious for 15 years. 5 Wliile casual acts are not enough to establish ownership by adverse possession, 6 there is a presumption, effective to establish title in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that the possession is adverse whenever there is “open and continuous use of another’s land.” 7

There is plainly support in this record for the District Court finding of adverse possession. From at least 1938, the disputed strip was bordered by appellants’ house wall and wooden fence, and was so situated as to appear to all as a part of appellee’s walkway and backyard. From 1936 until the 1961 sale, appellee’s predecessor in possession, two life tenants (supra note 2), used the walkway daily and had an entrance to their house in this walk until appellee removed it in 1961. They stored garbage containers and firewood in the walkway. On several occasions they maintained the drain adjoining the house now occupied by appellants, by having it cleared. They repaired and painted the wooden fence that appellants now claim is wholly within their property. One of these life tenants, Mrs. Purcell, planted rose bushes next to the fence, and thus on the disputed strip. According to undisputed testimony, she worked in the garden cultivating the roses nearly every day in season; she talked about them as her flowers; and on occasion she invited others into the garden to see them. These facts reveal more than random or haphazard incidents. They reflect intentional use by Mrs. Purcell and her sister of the disputed property as their own, without any evidence of permission sought or accommodation given.

The claim of adverse possession is further substantiated by the testimony of the record owner’s predecessor in possession. Mrs. Wilson, who rented appellants’ house from 1944 to 1964, stated that she never used the walkway and did not feel she had any right to do so. She assumed without question that the south wall of her house was the boundary. On one occasion she even had a tree in her backyard cut up and hauled through her basement, a burden not likely or lightly assumed if she thought she had a right to use the walkway. Mrs. Wilson also stated that she did not believe that the drain south of her house was her drain, *714 but rather was that of Mrs. Purcell, who cleared it when it became blocked.

The record also discloses, from uncon-tradicted testimony of appellee, that all other properties along that block are similarly about two and one-half feet off the survey lines, and that if record boundaries are followed, appellee would own two and one-half feet of the living room of his neighbor’s house which adjoins his on the south.

The rebuttal evidence by the record owner was not sufficient for us to say the trial court erred. First, appellants asserted that the footing of their house extends underground into the disputed area between the house. This would hardly seem to rebut open usage by ap-pellee and predecessors of what was visible above ground. Moreover, since appellants had sealed the bricks along the walk to prevent seepage into their basement, they were never able to dig down to see if the abutment actually encroached into the disputed area.

Appellants also claim that the drainage from their lot over a period proved that the use by the appellee of the walkway area was not “exclusive.” Appellants produced no evidence to show that their predecessors built the ten inch drain, or shared in its building; and the effect of the drain is to benefit appellee (and his predecessors) by keeping the natural drainage, from the higher lot of appellants, channeled and away from the rest of the five-foot walk.

Appellants stress that the Riggs Bank, the trustee for the two life tenants from whom appellee bought his lot, in no way claimed ownership of the strip and indeed did not even know it existed. However, our jurisdiction recognizes the doctrine that a claim of adverse possession may be rooted in ignorance or mistake. 8

Finally, appellants bring up the point that for the entire period, they and their predecessors in title have paid taxes upon the property. But the tax assessor routinely follows the record title. Payment of taxes is, of course, strong evidence of a claim of title when paid by someone other than the record owner. See Holtzman v. Douglas, 5 App. D. C., 397, 410-411 (1895), aff’d 168 U.S. 278, 18 S.Ct. 65, 42 L.Ed. 466 (1897). 9

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Bluebook (online)
411 F.2d 711, 133 U.S. App. D.C. 397, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 8959, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-m-gary-and-margaret-w-gary-v-ernest-b-dane-iii-cadc-1969.