Leggett v. Olson

210 P.2d 648, 66 Nev. 339, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 71
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1949
Docket3556
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 210 P.2d 648 (Leggett v. Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leggett v. Olson, 210 P.2d 648, 66 Nev. 339, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 71 (Neb. 1949).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Guild, District Judge:

Sidney Leggett and Freda Leggett brought an action in the Second judicial district court of the State of Nevada, in and for the county of Washoe against Gustav Olson and Ethel Olson, claiming to be the owners of that certain piece or parcel of land, lying and being in the city of Reno, Washoe County, Nevada, and described as follows:

Beginning at the NE cor. of property, being the SE cor. of Threlkel Lot, a pipe in place on east line of sec. 12, whence the NE cor. of said sec. 12, T. 19 N., R. 19 E., M. D. B. & M. a pipe in concrete, bears N O deg. 10 W, 193.3 feet; running thence along east line of said sec. 12, S 0 deg. 10' E. 146.70 feet to a pipe in place heretofore set at the intersection with originally surveyed north line of State Highway; thence along said north line, more or less, N. 81 deg. 42' W. 73.90 feet to present concrete highway mounment; thence N. 77 deg. 22' W. 53.0 feet to a similar monument; thence N. 80 deg. 38' W. 116.55 feet to approximate original SW cor. of this parcel; thence N. 1 deg. 39' W. 103.7 feet to NW cor. of same, a point between face of Threlkel fence and concrete base of Olson iron fence and thence N. 89 deg. 34' E. 242.40 feet to the place of beginning, being situated in Lot 1 of said sec. 12.

The defendants in the action set up two separate defenses, that of adverse possession and estoppel for the following described tract of land:

All of the lands lying west of a certain fence line extending northerly and southerly and terminating between *341 the north boundary and the south boundary of the area described in plaintiffs’ complaint and more particularly being a fence the NE corner of which lies 234.9 feet south 89° 34' W. of a point on the east line of sec. 12, T. 19 N., R. 19 E., M.D.B. & M., 193.3 feet south of the NE corner of said sec. 12, and the SE corner of which fence lies 240.9 feet south 89° 34' W. of a point on the east line of section 12., T. 19 N., R. 19 E., M.D.B. & M., 297 feet south of the NE corner of said section 12; the said fence line is further described as being situated between the north boundary of U. S. Highway No. 40 and a line extending south 89° 34' W. from a point on the east boundary of section 12, T. 19 N., R. 19 E., M.D.B & M., situated 193.3 feet south of the NE corner of said section 12.

The controversy is over a triangular piece of land lying to the west of a concrete footing and wire fence, which concrete footing and wire fence has a course of N. 2° 47', E. 103.84 feet to the NW corner of the lot, from the SE corner on the U. S. Highway 40 and the Westerly boundary running Io 39' W. 103.70 feet, making a strip of land running from no width to 8.04 feet at the north end.

The trial court gave judgment for plaintiffs, the respondents here, from which judgment the defendants, appellants, appeal.

The salient facts and testimony are briefly as follows: In September 1926, Julius Redelius and his wife Ethel lone Bell Redelius, now Olson, were divorced in the Second judicial district court of the State of Nevada, in and for Washoe county and at the time of said divorce they were the owners of a tract of land of approximately three and a half acres abutting the State highway which runs easterly and westerly between Reno and Sparks; that this tract of land is crossed at right angles by the Sullivan-Kelly Ditch. To the east of the ditch Redelius and his wife had constructed a residence. Mrs. Redelius was awarded the tract of land in question and thereafter *342 Redelius and his wife, Ethel, agreed that there were unpaid community obligations; that Ethel, his wife, quitclaim to Redelius the property awarded to her by the divorce decree and that he would encumber the portion of the parcel on which the residence had been constructed after setting off the same from the remainder of the tract. He would pay the obligations and reconvey to Ethel, subject to the mortgage, the area set off by him for the use of the residence.

The plaintiffs, respondents here, subsequently acquired the remainder of the tract to the east of the residence parcel and the controversy arises by reason of a dispute as to the proper boundary between these two parcels.

On the 11th of April, 1927, Redelius mortgaged to M. E. Cafferata of the city of Reno, the premises known as the residential property and on the 14th of April, 1927, Julius Redelius deeded to Ethel lone Bell Olson the tract of land upon which the residence is located, being approximately 103.7 feet on the north line of the right-of-way of the State highway leading between Reno and Sparks and westerly along the north line of said right-of-way, a distance of 86.8 feet, thence north, a distance of 97 feet; thence east a distance of 86.5 feet to the point of beginning.

Prior to the deed from Redelius to his former wife, Mrs. Olson, and prior to the giving of the mortgage from Redelius to Cafferata, and prior to the conveyance of Redelius of the remaining portion (exclusive of the residential portion) to Cafferata and Granata, Redelius hired a surveyor to survey the tract and the surveyor set the survey stakes by placing a pin on the north of the property and the corner of the rubble stone pillar on the south of the property. That is to say, the line established by Redelius was the line north and south from the southeast corner of the rubble stone fence to the pin established by the surveyor to the north.

It appears from the testimony and the exhibits that the description in the conveyances was by metes and *343 bounds and the difference arises as stated above in the triangular piece of land above described, being as staked off and marked off by the surveyor and Redelius, a difference of 8.04 feet on the north end, tapering down to nothing on the southeast corner.

The testimony is further upon the part of Mr. Redelius that in laying out the residence parcel he used the middle of the ditch above described as the west boundary. The south boundary was along the highway where a rubble stone fence had been built.

The east boundary which is the disputed parcel in this action, was then formed by a line between the rubble stone pillar on the east end of the rubble fence and a pin placed on the north boundary of the property at the point which would as nearly as possible square up the parcel.

The two points as marked (where the fence was later built), were pointed out by Redelius to Cafferata prior to the mortgage which Cafferata took upon the residential property and prior to the time that Cafferata and Granata took a deed from Redelius to the remaining property; and that Redelius had marked off this line by taking certain measurements with a steel tape and after-wards driving stakes at each end of the northerly-southerly line.

It is also in evidence that all of the parties knew and agreed to the boundary so marked and established by Redelius. Not any of the parties checked the legal descriptions with the actual boundary line established by Redelius.

Thereafter Mr.. Olson hired one Bevilacqua to construct a fence and before doing so had Mr. Redelius show him the line and the stake on the north side and the rubble stone pillar on the south side, which had long before been pointed out both to Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
210 P.2d 648, 66 Nev. 339, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leggett-v-olson-nev-1949.