Lembke v. Lembke

196 Iowa 136
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 22, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 196 Iowa 136 (Lembke v. Lembke) 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
Lembke v. Lembke, 196 Iowa 136 (iowa 1923).

Opinion

Evans, J.

Plaintiff, Henry Lembke, and intervener, Charles Lembke, are brothers. They are the owners of adjoining lands, which formerly they had occupied as neighbors, for many years. Originally, their adjoining lands comprised the northeast quarter of a certain Section 13. Henry owned the east half thereof, and Charles, the west half thereof. About 1898 or 1899, Charles Lembke purchased the east half of the southeast quarter of said Section 13, known in the record as the Newberry 80. It will be noted that the Newberry land joins the plaintiff’s land on its south line, whereas it only corners with the 80-acre tract of Charles Lembke, its purchaser. The following diagram will be an aid to an understanding of the evidence:

George Lembke, defendant, is a son of Charles Lembke’s, and is in possession of all the land of Charles Lembke herein involved. As to a part of such, he is in possession under a contract of purchase; and as to the remainder thereof, he is in possession as a lessee, and as an optionee to purchase.

The testimony on behalf of the defendant and intervener was that, before purchasing the Newberry 80, Charles Lembke [138]*138sought hn understanding with his brother as to acquiring a right of way over the corner of his brother’s land, which should connect the land which he proposed to purchase with the land which was then owned and occupied by him. The plaintiff advised him to buy the land, and freely offered him the right of way over the corner of his land. The plaintiff had no pecuniary interest in the purchase nor in the creation of a right of way, except possibly an indirect one, in that the Newberry land was said to be overrun with noxious weeds, which both Henry and Charles greatly desired to eliminate from any contiguity with their lands. Relying upon Henry’s promise of the right of way through his land, Charles bought the Newberry land, and thereafter took possession of the right of way by running a diagonal fence across the corner, as indicated in the above plát. A point two rods north of the true southwest corner of plaintiff’s land and another point two rods east thereof form the termini of this diagonal fence. From the corner post to the center of the diagonal fence, he installed a gate. The only function of this gate was one solely for the use of Charles Lembke. It served to keep the stock confined within either tract. Charles Lembke testified to two or three conversations’on the subject with his [139]*139brother Henry. One of these conversations was had at or about the place of the proposed right of way. August Lembke, a son of Charles Lembke’s, was present at this time, and testifies in corroboration of his father. Plaintiff’s denial of these conversations is qualified to such an extent as to leave him very narrow ground upon which to stand. The numerical weight of the evidence is against him. But we would not lay undue stress upon this fact, were it not for the corroboration afforded by the record to the defendant and the intervener. The following from the testimony of plaintiff as a witness is sufficiently illustrative of the nature and extent of his denial.

[138]

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Related

Black v. Whitacre
221 N.W. 825 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1928)
Molene v. Tansey
213 N.W. 759 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1927)
Stovern v. Stovern
198 Iowa 1327 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
196 Iowa 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lembke-v-lembke-iowa-1923.