Lisher v. Krasselt

492 P.2d 52, 94 Idaho 513, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 281
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1972
Docket10966
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 492 P.2d 52 (Lisher v. Krasselt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lisher v. Krasselt, 492 P.2d 52, 94 Idaho 513, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 281 (Idaho 1972).

Opinion

McQUADE, Chief Justice.

This is an action in which plaintiffs, seeking to quiet title to real estate, appeal from judgment and award of injunctive relief for defendants. The trial court found that the parties were owners of adjoining properties in Latah County. More than fifty years ago the boundary was changed by oral agreement of the predecessors, to avoid the inconvenience of a survey line which bisected respondents’ granary. Under terms of that agreement respondents’ predecessor acquired one-half acre beyond the survey line, and relinquished a roughly equivalent parcel elsewhere. A fence approximating the agreed boundary was in place when respondents began to farm their land as lessees in 1943 and when they purchased it in 1953. They claim that they were given to understand that the disputed half-acre was included in the sale. Appellants purchased the adjoining land in 1962, cultivating it up to but not beyond the fence. The county assessor, presuming ownership to be delineated by the fence line, assessed the disputed land and granary, together as realty, to respondents. Appellants were assessed no taxes on the property in question.

*515 Appellants commenced this litigation in 1970, alleging simply that “a dispute has arisen,” and requesting the trial court to order a survey of the properties. That action was dismissed by the district court, on respondents’ motion, for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The order of dismissal is attacked, without argument or citation of authority, in appellants’ first assignment of error. “Good cause” must be shown before a court exercising equitable powers will order an inspection of articles or premises subject to litigation. 1 Morevor, I.C, § 6-405 authorizes application for a survey order only if necessary to protect or ascertain a property right. 2 Appellants’ complaint failed to allege necessity, and properly was dismissed.

In an amended complaint appellants subsequently sought to quiet title to all their property, alleging that respondents claimed “some right, title, interest or estate therein.” 3 In their answer respondents admitted claiming “some right, title, interest or estate” without specifying the extent of the claim. In addition, they affirmatively alleged that title vested in them by adverse possession, oral agreement or acquiescence, and prayed that the court enjoin interference with occupancy of the land thus claimed. 4 Appellants moved to strike the answer as too indefinite to establish a claim upon which relief could be granted if the court found for respondents. The court’s denial of that motion is challenged on appeal in appellant’s second and third assignments of error.

Prior to the advent of simplified “notice” pleading, this Court held that a complaint or cross-complaint filed in an action to quiet title was defective if it lacked a description of the property sufficient to support the judgment. 5 However, I.R.C.P. 8(a) now requires only that pleadings before courts of general jurisdiction contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief” and “a demand for judgment for the relief to which he deems himself entitled.” Technical forms of pleading are abolished by Rule 8(e). Rule 54(c) requires the trial court, in non-default cases, to “grant the relief to which the party in whose favor [judgment] is rendered is entitled, even if the party has not demanded such relief in his pleadings.”

If judgment no longer need conform to the prayer, omission of a description of property claimed in a quiet title action does not constitute grounds for reversal, unless appellants show resultant prejudice at trial. 6 In the present case, both parties knew well the disputed land. Respondents identified in their answer the property claimed as land in which appellants sought to quiet title but which respondents occupied. Only the half-acre in question came within the terms of that description. Moreover, appellants were afforded the opportunity during a pre-trial conference to ascertain the extent of relief sought by respondents. The record does not indicate, and appellants have made no effort to show, prejudice resulting from the court’s refusal to strike as too indefinite the respondents’ answer.

*516 Appellants’ fourth assignment is an attack on the trial court’s refusal to quiet title in them. It raises the substantive issues of adverse possession, oral agreement and acquiescence. Neither the oral agreement nor the ensuing acquiescence establishes a claim of right unless the recognized boundary resolved a dispute or uncertainty concerning the true line. 7 No such uncertainty or dispute attended the surveyed line in this case.

Respondents’ claim to title by adverse possession is based on occupying the land exclusively, continuously, openly and notoriously, paying all taxes assessed, for more than five years. 8 Appellants argue that the possession was not hostile to the true owner because it was authorized by the oral agreement. I.C. § 5-209 provides that an oral claim to title shall be deemed adverse; 9 and this Court has applied that rule to claims under oral agreements reached by adjoining landowners who disputed, or were uncertain of, the true boundary. 10 However, the fence boundary in this case resulted not from dispute or uncertainty but from a mutual desire to avoid the inconvenience created by the surveyed line. It may be contended that there was no conflict of claims to induce appellants or their predecessors to bring an action for ejectment, or to quiet title, within the statutory period. If so, the oral agreement would be interpreted merely to create reciprocal permissive uses, or revocable licenses, which negate the element of adversity deemed by I.C. § 5-209 to attend an oral claim of title. 11

We believe such reasoning too narrowly circumscribes application of I.C. § 5-209, read in conjunction with I.C. § 5-210. 12 The latter section embodies the balance of complementary principles in equity by which a claim of adverse possession is *517 tested. 13 Requiring one who claims by adverse possession to inclose, cultivate or improve, and to pay all taxes levied and assessed, ensures that one who seeks equity will do equity. One who claims an equitable right superior to apparent legal title must perform acts which could not otherwise be compelled, in order to obtain the extraordinary relief sought. On the other hand, depriving one of legal title who permits another to perform these acts on his land, for a specified period, ensures that protection is extended only to those vigilant and assertive of their rights. In this case respondents and their predecessors established a clear claim under I.C.

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Bluebook (online)
492 P.2d 52, 94 Idaho 513, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisher-v-krasselt-idaho-1972.