Lott v. Muldoon Road Baptist Church, Inc.

466 P.2d 815, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 146
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 16, 1970
Docket1103
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 466 P.2d 815 (Lott v. Muldoon Road Baptist Church, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lott v. Muldoon Road Baptist Church, Inc., 466 P.2d 815, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 146 (Ala. 1970).

Opinions

OPINION

BONEY, Justice.

This case involves the title to certain real property which appellee claims to have acquired through adverse possession under color of title. The property is part of what is described as Government Lot 92 in Section 13, Township 13 North, Range 3 West, Seward Meridian. This appeal involves only the south 75 feet of the north 135 feet of the lot.

In 1951, appellant, Leo Lott (also known as Leo L. Luckett) came to Alaska; shortly thereafter she married Burnie B. Garland. In September of 1952, appellant acquired in her own name, Leo L. Garland, real property described as the northernmost 75 feet of tract 48 in section 13. Tract 48 was an earlier designation for lot 92.

In 1955, Leo and Burnie Garland were divorced. As part of the property settlement, appellant obtained by a recorded deed an additional 60 feet of lot 92 from Burnie. This property was to the south of and adjacent to the 75 foot parcel acquired by appellant in 1952. The result of this settlement was to divide the lot which is 330 feet long into two parcels: the north 135 feet belonging to appellant and the south 195 feet belonging to Burnie Garland.

Some time in 1955 appellant left the State of Alaska. While she was absent from the state, Burnie Garland caused a survey to be made and a plat prepared in which the south 270 feet of the lot was subdivided into three lots.1 Since Burnie Garland only owned the south 195 feet of the lot, the platted land extended 75 feet on to the portion of the lot owned by appellant. This encroachment included the 60 foot parcel which Burnie had deeded to appellant in the divorce settlement, and a small part of the 75 foot parcel appellant had acquired in her own name. The platted land was designated “Homesite Park Subdivision.” The plat contained a certificate of ownership whereby Burnie Garland certified that he owned all of the property described in the plat. The plat was dated June 7, 1958, and filed on August 21, 1958.

On August 8, 1958, Burnie Garland purported to convey the property described in the plat to the Title Insurance and Trust Company, as trustee, under a recorded deed of trust. The deed of trust was to secure a loan to Garland of $3,612 from the City National Bank of Anchorage. On September 12, 1959, Title Insurance and Trust, by a deed of reconveyance conveyed the platted land back to Burnie Garland. This deed was recorded on September 14, 1959, and described the property as Lot 92, of Section 13, Township 13 North, Range 3 West, Seward Meridian except the north sixty feet. At this time actual title to the north 135 feet was still held by appellant.

[817]*817Some time in 1959 Burnie Garland rented the property for use as a Sunday school to Cecil Owens, a member of the Tribal Baptist Church. On July 7, 1960, Garland entered, with the Eagle River First Baptist Church, into a recorded one-year lease with option to purchase. The property described in the lease was the same as had been described in the deed of trust, deed of reconveyance and the plat, that is, the entire lot 92 except the north 60 feet. The lease provided that the owner “is willing to rent and sell said property to the church in accordance with the terms and provisions of this agreement.” The church was to pay $150 per month for one year at which time $900 would be applied to the purchase price of $25,000. The “option” to purchase was to be exercised with thirty days notice ; and in the event it was not exercised, the lease provided that the church could remove its improvements but would reimburse the owner for any expenditures for title insurance. The church took possession immediately, and the church has held services on the property every week since it took possession. Reverend Chron testified that it was the church’s understanding that they were really buying the property outright, not leasing it.

Burnie Garland died in California on June 7, 1961. On February 27, 1962, the National Bank of Alaska executed an administrator’s deed which purported to convey the same property which was the subject of the “lease with option to purchase.” The deed was issued to the appellee Mul-doon Road Baptist Church, successor to the Eagle River First Baptist Church.

On July 27, 1967, appellant filed suit to eject appellee from the property and to quiet title to that portion (75 feet) of Homesite Subdivision which is included in the north 135 feet of lot 92. After trial without a jury, a judgment was entered which decreed that appellant had no right to or interest in the property. From this judgment, Leo Lott appealed claiming that color of title was not established by the lease with option to purchase, or any other instrument, and that the statute of limitations applying to actions for ejectment of persons without color of title had not run. On appeal the church claims that the superior court correctly determined that the church or its predecessors have held the property under color of title for the required length of time.

Evidence adduced at the trial showed that the earliest act of hostile possession of land in question came at some time in 1958 when Burnie Garland had the land surveyed and platted. Other evidence at the trial was sufficient to allow the court to find that Burnie Garland retained actual possession of all of the land in question. Moreover, there is apparent agreement that the possession by the church and its predecessors has been open, notorious and continuous. Thus the sole question presented in this appeal is whether such possession has been under color of title.

In Alaska the “color of title” doctrine is created by statute; AS 09.25.050 provides:

The uninterrupted adverse notorious possession of real property under color and claim of title for seven years or more is conclusively presumed to give title to the property except as against the state or the United States.

“Color of title” as used in this statute has been defined by this court in Ayers v. Day & Night Fuel Co., 451 P.2d 579, 581 (Alaska 1969):

Color of title exists only by virtue of a written instrument which purports, but which may not be effective, to pass title to the claimant.

The function of the doctrine of col- or of title is to define the exact boundaries of the land which is claimed.2 When one [818]*818adversely possesses land under color of title the extent of the land possessed is measured by the terms of the purported instrument giving color of title rather than by the actual physical use by the claimant.3 The other effect of the doctrine is to shorten the period of prescription from 10 years to 7.4 The shortened period of prescription is most logically attributable to a belief that a person holding land under col- or of title will be more likely to make improvements and otherwise commit himself to that land.

The good faith of the claimant is not a relevant issue under our ten-year adverse possession statute.5 But we must consider whether good faith is a necessary element in order to establish adverse possession under color of title pursuant to AS 09.25.050. This question has not yet been determined in the courts of Alaska.6 Although several jurisdictions have held that a claim under color of title does not require good faith,7

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Lott v. Muldoon Road Baptist Church, Inc.
466 P.2d 815 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1970)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
466 P.2d 815, 1970 Alas. LEXIS 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lott-v-muldoon-road-baptist-church-inc-alaska-1970.