Lundquist v. Eisenmann

290 P. 277, 87 Colo. 584, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 270
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 30, 1930
DocketNo. 12,267.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 290 P. 277 (Lundquist v. Eisenmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lundquist v. Eisenmann, 290 P. 277, 87 Colo. 584, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 270 (Colo. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiee Eisenmann is the record owner of lots 40 and 41 in block 12 of Lake Avenue Addition, former town of Bessemer, now a part of the city of Pueblo. Each lot in the block, according to the original recorded plat of the property, is supposed to have a frontage of 25 feet. Defendant Lundquist is the record owner of lots 39, 38 and 37 in the same block, which lots lie immediately to the south of plaintiff’s lot 40 and in the order above designated. This action by the plaintiff is to recover from, the defendant possession of a strip of land 8 feet in width off of the south side of lot 40 extending the entire depth of the lot from the street line and back to the alley at the rear, which strip of land the plaintiff says has been *586 wrongfully taken possession of and now is withheld by the defendant. Plaintiff claims ownership of this disputed strip as part of his lot 40, and the defendant asserts title thereto as a part of her lot 39. There is an admitted shortage in block 12 to the extent of 10 feet in width. The trial court, upon evidence that is not in serious dispute upon the essential and controlling facts, found in favor of the plaintiff’s claim and rendered judgment in his favor for possession of the disputed 8-foot strip of land, together with damages sustained by him as the result of the defendant’s unlawfully taking possession thereof, and also for other injuries inflicted.

Upon this review the discussion, particularly by counsel for the defendant, has taken a wide range. The trial court found the facts generally in favor of the plaintiff. It also specifically found that the plaintiff purchased lots 40 and 41 on June 16, 1902. The block was then unoccupied and was vacant land. At the time of the purchase the plaintiff caused the lots to be surveyed by the city surveyor, and later staked and enclosed the lots with a solid board fence on the lines of the survey. The same year he erected a dwelling house on the premises, in which he has ever since continuously resided. He also laid a concrete sidewalk the entire width of the lots, which has ever since remained in place. In 1902, the year of his purchase, plaintiff planted trees within 5 feet of the south boundary line of lot 40, which was established by the official survey, planted the entire width of the enclosed property in lawn, built a solid board fence and outhouses across the rear, and has continuously maintained all of such improvements ever since,- and also ever since 1902 has paid all of the taxes legally assessed against lots 40 and 41.

The court further specifically found that as to 3.12 feet of this 8-foot strip in question adjoining the premises of the defendant, the plaintiff was in open, notorious, exclusive, continuous and hostile possession and occupancy of the same under claim of ownership in good faith for a *587 period of 24 years prior to the origin of the claim of the defendant, or any adverse claim, and thereby became and is entitled to the ownership, possession and enjoyment of said portion, 3.12 feet of the 8-foot strip, free from- the claims of the defendant and all other persons; and that under the conveyance of 1902 he has title to the remaining 4.88 feet in width of the strip in question. The court also found that the plaintiff’s damage is $70, which the defendant conceded plaintiff sustained, if he was entitled to any relief whatever.

When the plaintiff purchased these lots and built his house thereon and enclosed the same with a fence, built sidewalks and otherwise improved them, the city surveyor had theretofore made a survey thereof for the plaintiff and the fence was built on the line indicated by the survey. In other words, the recorded plat of the lots in question was observed by the plaintiff in making his improvements upon the premises.

One objection urged by the defendant is that the court, in the absence of all necessary parties, had no authority to distribute or apportion the shortage of 10 feet in the block, as the same was originally surveyed and platted. Defendant may not now be heard to complain of what she, herself, solicited the trial court to do.

If the findings of fact by the trial court above outlined are sustained by the evidence, we do not see any tenable ground upon which the judgment can be set aside. According to these findings the plaintiff under claim and color of title had been in actual, open, notorious, exclusive, continuous and hostile possession and occupancy of the entire tract of land for 24 years prior to the inception of the rights of the claimant at the time she purchased her lots. The record discloses that at or before the time defendant purchased her lots she caused a survey thereof to be made by a surveyor, but the court below evidently found, and the evidence justified the finding, that this survey was made not upon the basis of the original plat but of some amended plat which was erroneous. *588 The trial court must have so found. Indeed, it appears from the record that the owners of this addition, in the making and filing of an amended plat, expressly stated therein that the same was not made for the purpose of encroaching upon, nor was it intended in any way injuriously to affect, the rights of those who had purchased property upon the basis of the original survey and the recorded plat thereof in reliance upon which the plaintiff obtained his deed.

Defendant’s assignments of error — there are only three — are not in compliance with our rule 32, which requires that each error shall be separately alleged and particularly specified. While the assignments are separately alleged, there is no specification thereof. The first one is merely a statement that the trial court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for judgment and refers to folio 113, which is not in the printed abstract. The second assignment is merely that the trial court entered an order that is contrary to the law and the evidence, and contains no specification whatever; the third assignment is merely that the judgment is contrary to law and the evidence. If we should strictly enforce our rule, we might affirm the judgment without an opinion, but we take up in their order the five separate objections to the judgment which the defendant argues in her brief.

Defendant says that claiming ownership of property under a mistake as to the correct boundaries,, is not the character of possession sufficient to establish title by adverse possession under our statute law. This proposition assumes that plaintiff made a mistake as to the correct boundaries of his lots 40 and 41, and therefore his'possession thereof is not sufficient to establish title by adverse possession. This presupposes that the plaintiff was thus mistaken. Such, however, is not the evidence and the court found that no mistake was made by the plaintiff of this character, but that the plaintiff held continuous and undisputed possession of lots 40 and 41, as they were delineated on the recorded plat and of the di *589 mensions just as the plat described them, and enclosed these lots, exactly as they were described on the recorded plat, by a fence and by planting trees on the disputed 8-foot strip and by using the entire enclosure as his own exclusive property. There is no merit in this contention.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 277, 87 Colo. 584, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lundquist-v-eisenmann-colo-1930.