McBride v. Whitaker

90 N.W. 966, 65 Neb. 137, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 284
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1902
DocketNo. 11,090
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 90 N.W. 966 (McBride v. Whitaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McBride v. Whitaker, 90 N.W. 966, 65 Neb. 137, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 284 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Duffie, C.

The northeast quarter of section 12, township 8 north of range 15 west, in Buffalo county, Nebraska, is intersected by a channel of the Platte river, known as “Mosquito channel.” That part of the section lying north of this channel was surveyed into one full forty-acre tract, and two fractional lots, numbered on the government plat as 6 and 7. That part of the quarter section south of the channel consists of a fractional lot marked on the government plat as lot 8. ■ About midway between these lots in the centre of the channel is an island which was never surveyed, and McBride, the owner of lot 8, and Kilgore, who claims to be the owner of lots 6 and 7, each claim title to a portion of this island, asserting that their grant of the fractional lots above mentioned gave them title to the thread of the channel, including all islands or parts of islands embraced within this limit. McBride and Kilgore could not agree upon a division of the island, and the possession thereto shifted between them, but for many years previous to 1897, one or the other of these parties has been in the actual possession of the island. In April, 1897, the defendant Whitaker took possession of the island, and has had actual possession from that time. This action was brought by the appellant McBride to quiet his title to so much of the island as might fall within the terms of his grant; his petition alleging that the meandered lines, as shown by the field notes, do not coincide with the banks of the said Mosquito channel as they now exist, and that there is a controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant Kilgore as to where said boundary line should be located. He asks that the boundary line be ascertained and established by the court, and his title established as [139]*139against the claim 'of Kilgore. Whitaker was made a party defendant in this action; it being alleged in the petition that Whitaker had moved upon the island and erected a house thereon, and made claim to the ownership thereof. The court made certain findings of fact and.conclusions of law, upon which judgment was entered, from which judgment and decree the plaintiff McBride and the defendant Kilgore have appealed to this court.

The court’s findings are as follows:

“That the plaintiff, McBride, at the time of the bringing of this suit, was the owner of lot eight (8) in section twelve (12), township eight (8), range fifteen (15), in Buffalo county, Nebraska ; that he made the original entry therefor and obtained title to the same by the United States patent, and has been in the open and notorious possession of the same for fifteen or twenty years. The court further finds that the defendant W. H. Kilgore at the beginning of this suit and for a long time prior thereto, Avas the owner of lots 6 and 7 in said section; that he became the owner of the same by virtue of a deed to him from the original patentee of said tract, and that he had been in possession of the same for more than ten years prior to the bringing of this suit; that said tract of land, with other land, Avas within the extreme channels of the Platte river, and that lying between lots 6 and 7 on the north, and lot 8 on the south, Avas a tract of land in said section 12 of about 22 acres entirely surrounded by certain channels in the Platte river, and which is the tract of land in dispute herein; that the government surveyor when originally surveying said lots 6 and 7 did not actually survey the meander line forming the south line of lots 6 and 7 as they were required to do, but that instead of making an actual survey of said meander line along the said channel bordering on said lots 6 and 7, they falsely show upon the map made by them that they had done so, and located upon said plat what they supposed to be the true meander line of said lots 6 and 7; that they never made an actual survey of the north meander line of said lot 8, but indi[140]*140cated upon the plat made by them what they supposed was the meander line of said lot 8; that they never actually surveyed the meander lines of said tract of land lying between lots 6 and 7 on the one side and lot 8 on the other and which tract is spoken of in the evidence as an island, but that they indicated upon the plat the general outlines of said island as they understood it to be. The court further finds that said channels bordering said tract in dispute, the one being on the south of lots 6 and 7, and the other on the north of lot 8, are substantially the same now as they were at the time the original survey was made, and that said channels are substantially as shown by the plaintiff’s plat markéd ‘Plaintiff’s Exhibit A’ offered in evidence. The court further finds that the defendant Kilgore at all times since he became the owner of said lots 6 and 7, claimed to be the owner of the tract in dispute as part of his said lots 6 and 7; that such claim had not extended over the period of ten years at the bringing of this suit; that he had possession during a part of the time of all of said tract, and all the time a part of said tract'; that'McBride, ever since he obtained his final receipt to lot 8, has claimed to be the owner of a part of said island; that they together have had the title to lots 6 and 7 on the one side and lot 8 on the other, and have had possession of the island for more than ten years prior to the bringing of this suit, but that they were contending between themselves during said period as to what part of said island each should have, and did not agree. The court further finds that the south line of said lots 6 and 7 is the channel line as shown in Exhibit A and that the north line of said lot 8 is the channel bounding it on the north as shown in said Exhibit A. As a matter of law, the court concludes that said island should have been surveyed by the government surveyor; that it was a neglect of duty on their part not to survey the same; that the title to said island still remains in the United States; that it was never the intention of the government at the time it gave the patent to said lots 6 and 7 to convey any part of the island, nor was [141]*141it the intention of the government to’ convey it to the patentee of lot 8; that the only interest the defendant Whitaker has in said land is that he claims the right to enter the same as a homestead, and that his right is only what possession would give him, and that he has no title thereto. The court further concludes as a matter of law, that the government is not bound by the failure of the surveyor hired to do this work by his neglect to perform his duty, and that his failure to actually survey said island did not thereby give the parties to whom the government granted the land on either side thereof any right to it.”

We doubt very much whether the petition presents a case of equitable jurisdiction. The fact that the plaintiff McBride and the defendant Kilgore each claim ownership of a part of the island in dispute, but can not agree upon the division to be made thereof, does not, in our opinion, present any matter for the equitable interference of the court. Conceding, as we think we must, that as between themselves their claim to ownership of the island is a valid and legal claim, and passes to them with the grant of land along the shore of the. channel, the fact that the dividing line between them is in dispute, is not a matter concerning which the equitable jurisdiction of the court may be invoked. Each concedes to the other the ownership and legal title to a portion of the island. The only matter in dispute between them is the establishment of a dividing line, and this is certainly a matter which a court of law has full poAver and authority to adjust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 N.W. 966, 65 Neb. 137, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcbride-v-whitaker-neb-1902.