McIntire v. Wasson

270 P.2d 32, 125 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1892
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 19, 1954
DocketCiv. No. 4692
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 270 P.2d 32 (McIntire v. Wasson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntire v. Wasson, 270 P.2d 32, 125 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1892 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an action to quiet title to a 30-foot strip of land in Lot 7 of a certain subdivision. The defendants and the plaintiffs own adjoining properties in said Lot 7, and the dispute is as to the boundary line between them. The plaintiffs are the successors in interest of their mother, Mrs. Kerwin.

On April 3, 1912, a corporation filed a map showing the subdivision of a section into 64 numbered lots of approximately 10 acres each. It also shows several strips reserved for road purposes, and marked as lettered lots. Along the north side of the north tier of lots appears such a strip 1 mile long and 30 feet wide, which is marked “Reserved for road Lot E.” It is admitted that this strip is the south [372]*372half of a county road, and that the north line of this strip corresponds with the section line. Lot 7 is the second lot from the west in the north tier of lots. There is also a strip reserved for a road on the east side of Lot 7, the width of which is not given. Lot 7 is marked as cqntaining 10.09 acres. Its east and west dimensions are given as 661.85 feet at the north, and 661.44 feet at the south. Its north and south dimensions are given as 664.22 feet at the west, and 664.38 feet on its east line. The map contains the statement “All stakes 4" x 4" R.W. All lots are measured to center of stakes. All dimensions are from section lines to center of roads.” It also contains the statement “All lots intended for sale are designated by number and all pieces or parcels of land designated hereon as roads are excepted and reserved from sale and are intended for use as private roads until such time when the corporation may dedicate the same to public use.”

The common grantor of the parties to this action was Frank E. Green, who acquired title from the corporation by two deeds. The first, dated May 1, 1928, conveyed the south 126 feet of the north 282 feet of Lot 7, and the second, dated April 5, 1930, conveyed all of Lot 7 except the south 126 feet of the north 282 feet. Apparently, Green had had a prior contract for the purchase of Lot 7 since he had contracted to sell a portion of that lot to Mrs. Kerwin before he received the first of these deeds.

On February 23, 1928, Green contracted to sell to Mrs. Kerwin “the South One Hundred Thirty and Thirty-eight hundreds (130 38/100) feet of Lot Seven (7) ” of this subdivision for $1,100, payable $400 down and the balance in installments. Thereafter, Green gave five deeds conveying portions, of said Lot 7, four of them with a frontage of 126 feet on the street to the east of the property and the other conveying the rest of Lot 7 to Mrs. Kerwin. These deeds were as follows:

(1) On May 2,1928, a deed to Holland conveying the South 126 feet of the North 282 feet.
(2) On May 5, 1930, one to Mrs. Kerwin (plaintiffs) conveying all of Lot 7 except the north 534 feet.
. (3) On November 10,1930, one to the Wassons (defendants) conveying the South 126 feet of the North 534 feet.
(4) On October 23, 1931, one to Marks conveying the South 126 feet of the North 156 feet.
(5) On April 14, 1932, one to Welch, conveying the South 126 feet of the North 408 feet.

[373]*373The first grantee to enter and occupy his property was Holland, who occupied the second 126 feet south of what may be called the property line, and allowing for the 30-foot strip at the north which was reserved for road purposes. The next was Mrs. Kerwin, predecessor of the plaintiffs, who in 1928 took possession of the south 130.28 feet, including the 30-foot strip in controversy. She built a house, planted a palm tree on the 30-foot strip, used a part of that strip for a driveway, and maintained an oil tank thereon. There is no dispute that she has occupied the strip in question at all times since 1928, and without objection from the Wassons until shortly before this suit was filed. Wasson entered at the time he bought his property and built a house on it, oceuping the 126 feet north of the 130.28 feet occupied by Mrs. Kerwin. In 1931, he built a fence on what he “presumed” was the boundary-line between his property and Mrs. Kerwin’s, having been shown her contract with Green, and ten years later built a more substantial fence along the same line. He testified that he never claimed more than 126 feet prior to 1951, that he now claimed 156 feet, and that he first claimed 156 feet when the tax collector “sold the North Thirty feet of Lot Seven and that was the time I discovered I was Thirty feet too far north.” Welch occupied the 126 feet between Holland and Wasson, and Marks occupied the north 126-foot parcel running to what may be called the property line, but not including the 30 feet at the north reserved for road purposes. Marks testified that he had a contract first and later Green gave him a deed; that he wanted to know where the boundaries were in order to locate his house; that he asked Green about this and that Green “told me to measure from the center óf the street One Hundred and Fifty-six feet back south”; that Holland helped him to measure it; and that he measured his lot 126 feet from the edge of the road to Holland’s lot on the south. One of the plaintiffs testified that she was present, with her mother, in February, 1928, when Green showed them the stakes and pointed out their frontage of 130 feet where they were building a house. No stakes were to be found at the time of the trial.

In 1950, it was discovered that “the north 30 feet of Lot 7” had been assessed for 1930 to Green, and sold to the state for nonpayment of taxes in 1931. In order to straighten' out their titles the four then owners of the 126-foot parcels paid the amount necessary to clear up that tax sale, and on March 13, 1951, that 30 feet was deeded by the tax collector to one [374]*374Tenosa who had purchased Marks’ property, the north one of these 126-foot parcels. As a part of this transaction each of the three northerly owners of 126-foot parcels agreed to, and did, deed the south 30 feet of his property to his neighbor on the south. The Wassons were given such a deed by their neighbor on the north. This is only a paper transaction, to straighten out the titles, and it left each of the four owners of 126-foot parcels in possession of the same property he had occupied for years. The plaintiffs, as successors of Mrs. Kerwin, did not participate in this transaction since her deed called for all of the rest of Lot 7 and her original contract called for the south 130.28 feet.

The Wassons then had their property surveyed by a surveyor who took a line 30 feet south of the section line as the northerly line of Lot 7, and thus fixed Wasson’s south line at a point 534 feet south of the south line of the county road, leaving only 100.38 feet for the plaintiffs. The Wassons having accepted the deed to 30 feet from their neighbor on the north, then claimed to own an additional 126 feet south of that, based on this new survey, and began the erection of another house which extended about halfway over the disputed 30-foot strip.

The plaintiffs brought this action for an injunction and to quiet their title to that 30-foot strip. The defendants answered and cross-complained, seeking to quiet their title to the disputed strip. The court found that Lot 7 extends south 664.38 feet from the south line of Lot E on said map, which was set apart for road purposes; that the northerly line of Lot 7 was the southerly line of Lot E; -“that it was not the intent of any prior grantor of any portion of Lot 7 ...

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.2d 32, 125 Cal. App. 2d 371, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1892, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintire-v-wasson-calctapp-1954.