Meeker v. Gilbert

19 P. 18, 3 Wash. Terr. 369, 1888 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 20
CourtWashington Territory
DecidedJanuary 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 19 P. 18 (Meeker v. Gilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Territory primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meeker v. Gilbert, 19 P. 18, 3 Wash. Terr. 369, 1888 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 20 (Wash. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Jones

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the brief of appellee (the plaintiff below) he states his complaint as follows:

That on and prior to January 17, 1873, James Oarty, Sr., was the owner in fee of the donation land claim No. 37, and that about said date he conveyed to James Oarty, Jr., a portion thereof, described as follows:

“Being parts of sections 18 and 19, in township 4 N., B. 1 E., and section 24, in township 4 N., B. 1 W., and being the south half of the donation claim of James Oarty, Sr., Not. No. 195, which said half of said donation claim is more particularly bounded and described as follows: Beginning in section 24, township IN., B. 1 W., at an ash tree on the right bank of Lake river, at a point 16 chains north and 6.27 chains west of the northwest corner of Arthur Quigley’s donation land claim; the said point being the southwest corner [373]*373of said James Oarty, Sr.’s donation land claim; thence east 37.50 chains,” etc. (around the south half).

That prior to said conveyance they mutually agreed on the division line, from the point where the ash tree in said deed named stood on the' bank of Lake river, for a distance of about 600 yards to where the line intersects the county road, running across the claim, and caused the same to be surveyed and marked on the ground by stakes.

That James Oarty, Jr., thereupon entered into possession, and remained in possession of the same until on or about March 20, 1874, when he sold and conveyed to P. O’Leary, by the same description as in the deed to him, except that the land is described as beginning at a point 16 chains north and 6.27 chains west of the southwest corner of said claim, and no mention is made of said ash tree.

That O’Leary entered into possession of said land the same as his grantor had held, and remained in possession until on or about August 28, 1875, when he sold and conveyed the same to Stephen Shobert, by description the same as in his deed from James Oarty, Jr., and that Shobert then entered into possession of the same land as held by his grantor.

That all of said parties to said conveyances in purchasing said land from their respective grantors had said line, so far as the same was surveyed and marked, pointed out to them as the division line, and recognized the same as such, and in all of said conveyances the parties granting conveyed with reference to said line so marked as the division line, and the grantees therein took to said line as such division line, and with the understanding and belief that the same was the true division line, and they entered into possession of said south half of said claim and held and occupied the same up to said division line as the division line and the north boundary of their land.

That said Stephen Shobert in the fall of 1875, or early in 1876, erected upon said division line so marked and staked a rail fence from said county road, a distance of about 300 yards, and up to the head of a lake covering the wester[374]*374most portion of said land, and said fence, so erected by him, remained upon said land as a line or division fence between the north and south halves of said claim, until the commission of the wrongful acts of the defendant hereinafter referred to.

That on or about the 4th day of April, 1883, the said Stephen Shobert sold and conveyed said south half of said claim to the defendant, and in his deed therefor described the same as in the deed from O’Leary to Shobert.

That at the time of said conveyance and prior thereto, Stephen Shobert pointed out to defendant, as the division line of said donation claim and as the north boundary of defendant’s land, the said rail fence and the direction of the same projected to Lake river, and the defendant so purchased the same with the understanding that such was his north boundary line.

That the defendant and O’Leary by agreement in January, 1884, caused said division line to be surveyed, and completed said division fence at their joint expense from the end of the rail fence and in a line with it, and on the line of the original survey and the position of the ash tree, and said boundary fence so made was recognized by defendant as his north boundary fence until the commission of the wrongful acts complained of.

That in June, 1884, plaintiff purchased the north half through mesne conveyance from James Carty, Sr., and his heirs, and in his deed the same was described thus: Beginning at a point in section 24, T. 4 N., B. 1 W., 16 chains north and 6.27 chains west of the southwest corner of the donation land claim of James Carty, Sr., said point of beginning being on Lake river, and running thence east, etc. (around the north half).

That said land, so enclosed on the south boundary by said fence made by Shobert and said fence made by O’Leary and defendant, was, until the commission of the wrongful acts complained of, in the actual, open, notorious, and peaceable possession of plaintiff and of his grantors.

That immediately north of said fence the plaintiff and his [375]*375grantors have, since 1876, used a road by which they have hauled farm products and goods to and from their steamboat landing on Lake river, and have had access to the county road, and the plaintiff has constant need of said road, and the same is his only means of access to Lake river or said landing, on account of a lake which extends across the farm and separates the lower part of the farm and Lake river from the upper part of the farm where the buildings are. That the lake extends nearly to the fence, and the road where it crosses the head of the lake has been made at great expense and trouble. That the defendant, claiming that his fence was not on the true division line, and that the true division line was fifteen feet to the north, but well knowing the premises, did on October 8, 1885, wrongfully and unlawfully break and enter upon plaintiff’s land, and with force did break and tear down said rail fence built by Shobert, and did construct the same on plaintiff’s land at a distance of about fifteen feet north from where the same had stood, and thereby closed up the portion of plaintiff’s road lying next thereto, and took possession of and closed up plaintiff’s gate at the county road, and that the defendant threatens to and is about to tear down the remainder of the fence, the post and board fence, and erect the same upon the plaintiff’s land, fifteen feet further north, and take possession of and enclose the remainder of plaintiff’s road to said river and said landing, and prevent his access to said landing and the portion of his farm lying beyond the lake. That there is no other place where the plaintiff can construct a road across the lake or reach his landing or any landing on his river front, save by the outlay of a large sum of money and great labor and expense. That all of said acts have been done with violence and a large force of men, and without the consent of the plaintiff.

That said beginning point of the division line and the western terminus of said board fence is 16 chains north and 6.27 chains west of the southwest corner of said donation claim as the same was originally surveyed, and as the same was recognized and acquiesced in by defendant and [376]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 P. 18, 3 Wash. Terr. 369, 1888 Wash. Terr. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeker-v-gilbert-washterr-1888.