Minear v. Keith Furnace Co.

239 N.W. 584, 213 Iowa 663
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedDecember 16, 1931
DocketNos. 40909, 40918.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 239 N.W. 584 (Minear v. Keith Furnace Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Minear v. Keith Furnace Co., 239 N.W. 584, 213 Iowa 663 (iowa 1931).

Opinion

Wagner, J.

The defendant Iowa National Bank has a mortgage upon the property of the Keith Furnace Company, *665 and the 'remaining defendants, to wit, Dorsey and Crestón Coca Cola Company, are only interested by reason of a contract of purchase of a portion of the real estate owned by the Furnace Company. A determination of the rights as between the plaintiff and the Furnace Company will necessarily determine the rights of the remaining defendants. The plaintiff and the Furnace Company are adjoining lot owners, the plaintiff being the owner of property described as the West 57 feet of the East 117 feet of the West 2 acres of Lot 8, of the official plat of the South y2 of Section 1, Township 78, Range 24, now included in and forming a part of the City of Des Moines; and the defendant being the owner of the adjoining property, described as the West 57 feet of the East 174 feet of the West 2 acres of Lot 8, of the official plat of the South y2 of Section 1, Township 78, Range 24, now included in and forming a part of the City of Des Moines.

The Furnace Company has erected a two-story brick building upon its premises, approximately 150 feet long from north to south. The footings and foundation of this building were constructed late in the year 1921, and the building was erected the following spring. It is the contention of the plaintiff that the east foundation wall and the brick wall erected thereon encroach upon her property. It is the contention of the Furnace Company that said wall was constructed upon the line which had been acquiesced in and recognized for many years by the owners of the two tracts as the dividing line between them. The Furnace Company further relies upon estoppel. Upon trial, the court, basing his finding upon a survey made for plaintiff a few weeks before the commencement of this action, found that the boundary line between the properties of the plaintiff and of the Furnace Company is two feet, six inches, west of the east wall of the Furnace Company building at the southeast corner thereof, and 1 foot, 8y2 inches, west of said wall at the northeast corner of said building, and that the boundary line between the two properties is one corresponding therewith, and quieted the title in the plaintiff to said strip occupied by the building of the Furnace Company, and ordered the removal within ninety days from the date of the decree, of that portion of the building found to encroach upon said strip. From this judgment and decree, the defendants have appealed.

*666 It is the contention of the Furnace Company that the east foundation wall and the brick wall erected thereon were constructed upon the line, or a few inches to the west of a fence which had been constructed years before, which fence line for more than ten years had been acquiesced in and recognized by the owners of the two tracts as the division line between them. It is the settled law of this state that a line between adjoining tracts, definitely marked by a fence which has been acquiesced in and recognized by the owners of the tracts as the division line for more than ten years, becomes, as between the parties, the true line between said tracts, although a subsequent survey may show otherwise, and although neither of the parties intended to claim more than his deed calls for. A multitude of authorities could be cited on this proposition, but see Bradley v. Burkhart, 139 Iowa 323; Miller v. Mills County, 111 Iowa 654; Norton v. Ferguson, 203 Iowa 317; Brown v. Bergman, 204 Iowa 1006; Stone v. Richardson, 206 Iowa 419; Sorensen v. Mosbacher, 210 Iowa 156; Kraft v. Tennigkeit, 210 Iowa 81. It becomes necessary at this point to consider the facts as shown by the record. It will be noted that the property of the plaintiff lies to the east of that of the Furnace Company-. Both tracts were at one time owned by Edward Minear, son of the plaintiff, he having purchased the property now owned by his mother July 11, 1903. He built thereon a house in 1906 or 1907. On October 16, 1915, Edward Minear conveyed to his mother, the plaintiff in this action, by a warranty deed, real estate therein described as the East 55 feet of the West 114 feet of the East 174 feet of the West 2 acres, etc. On May 7, 1930, about two weeks before the commencement of this suit, Edward Minear executed unto his mother what is denominated in the record a correction deed, conveying thereby real estate by the same description as that contained in the deed obtained by him July .11, 1903. On October 17, 1904, Edward Minear obtained a deed for real estate described therein as follows: The West 57 feet of the East 174 feet of the West 2 acres of Lot 8, of the official plat of the South y2 of Section 1, Township 78, Range 24, now included in and forming a part of the City of Des Moines.

This is the property now owned by the Furnace Company. Edward Minear sold and conveyed this property to Carpenter on August 2, 1906, and the Furnace Company is the record *667 owner thereof by a regular chain of mesne conveyances. It will thus be observed that from October 17, 1904, until August 2, 1906, Edward Minear was the owner of both tracts of real estate herein involved. There is a discrepancy in the testimony between Edward Minear and Carpenter as to when the fence between the two tracts was erected, Minear claiming that the fence was erected before his purchase of the tract now owned by the Furnace Company, and Carpenter and his wife, disinterested witnesses, testifying for the defendants, claiming that it was afterwards. Carpenter testified that while Minear built the fence, he paid his share of the expense, and that he suggested to Minear to have the posts stand on the west side of the east line. The testimony of Minear is that, before the fence was constructed, he had a surveyor to give him the corners of the lot now owned by his mother, and that he placed the west fence on that line. There is other testimony in the record to the same effect. Therefore, it is established by the record that the fence, whenever erected, was placed on what was believed to be the true line between the two properties. The plaintiff, during her occupancy of the premises, recognized said fence as the line, and has never contended that her property extends west of said fence line. In her argument, she admits that the fence erected by the son Edward was on the line. It is clearly established by the record that said fence'was erected as a partition fence and recognized by the owners of the two tracts and acquiesced in by them as the dividing line between the two tracts since the time of the erection of the fence, whether it was in 1903, 1904, or 1906. Under the authorities hereinbefore cited, this fence had become the true line as between the respective tracts when the erection of the building of the Furnace Company was begun in 1921.

The next question of importance is whether the Furnace Company, by the erection of its building, has encroached upon the property of the plaintiff to the east of said fence line. While the testimony of the plaintiff and that of her son, Dewey, and some testimony of lesser importance by other members of her family, is to the effect that the building was placed east of said fence line, yet the convincing testimony, as disclosed by the great preponderance thereof, is that the east wall of the building was located a few inches to the west of said old fence.. One *668

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Bluebook (online)
239 N.W. 584, 213 Iowa 663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/minear-v-keith-furnace-co-iowa-1931.