Moore v. Shoemaker

10 App. D.C. 6, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3154
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 4, 1897
DocketNo. 595
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 App. D.C. 6 (Moore v. Shoemaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Shoemaker, 10 App. D.C. 6, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3154 (D.C. Cir. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Alvey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The bill in this case was filed for the purpose, as we gather from its allegations and prayer for relief, of quieting a claim of title alleged to have been acquired by adverse possession, in a slight strip of ground upon which a wall rested, dividing and supporting in part two houses fronting on Seventh street, west, and located on lot 10, square 423, in the city of Washington. The bill was framed, manifestly, to bring the case within the principle laid down by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Sharon v. Tucker, 144 U. S. 533 — a case taken up from the Supreme Court of this District. But that case, clearly, has little or no application to the present case.

It appears, both from the bill and the answer, that, in 1845, John McCutcheon was owner of the north 33 feet 4 inches of lot 10, in square 423. Being the owner of such part of the lot, in 1851, he erected upon such part of lot 10 two adjoining brick houses, the front walls of which were located SSjV feet back from the front line of the lot on Seventh street. This is shown by a plat filed with the bill. In 1856, McCutcheon conveyed the south half of this property [11]*11that is to say, 16 feet 8 inches front, by metes and bounds, to a party named Baylis, through and under whom by mesne conveyances, the plaintiffs claim. And in 1857, Mc-Cutcheon conveyed the north half of the 33 feet 4 inches of lot 10, being the remaining 16 feet 8 inches front, by metes and bounds, to a party named Utermehle. By subsequent mesne conveyances, this north half part of the 33 feet 4 inches of lot 10, so held by McCutcheon, has been conveyed to the present defendant. The two parts thus separately and differently conveyed by the owner McCutcheon, each had a house thereon at the time of the conveyance by Mc-Cutcheon, divided from each other, but mutually supported by a thin division wall of only four inches thick.

Some years after, the owner of the south half or part of the ground, extended the front wall of his house to the front line of the lot, prolonging the division line between the two houses, as shown by the line 1-2 on the plat. And about ten years later the owner of the north half or part of the ground likewise extended his house to the front line of the lot, and in so doing he used the wall already extended by the owner of the south half of the ground so separately conveyed. The house as originally built, and subsequently extended, on the 16 feet 8 inches south portion of the ground conveyed by McCutcheon, and nowin the possession of the plaintiffs, was torn down by the plaintiffs, with the purpose of erecting a new building instead thereof, prior to the time of filing the bill in this case. There is no necessity shown for the tearing down and reconstruction of the building on the south side of the wall, except to enable the plaintiffs to enlarge and extend their building. The defendant insists that whatever right of easement the plaintiffs may have had in the wall as means of support to their house "while standing, they no longer have any right therein, and that the wall never, was a party wall, and cannot be used as such.

The plaintiffs in their bill set out their title, according to [12]*12their claim and pretensions, and the facts as they claim them to exist; and they allege as the result of the preceding allegations of their bill, “that notwithstanding the apparent legal title to the strip of ground in controversy is outstanding in the defendant, the plaintiffs are by reason of the long continued adverse possession of themselves and their grantors or predecessors in interest, as in their bill referred to, and by reason of the further fact, now alleged by plaintiffs, that the possession therein referred to was taken and held, and the improvements made by the plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest with the full knowledge of and without objection by defendant or her predecessors in interest, and assented to by them, the actual, legal and beneficial owners, as against all persons whomsoever of the land hereinbefore specifically described; but that, inasmuch as the facts respecting their adverse possession and estoppel of defendant do not appear of record, the apparent legal title, as shown by the record, is outstanding in the defendant, and that such apparent title, while thus outstanding, constitutes a cloud upon plaintiffs’ own actual title, and that its effect is to seriously embarrass them in selling or otherwise disposing thereof, as they are desirous to do, and plaintiffs aver that they are without remedy,” etc. And they pray that, as against the defendant, their title to the part of lot 10, square 423, as claimed and possessed by them, may be quieted, and that they may, as against the defendant, be decreed to be the sole, legal and beneficial owner thereof. It is thus made clear that the object of the bill is to quiet alleged title acquired by adverse possession, and to have such title judicially declared, notwithstanding the apparent legal record title to the strip of ground claimed by the plaintiffs is conceded to be in the defendant. ■

Upon the pleadings and proof, the court below adjudged and decreed as to the rights of the respective parties, plaintiffs and defendant, in the ground upon which the wrall rests, and the wall itself as a division wall; and as to that part of [13]*13the wall extended 33TV feet to the front line of the lot on Seventh street, and designated on the plat as the part 1-2, the court declared and established the same “to be a party wall, subject to the rights and easements therein of the said complainants and defendants as the same do now exist.” From this part of the decree there has been no appeal, and therefore we are not called upon to review it. But the court below proceeded by a distinct clause to adjudge and decree “that as to that part of the said lot ten (10), in square four hundred and twenty-three (423), lying north of the centre of the said party'wall, and the other part of the said lot lying north and west of a line drawn due west to the rear line of the said lot from a point situate thirty-three and one-tenth (33iV) feet west from the line of Seventh street and one hundred and sixteen (116) feet eight (8) inches south from the north line of said square, the relief prayed for in the said bill of complaint, be, and the same is hereby, denied, and the bill of complaint in regard thereto be, and the same is hereby, dismissed, each party paying their own costs.”

It is from this clause or part of the decree that the plaintiffs have appealed.

The plaintiffs insist that there is error in this part of the decree—

1. In not granting the entire relief prayed by the bill

2. In not adjudging the plaintiffs to be the owners in fee of the land covered by their building, and in dismissing the bill of complaint as to a part of such land.

3. In not declaring the walls 2-3 and 3-4 to be party walls, and in not decreeing that the land south of the middle line thereof prolonged to the rear of said lot belongs to the plaintiffs in fee simple.

These alleged errors may be treated together, as embraced under one and the same general consideration.

It is very clear there is no question on the facts of this case, as to rights acquired by mere adverse possession, the one party against the other. The rights of the parties [14]*14depend upon other principles.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 App. D.C. 6, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-shoemaker-cadc-1897.