Mount v. Curran

631 P.2d 496, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 518
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1981
Docket4872
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 631 P.2d 496 (Mount v. Curran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mount v. Curran, 631 P.2d 496, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 518 (Ala. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a grant of partial summary judgment on an adverse possession claim. We reverse.

An action to quiet title to a tract of land in Fairbanks was brought by Mary Jane Curran, Thomas Curran, and the Parrish Co., their successor in interest. Curran alleged that she was the record title holder and owner in fee simple of Lots 6, 7A, and 7B, Block 95, of the Fairbanks townsite, as laid out in the survey known as the Robe Map of 1909. 1

James and Helen Mount, owners of Lot 8 (an adjacent lot), answered that portions of these lots (6, 7A, and 7B) were theirs by right of adverse possession. The claim was based on the Mounts' occupancy of the disputed portions since 1978, and occupancy before that time by their predecessor in interest, Simeon Bulavski, who owned the property from 1985 to 1978. The 1978 conveyance of Lot 8 to the Mounts from Si-meon Bulavski described Lot 8 by metes and bounds, and this description results in an overlap with Lots 6, 7A and 7B as claimed by Curran and described in the Robe Map. 2

Parrish Co. moved for partial summary judgment on its claim as to ownership of Lot 7A. The history of that particular portion differs from that of Lots 6 and 7B in that 7A was acquired from its then-record *498 owner, one Harry Bisoff, by the City of Fairbanks on February 2, 1962, following foreclosure on a tax lien. The City held the property until 1978; then it sold Lot 7A to the partnership of "Curran and Hodges." 3 Parrish Co.'s basis for summary judgment was that, even conceding actual occupancy of the disputed portions by the Mounts and their predecessor in interest (Bulavski) since 1986, the intervention of the tax foreclosure would defeat the adverse possession claim. 4

Following argument and briefing, the superior court ruled that, as a matter of law, the Mounts had no claim to Lot 7A. 5 The Mounts moved to set aside the partial summary judgment, submitting various materials in support of the motion. The superior court denied the motion and this appeal by the Mounts followed.

As noted above, it is stipulated for purposes of this appeal that Bulavski openly and hostilely occupied the disputed portions of land from 1986 on. Counsel for the Mounts has awkwardly framed the issue of the 1962 tax foreclosure in terms of whether Bulavski should be deemed to have been the owner against whom the taxes should have been assessed. This issue we regard as irrelevant. The question is whether the City by its foreclosure on Bisoff's land could obtain that interest in the disputed portions which Bisoff had, by stipulation, already lost by adverse possession to Bulavski. We think not.

This conclusion finds support in the text of AS 84.25.080, which pertains to validating tax deeds. Of particular significance is section (c), which provides:

The deed, when executed, is sufficient to convey all of the right, title or interest of the delinquent owner or a person in privity with him in the real property sold to the purchaser at the sale. 6

The City's tax deed thus conveyed all of Bishoff's interest, but this did not, as of the time of the tax foreclosure, include those portions already obtained by Bulavski by adverse possession.

Case law from other jurisdictions also supports this conclusion. In DeRosa v. Spaziani, 142 N.Y.S.2d 839, 844 (N.Y.Sup.1955), *499 the court held that foreclosure of a tax lien against the record owner of property, a strip of which was adversely possessed by a neighbor, "did not cut off the title by adverse possession to the land occupied by the encroachment which already had fully vested in plaintiff's [adverse occupant's}] predecessors in title."

Palm Orange Groves, Inc. v. Yelvington, 41 So.2d 883 (Fla.1949), reaches a similar result. There again, there was apparently a discrepancy between the boundaries as used by the occupants and the boundaries as described in the land records. The Yelv-ingtons, upon acquiring one lot by obtaining a tax deed, claimed that their neighbor, Palm Orange Groves, was using part of the lot described in the Yelvingtons' tax deed. The court held that, since Palm Orange Groves had been in possession of the disputed area for forty to sixty years, its claim of ownership prevailed: "The claim of [the adverse possessor] as to the land in question is superior to [the tax deed holder's] paper title ... [and] to the tax lien of the county and state ...." Id. at 885. Further authority for this position is given in the footnote. 7

This conclusion renders it unnecessary for us to address the other points put forward by the Mounts. 8 The case must be remanded to the superior court for determination of whether the presumption, stipulated for purposes of this appeal, is an accurate one-i. e., whether Bulavski in fact occupied the property openly and hostilely from 1986 until the time of the tax foreclosure. 9

The decision granting summary judgment is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

MATTHEWS, J., not participating.
1

. The parties apparently have located no copies of the original Robe Map itself. The Map was reproduced by Karl Theile, United States Surveyor General, in 1922.

2

. The dispute seems to be grounded in an ancient discrepancy between the 1909 survey and the boundaries as recognized and utilized by the occupants, shown by fences on the lots. It was apparently this same discrepancy which led to the litigation in Ringstad v. Grannis, 159 F.2d 289 (9th Cir. 1947), appeal after remand, 171 F.2d 170 (9th Cir. 1948). However, as Curran points out, that case is of no relevance to the specific question here presented.

3

. From Curran and Hodges, the property passed into the Estate of Thomas E. Curran, Jr., of which Mary Curran is the executrix. The property was subsequently sold to the Parrish Co.

4

, At the time of foreclosure, former § 16-1-125r, ACLA 1949, read:

Title of city.

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631 P.2d 496, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mount-v-curran-alaska-1981.