Oliver v. Thomas

112 N.W.2d 525, 173 Neb. 36, 1961 Neb. LEXIS 149
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1961
Docket35027
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 525 (Oliver v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oliver v. Thomas, 112 N.W.2d 525, 173 Neb. 36, 1961 Neb. LEXIS 149 (Neb. 1961).

Opinion

Yeager, J.

This is an action instituted by John E. Oliver, Robert L. Schmidt and Iris M. Schmidt, husband and wife, and L. Grace Oliver, plaintiffs, against Ned Thomas, Sr., Hazel M. Thomas, Ray Burden, Virgil Plummer, Leo Little, Jacob C. Zitterkopf, Claude Thomas, The Federal Land Bank of Omaha, a corporation, Pan American Petroleum Corporation, George A. Morris, and David J. Pickard, defendants, to quiet title in plaintiffs to certain real estate in Morrill County, Nebraska. The area involved is not particularly described in the pleadings or elsewhere in the record. It is however between land to the north owned by Ned Thomas, Sr., and land to the south owned by John E. Oliver. All of it except a very narrow strip aloiig the north side is between the present-north and south banks of the North Platte River. These plaintiffs claimed the right to have title quieted on the basis of adverse possession.

John E. Oliver claims to be the owner of the area in controversy. Robert L. Schmidt and Iris M. Schmidt assert an interest by reason of a contract of purchase. Presumably L. Grace Oliver is the wife of John E. Oliver. The rights of all other parties plaintiff depend upon what the adjudication shall be as to the plaintiff John E. Oliver, hence when the term plaintiff is used the reference will apply to all parties plaintiff unless separate reference is indicated.

The defendant Ned Thomas, Sr., who was the owner of the immediately adjacent land to the north, denied that the plaintiff was entitled to have title quieted in him, and by cross-petition asserted that he was entitled to have title quieted in him for the reason that the area was accretion to his adjacent land.

Of the other named parties, defendant Pan American *38 Petroleum Corporation was dismissed as a party defendant and is not a party to the proceeding. The rights of the others depend upon the adjudication as to the defendant Ned Thomas, Sr., hence when the term defendant is used the reference will apply to all parties defendant unless separate reference is indicated.

The questions for determination in the case are contained in the following pretrial order: “That the issues in this case be limited to whether or not the plaintiff owns the land and river lying south of the fence described in plaintiff’s petition by adverse possession or the defendant Ned Thomas owns some portion of the area lying south of the fence either by adverse possession or on the basis of a shift of the river boundary line by accretion.”

A trial was had and judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff quieting title to the area described in the decree. Title was quieted in the defendant to a described area, but this is of no consequence since no party in this action has made a claim against it adverse to the title of the defendant. This was not an issuable matter on the trial.

A motion for new trial was duly made by the defendant. This motion was overruled. From the judgment and the order overruling the motion for new trial the defendant has appealed.

As grounds for reversal the defendant has set forth numerous assignments of error. The first of these is in substance that the evidence of the plaintiff was insufficient to sustain a judgment in his favor on his pleaded cause of action. This one will be considered first.

In order to arrive at any conclusion it becomes necessary to indicate as clearly as the record will permit the location of the area involved. This may be done only by reference to other property owned by the plaintiff and by the defendant. This cannot be done with any degree of accuracy on the evidence in the record. It is not described by metes and bounds or any kind of *39 survey; it is not described by monuments within the area or adjacent to it; and it is not described by distances from established monuments farther away. The defendant has described the land in question in his pleadings as the area south of the present fence bounded on the west by extending south at right angles with the centerline of the North Platte River as it existed in 1877 a line 1,392 feet west of the east line of Lot 5 a distance of 500 feet and on the east by extending the east line of Lot 5 south at right angles with the centerline of the North Platte River a distance of 650 feet and on the south by a line connecting the two extended lines. The exact geographical location of none of the named points or lines can be identified. This represented the total area claimed by the defendant in his pleadings and on the trial.

The court by its judgment quieted title in the plaintiff to an area described therein as “all real estate lying south of the fence line A-B-C-D as shown on the plat attached hereto and hereby made a part hereof.” This plat is a copy of the exhibit elsewhere referred to in this opinion. The area to which title was quieted includes the area which the defendant says he is entitled to in his pleadings as well as the area south to the south bank of the river.

The parties have placed in the record an exhibit which discloses authentic information with reference to land a considerable distance to the north of this area and also to the south, but none as to this area going back of the year 1958. It is true that lines appear on the exhibit but the testimony does not, within the legal sense, establish true location. By lines placed upon the exhibit by the witness who made and identified it, it appears that the north bank of the North Platte River was near the north line of the area involved and a short distance north was a fence which had been maintained at this location since 1932. There is evidence that a fence was maintained at this location prior to 1932, but since plaintiff’s *40 cause of action depends upon possession from that date forward it does not appear to require discussion as to earlier dates. The exhibit on its face indicates that by a survey made in 1877 this area was a part of the riverbed at that time, which riverbed extended a great distance north, and south generally to the present south bank of the river. The lines do not exactly coincide but they are at no point far apart.

It is obvious that the location of the north bank of the riverbed had moved south by 1932 since the north bank was near the north line of the area involved in 1932. The present south bank, according to the exhibit, is well to the south of this area. The only inference which the record contains is that the area between these two banks is within the present bed of the North Platte River, that the north bank of the river is in about the same location as it was in 1932, and that the area involved in this litigation is in the northern portion of the riverbed.

There is no complete description of the topography of this or any other portion of the riverbed at this time or since 1932. There is evidence that during the months after the close of the irrigation season it is for the most part covered with water, and that during the other months water for the most part disappears from the surface leaving channels, not clearly defined or described, for the flow of water. There is an island, not clearly described as to area, the size of which has not remained the same over the years. There are channels to the north and south of this island. There is evidence of other islands and sandbars but they are not located or. identified.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 N.W.2d 525, 173 Neb. 36, 1961 Neb. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliver-v-thomas-neb-1961.