Parizek Ex Rel. Greazel v. Klein

68 N.W.2d 299, 246 Iowa 557, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 8, 1955
Docket48613
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 68 N.W.2d 299 (Parizek Ex Rel. Greazel v. Klein) 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
Parizek Ex Rel. Greazel v. Klein, 68 N.W.2d 299, 246 Iowa 557, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349 (iowa 1955).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This appeal really involves a boundary dispute between premises situated in and a part of Out Lot 8 in the east part of Iowa City, Iowa. The Out Lot is bounded on the west by Governor Street, on the south by Davenport Street, and on the east by Woods Addition. A 20-foot alley runs east and west through it and Woods Addition, parallel with and 150 feet north of Davenport Street. The premises involved here front on Davenport Street and extend north to the alley.

Out Lot 8 is one of a series of “out lots”, originally lying along the east side of Iowa City. They were apparently assumed to be 430 feet long- east and west. Out Lot 1 at the southeast corner of the original town was so marked.

The city engineer, a witness for plaintiff, testifies: “The east line of all the Out Lots was the section line * * * but [it] is not parallel to the last street that was laid out because there was a converging there, so they couldn’t all be 430 feet.” He also says Woods Addition was “laid out years ago when they probably had *559 better monuments than we have now.” He says Woods Addition consists of five lots 60 feet wide fronting south on Davenport Street. And he assumes it is “all there” (300 feet east and west) and that the shortage caused by error in locating the section line must be charged against the Out Lots though “it might be true that the section line could have been farther east * * * and over in Woods Addition * * *. I assumed Woods Addition was correct and that its west line was the section line. That is the way it has been assumed for years and years.”

The plats, prepared by this witness and offered by plaintiff, show the total length of Out Lot 8, along the north side of Davenport Street, as 368.5 feet, measuring from its southwest corner (at the northeast corner of the intersection of Governor and Davenport Streets) to a post he assumed to be at the southwest corner of Woods Addition.

He shows one pin 80 feet east, and another 70 feet farther east, of the southwest corner of the Out Lot. The latter marks the southwest corner of the premises of plaintiff’s intestate, Mary M. Ross.

The assistant county engineer also testifies for plaintiff. His plat shows the southeast corner of the Klein premises as 144 feet west of the southeast corner of Out Lot 8 and 224.4 feet east of its southwest corner. That would make the Out Lot 368.4 feet long, a variance from the city engineer’s measurement of only one tenth of a foot.

These measurements also agree in fixing the combined width of the Ross and Klein premises involved here as 74.4 feet.

The premises of plaintiff’s intestate are immediately west of the property owned by defendants Frederick and Jessie Klein. Their titles both stem from a remote common grantor, Rachel L. Ross. It is suggested that she thought her premises were 80 feet wide east and west, whereas, as we have seen, they were only 74.4 or 74.5 feet. At least her children, after her death, assumed the width had been 80 feet.

The mistake probably grew out of language in the deed (1879) from Caleb Quaintance to Rachel’s immediate grantor, Frederick Kramer, which recited: “The SW^ of Out Lot 8, Iowa City, Iowa, South of alley, except 150 feet square in SW corner of said Out Lot extending to- alley. Also commencing at *560 Southeast corner of said SW% of said Out Lot 8, thence North to alley, thence East 36 feet more or less to West line of lands sold by Jacob Bowman to Marshall Keyes, thence South to Davenport Street, thence West to beginning, the intent being to convey all the land 80 feet wide more or less lying between the lands heretofore conveyed by me to D. D. Conrad and the lands conveyed from Bowman to Keyes.” (Emphasis supplied.)

This description certainly did not cover “80 feet wide more or less.” The last part of course describes a width of 36 feet, but its location and the width of the first described part would depend on the total dimension of east and west of the SW% of the Out Lot. There is error also apparent in the reference to “lands sold by Jacob Bowman to Marshall Keyes” since no such deed is shown. Fortunately we need not resolve these discrepancies.

However Kramer’s deed to Rachel L. Ross (1881) purports to convey whatever Kramer received from Quaintance. And in 1903 Rachel conveyed to her son, Ernest H. Ross, “37 feet off the east side of the piece of ground which is described as follows: in the deed of Frederick Kramer to Rachel L. Ross * * * ‘the SW/^ of Out Lot No. 8 * * * south of alley except 150 feet square in southwest corner of said Out Lot extending to alley. Also commencing at southeast corner of SW^ of said Out Lot 8, thence North to alley, thence East 36 feet more or less to West line of land sold by Jacob Bowman to Marshall Keyes, thence South to Davenport Street, thence West to place of beginning * * *.’ ” We have inserted single quote marks to identify the quotation from the Kramer deed to Rachel. The deed from Rachel to Ernest is the foundation of the Klein title here. Plaintiff’s intestate acquired only what Rachel retained after that deed was executed.

A plat might make the situation more understandable to the legal profession generally, but we trust the written descriptions will suffice for our purpose here.

The plaintiff prayed that title of his intestate be quieted in the premises described as follows:

“Commencing 150 feet East of the Southwest corner of Out Lot 8, Iowa City, Iowa, according to the recorded plat thereof; thence East 43 feet, more or less, to the West Line of the land sold *561 to Ernest H. Ross, by deed recorded in Book 90, page 353, Deed Records of Johnson County, Iowa; thence North 150 feet, more or less, to the South line of the alley running East and West through said Out Lot 8; thence West along the South line of the said alley to a point due North of place of beginning; thence South to beginning, all located in Iowa City, Johnson County, Iowa.”

The trial court so decreed except that the claimed width of 43 feet was reduced to 41 feet. Only defendants Frederick and Jessie Klein appeal.

I. Since the titles of both plaintiff’s intestate and the Kleins are from a common source, we do not inquire as to the validity of Rachel Ross’s title nor as to the actual width of her premises when she executed to her son, Ernest H. Ross, the deed from which the Klein title stems. It is clear the descriptions in the deed to Rachel, as recorded, did not show all the land intended to be conveyed. The deeds from Quaintance to Kramer and from Kramer to Rachel L. Ross were obviously intended to convey what remained after certain tracts had been sold off on both sides and erroneously assumed the width to be 80 feet. Subsequent surveys establish that only 76.4 feet remained.

The deed from Rachel to her son described “37 feet off the east side of the piece of ground which is described as follows: [repeating the language of the Kramer deed].” Ernest H. Ross subsequently conveyed to his wife, Minnie: “The East one foot of the SW/^ and the West 36 feet of the SE% of Out Lot 8” and in 1934 Minnie filed an “Affidavit of Possession and Homestead” using this later description.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 N.W.2d 299, 246 Iowa 557, 1955 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parizek-ex-rel-greazel-v-klein-iowa-1955.