Pearson v. City of Guttenberg

245 N.W.2d 519
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 22, 1976
Docket2-57057
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 245 N.W.2d 519 (Pearson v. City of Guttenberg) 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
Pearson v. City of Guttenberg, 245 N.W.2d 519 (iowa 1976).

Opinion

RAWLINGS, Justice.

Plaintiffs, Charles and Abbie Millham, appeal from trial court adjudication denying their proprietary claim in a quiet title action. We modify and remand with directions.

March 8, 1972, proceedings were commenced below by six homeowners seeking to quiet their respectively asserted titles to residential property located in the east half of block 96 in Guttenberg, a northeast Iowa community. Block 96, located atop a bank or bluff in the eastern part of Guttenberg, overlooks the Mississippi River.

By joint petition said homeowners sought to extinguish defendant’s right to a strip of land lying between their residential tracts and the ordinary high water mark. Four of the original action-initiating parties have abandoned their appeals to this court. We therefore confine our review to Millhams’ (plaintiffs’) action against defendant municipality.

These plaintiffs allege they “are the absolute and unqualified owners in fee simple” of:

“The North Forty (40) feet of Lot Three (3); and the South Twenty-eight (28) feet of Lot Four (4) in Block Ninety-six (96); also the area, if any, which lies between said property and the ordinary high water mark on the westerly bank of the *522 Mississippi River; all m the Town (now City) of Guttenberg, County of Clayton, State of Iowa.” (emphasis supplied).

The “area, if any”, italicized in the above description, is the subject matter of this litigation. Stated otherwise, plaintiffs contend the strip of land located between their property and the river’s edge belongs to them because (1) it is a record title part of block 96, or (2) their right thereto is established by continuous possession and occupancy vis-a-vis municipal abandonment. Under either theory, plaintiffs would be riparian owners. On the other hand defendant insists the eastern boundary of block 96 is a dedicated (although unopened) public street as established by the original Guttenberg plat.

In 1847, Clayton county surveyor John M. Gay surveyed the town. A plat was attend-antly filed and duly recorded in 1848. That instrument shows block 96 bordered on the east by a strip of land dedicated for public use as “Water Street” and a “Publick Landing”. This is a sketch of the area according to said 1848 plat:

[[Image here]]

A casual examination of the foregoing diagram reveals block 96 does not extend eastward to the river. Plaintiffs contend, however, the narrow tract designated “Water Street — Publick Landing” has been abandoned by defendant. They further direct our attention to a second plat made in 1905 (discussed infra) which allegedly establishes the water’s edge as the east boundary of block 96.

November 29, 1973, e city is not estopped to claim the land in question; (2) it has neither abandoned nor otherwise forfeited title thereto; (3) the “official” plat referred to in plaintiffs’ chain of title is the 1848 John M. Gay plat, which has never been vacated despite existence of the conflicting 1905 plat; thus (4) the eastern boundary of block 96 is the line so designated in the 1848 By decree enterec trial court held: (1) t *523 plat. Trial court thereby reaffirmed municipal ownership of the contested tract, even though four homes in block 96 (including a portion of the Millham residence) extend beyond the 1848 plat boundary line, i. e., upon land here in dispute.

Millhams’ contentions on appeal are essentially twofold. They first assert ownership of the contested premises by virtue of the 1905 Schecker plat. In final analysis, this contention is one of ownership by record title. Alternatively, plaintiffs maintain defendant is equitably estopped to deny their claimed ownership of land lying between the record title property held by them and the ordinary high water mark.

These contentions will be entertained in the order presented.

I. “Because the case stands in equity, our review is de novo. We accordingly give weight to, but are not bound by, trial court’s findings. See Iowa R.Civ.P. 334, 344(f)(7).” Rector v. Alcorn, 241 N.W.2d 196, 199 (Iowa 1976).

RECORD TITLE OWNERSHIP

II. Noticeably the 1848 plat clearly established “Water Street” as the eastern boundary of block 96. In 1905, however, another or second plat was made pursuant to a survey by Charles Schecker. Plaintiffs insist the latter shows (1) the city abandoned Water Street along block 96, and (2) the eastern boundary of that block became the water’s edge.

As a preface to our consideration of this contention, a more detailed map of block 96 is set forth, infra [see p. 524]. Based upon the 1905 Schecker plat, this diagram shows block 96 is bordered on the east by two irregular wavy lines, labeled “High Bank of Mississippi” along the upper (northern) part of the drawing. An ancillary dispute as to the effect of such label is later resolved. The thatched area represents plaintiffs’ property as determined by trial court. To the right (east) thereof is the disputed tract, measuring about 68 feet, north to south. For reasons later disclosed land located between the 1848 plat boundary line and the heavier wavy line is denoted “upland tract”. The remainder of the disputed strip, represented by space between the two irregular lines, is labeled “lowland tract”.

III. The 1905 Schecker plat is the sine qua non of plaintiffs’ claimed record title ownership. All deeds comprising their chain of title describe the property conveyed “as designated in the recorded plat thereof”, or by similar words of incorporation. Millhams contend “the recorded plat thereof”, referred to in all such title instruments since 1905, relate to the Schecker plat. But defendant maintains such references in all of plaintiffs’ chain of title instruments are to the 1848 plat, including those executed after filing of the Schecker plat. It is attendantly urged by defendant the latter plat is invalid because of noncompliance with certain statutory procedures governing its recordation.

Resolution of this issue requires a sequential determination of the various defects to which defendant alludes.

A. First, defendant offered evidence tending to show the Schecker plat was .never actually recorded. Plaintiffs’ testimony, including Guttenberg Town Council Minute Book entries from 1903 to 1905 and numerous notations on the first page of the Schecker plat itself, strongly suggest the contrary. Indeed, the recorder’s certificate endorsed thereupon is prima facie evidence the document was in fact properly recorded. See Thompson v. Anderson, 94 Iowa 554, 557, 63 N.W. 355 (1895).

Despite the fact the county assessor never officially used the 1905 plat and same was not officially indexed in the county recorder’s office we assume, arguendo, it was recorded in September 1905. As later demonstrated, however, this alone does not per se aid plaintiffs’ cause.

*524 [[Image here]]

*525 B.

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Bluebook (online)
245 N.W.2d 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearson-v-city-of-guttenberg-iowa-1976.