Peterson v. Paulson

163 P.2d 830, 24 Wash. 2d 166, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 329
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1945
DocketNo. 29554.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 163 P.2d 830 (Peterson v. Paulson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Paulson, 163 P.2d 830, 24 Wash. 2d 166, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 329 (Wash. 1945).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This action grew out of a controversy concerning the rightful ownership of approximately two acres of land. In their complaint, plaintiffs sought to have their alleged title to the land quieted against the asserted claim of the defendants. By cross-complaint, the defendants sought to have the title to the same land quieted in themselves against the claim put forward by the plaintiffs. Upon a trial without a jury, the court entered a decree in favor of the defendants, granting them the relief asked for in their cross-complaint. The plaintiffs appealed.

The land which is here in controversy and certain other lands adjacent thereto are located in section 29, township 9 north, ránge 29 east, W. M., in Benton county, Washington. The Columbia river, in its general southerly course in that region, enters the northwest quarter of the northwest quarter of section 29 at a point on the west line thereof and flows in a southeasterly direction across the section, making its exit therefrom at a point on the east line thereof, near the northeast comer of what normally would be described as the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of the section. This intercurrence of the Columbia river within the normal subdivisions of section 29 produces fractional subdivisions, known, designated, and numbered as “lots.”

■ Lot 2, containing 34.75 acres, constitutes the major part of what normally would be described as the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter of the section and comprises that portion of the quarter-quarter section which lies south of *169 the river. According to a map introduced as an exhibit in the case, and hereinafter reproduced in part, the river becomes a part of the north boundary line of lot 2 at a point about four hundred fifty feet east of the northwest corner of the lot and then proceeds in a southeasterly direction across and beyond the east boundary fine of the section. Immediately west of lot 2, and lying in the same latitude, is a full forty-acre subdivision described as the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 29. Through the southerly portions of these two legal subdivisions runs the Columbia irrigation district canal, extending in an easterly-westerly direction.

Immediately north of the entire north line of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter and also north of the westerly four hundred fifty feet, approximately, of the north line of lot 2, in section 29, lies lot 3. This lot has a triangular shape and comprises in all 14.1 acres. It is bounded on the west by the full length of the west line of what normally would be the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of the section; on the south by the north line of the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter and by the westerly four hundred fifty feet of the north fine of lot 2; and on the north and east by the Columbia river. That portion of lot 3 which lies above, or north of, the westerly four hundred fifty feet of lot 2 and which extends northwardly to the river, comprises about two acres, and is, of course, also triangular in shape. It is this two-acre triangle, hereinafter at times, for convenience, referred to as tract X, which is the immediate subject of this litigation. The exact location of tract X may be better visualized if it is understood that it forms the easterly extremity of lot 3 and fies immediately north of the westerly four hundred fifty feet of lot 2. It may also be noted that this triangular tract X, which is a part of lot 3, lies wholly within the southeast quarter of the' northeast quarter of section 29, while the remainder of lot 3 lies within the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter of that section. Traversing lot 3, including tract X, is a highway which extends generally east and west and runs between Kennewick and Richland.

*170 In order to afford a clearer understanding of the situation encompassed in these various descriptions just given, we shall at this point present the following replica of the map, or plat, which was used upon the trial and upon which the respective negotiations hereinafter referred to concededly were based.

It may be explained that the original map in its entirety showed the whole of section 29, whereas the foregoing replica shows only those portions of the section which normally would be described as the southeast quarter of the northeast quarter, the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter, and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter, or, in other words, the south half of the northeast quarter and the north *171 half of the southeast quarter of section 29. The map as originally introduced in evidence as an exhibit is the only map appearing in the record, and it was expressly agreed by both parties at the trial that there was no dispute regarding the map and that it was “all right.”

The upper diagonal line shown on the map as here reproduced indicates the bank of the Columbia river as it flows from northwest to southeast through that particular area. The three parallel lines next below the diagonal line represent the public highway extending between Kennewick and Richland. The three parallel lines near the bottom of the map represent the irrigation district canal. The heavily shaded triangle, so marked during the trial and referred to herein as “tract X,” comprises the two acres here in litigation. The featheredged rectangle below tract X represents that portion of lot 2 which was included in respondents’ contract and in their original deed, as hereinafter more particularly explained.

Prior to, and in the early part of, April, 1935, the Columbia Irrigation District owned the various subdivisions of land particularly described above. It appears that all of these tracts once constituted a farm which one Roy Draper had formerly purchased from the irrigation district but which, on account of his failure to make the contract payments, had been taken back by the district and had become what is termed “district land.”

On April 9, 1935, the Columbia Irrigation District, being then the owner of the land, and the respondent W. B. Paul-son, who will hereinafter be referred to as though he were the sole respondent, entered into a written contract wherein' the district agreed to sell, and the respondent agreed to purchase, the

“West 14.75 acres of Lot 2, lying North of Canal, Section 29, Township 9 North, Range 29 East W. M.,”

for the sum of $102.68, of which $25.67 was paid in cash and the balance of which was to be paid in three annual installments of $25.67 each, beginning December 31, 1936. The evidence is to the effect, and the trial court in its memoran *172 dum decision found, that at the time this contract was made the manager for the district thought, and represented to the respondent, that lot 2 extended northwardly all the way to the Columbia river; that respondent believed that such was the fact; and that the contract was signed under the belief and with the understanding on the. part of both the respondent and the officers of the district that the contract included the two-acre triangular tract X. That understanding was founded upon a mistake, however, for, as explained above, tract X was not a part of lot 2, but rather of lot 3.

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Bluebook (online)
163 P.2d 830, 24 Wash. 2d 166, 1945 Wash. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-paulson-wash-1945.