Prudente v. Nechanicky

367 P.2d 568, 84 Idaho 42, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 232
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1961
DocketNo. 8997
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 367 P.2d 568 (Prudente v. Nechanicky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prudente v. Nechanicky, 367 P.2d 568, 84 Idaho 42, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 232 (Idaho 1961).

Opinion

SMITH, Chief Justice.

The record variously designates a certain structure as a boathouse, fioathouse or houseboat. Except where otherwise indicated we shall refer to it as a houseboat.

Respondents brought this action to quiet title to Lots 20 to 25, inclusive, in Central Addition to the City of St. Maries, alleging that they hold title thereto by virtue of a Benewah County tax deed executed and delivered April 20, 1959, but that appellants claim an interest in a certain “boathouse” or “fioathouse” purchased by respondents, assessed or taxed as real property, situate on and appurtenant to Lot 20.

Appellants by their answer disclaimed any interest in the described lots, but claim the houseboat, alleging that it was located partly on Lot 20 and partly on the adjacent Lot 19; they denied that the structure is appurtenant to the real property, alleging that it is personal property, and that re1 spondents secured no title thereto by their tax deed.

Appellants then affirmatively alleged that in 1958 they purchased the houseboat, in a dilapidated condition, tipped over on Lot 19, and that the owner of that lot permitted placement of the structure thereon; that they repaired and improved it to a value in excess of $1200; also that it is [45]*45placed on logs and so constructed that it floats on water. Appellants offered to do equity hy payment of reasonable rental for any time the structure may have occupied a portion of Lot 20.

Appellants, by supplemental answer, alleged that during the spring of 1960, due to the high waters of the adjacent St. Joe River, the houseboat floated off and away from, and no longer was located on any part of respondents’ land.

The trial court, sitting without a jury, found in favor of respondents and entered judgment and decree quieting title in them to the described lots and to the houseboat. Thereafter, appellants appealed from the judgment and decree and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The record shows that March 14, 1941, Oscar Oquist, then owner, quitclaimed the described Lots 20 to 25, inclusive, “together with the boathouse” situate thereon to Isaie Lahaye who, May 5, 1941, quitclaimed said described properties to Marguerite Nelson; that Marguerite Nelson and Sam Nelson, September 10, 1952, quitclaimed the same to Loren E. Forsberg. Next, by ■County Treasurer’s tax deed, dated January 16, 1957, for the consideration of $9.58 delinquent taxes, Benewah County took title to the described lots “and Houseboat.” Benewah County, April 20, 1959, by tax deed conveyed to respondents the described lots for a total consideration of $150, but made no mention in such deed of a float-house, boathouse, or houseboat; nor did the county theretofore advertise that any such structure was to be sold by the county at the tax sale.

The testimony shows that sometime after 1952 Mr. and Mrs. Forsberg transferred the land and the houseboat to Carl M. Buell, who was performing legal work for Forsberg. This transaction also was by quitclaim deed which Mr. Buell lost or misplaced. He remembered that previously he had prepared quitclaim deeds for the land but always had set out the houseboat separately, in addition to the legal description of the lots of land.

In 1958, Mr. Buell sold the houseboat to Clara Nechanicky, one of the appellants. This transaction is evidenced by Mrs. Nechanicky’s bank check to Buell, dated January 14, 1958, for $20; which cleared the bank the next day; on the face of the check is written “Pay’t in full boathouse.”

Buell didn’t think the houseboat was worth any more than $20 because of its deplorable condition. One witness, acquainted with the houseboat at that time, stated it was worthless except for the logs upon which it floated. Appellants after acquiring the houseboat rebuilt it and thereby enhanced its value to $1400.

The trial court found that in January 1958 the houseboat was tipped over and-laying on its side on the described Lots 17, 18 or [46]*4619, adjacent to Lot 20, it having been removed from Lot 20 by the waters of St. Joe River. That appellants purchased the houseboat from Carl M. Buell, paying $20 therefor although Buell did not have good title thereto; that appellants righted the houseboat, substantially repaired and improved it, and moored it at a place on, designated by and with the permission of the owner of Lot 19. That such structure is placed on logs, and floats during times of sufficient depths of the waters of St. Joe River; that appellants had no knowledge that respondents owned the lots which they claim, but assumed that one Jones owned the land, whereas Benewah County owned it, or a part on which the houseboat was placed.

■ Appellants assign error of the trial court in failing to decree them to be the owners of the houseboat; in finding that the houseboat was assessed as part of the realty; that its title passed to Benewah County in 1957 by tax deed; that the county conveyed it to respondents by county deed April 20, 1959, and that appellants were not the owners.

Appellants claim the houseboat as personal property. Respondents claim it as part of the real property conveyed to them in 1959 by the county’s deed.

Appellants’ arguments basically classified are:

First: That the county could tax the houseboat only as personal property and thus could execute on it only as personal property; that therefore it could not be included with the land in the tax sale.

Second: That even though the county might tax the houseboat as real property, nevertheless in fact it is personal property not affixed to the land, and therefore its title did not pass with the land or at least not by virtue of the tax deed.

I.C. § 49-218 sets out the schedule of annual fees to be paid a county assessor for licensing motor and sailboats. I.C. § 49-219 provides, “The license fees imposed by this act upon boats and motors thereof shall be in lieu of all taxes thereon,” and exempts from license requirements other classifications of boats by the following subsection:

“(c) That all boats not required to be or not licensed hereunder shall be assessed and taxed as personal property, the same as other personal property is taxed in the state of Idaho.”

Webster’s New International Dictionary, 2nd ed., defines houseboat as “a covered boat used as a dwelling, esp. a large flat bottomed boat with a superstructure much like a house * *

In Nagel v. People, 229 Ill. 598, 82 N.E. 315, the Illinois court held that a houseboat on a beach can properly be called a “water craft.”

[47]*47Fulton v. President, etc., of Ins. Co. of North America, (D.C.N.Y.), 127 F. 413, 416, involved insurance on a houseboat which throughout the opinion was referred to as a “boat.” The court, in defining “houseboat” stated, “A boat fitted up as a house, and commonly more or less resembling one in form and arrangements, for permanent or temporary habitation.”

Those definitions indicate that a houseboat is considered to be in the nature of a water craft, rather than real property or appurtenant thereto.

?Moreover, for the purpose of taxation the statute does not contemplate that a houseboat be licensed but rather, that it be assessed and taxed as personal property.

Respondents contend that the houseboat was a fixture or improvement situate on the lots, and that regardless how taxed, it remains real property and title thereto was conveyed by the county’s deed.

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Related

In re Ryerson
519 B.R. 275 (D. Idaho, 2014)
Spencer v. Jameson
211 P.3d 106 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2009)

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Bluebook (online)
367 P.2d 568, 84 Idaho 42, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prudente-v-nechanicky-idaho-1961.