Riedesel v. Towne

206 P.2d 747, 66 Wyo. 160, 1949 Wyo. LEXIS 9
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 31, 1949
Docket2433
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 P.2d 747 (Riedesel v. Towne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riedesel v. Towne, 206 P.2d 747, 66 Wyo. 160, 1949 Wyo. LEXIS 9 (Wyo. 1949).

Opinion

*162 OPINION

Riner, Chief Justice.

John K. Riedesel and Lillian E. Riedesel, his wife, as plaintiffs brought a suit to quiet title to certain lands in Albany County, Wyoming, against J. E. Harris and others as defendants in the District Court of that county. All of the defendants other than Harris, though filing an answer in form a general denial, took no part in the trial, and judgment was taken against them accordingly. Harris, through his counsel filed an answer and plaintiff replied thereto. On these pleadings the cause proceeded to trial before the court without a jury with the result that a judgment was entered against Harris, also, quieting title to the lands aforesaid in the plaintiffs. From this judgment Harris alone has brought the cause here for review by direct appeal.

The lands in which Harris by his answer claimed an interest adverse to plaintiffs are:

“The Southwest Quarter (SW%) of the Southwest Quarter (SW%) of Section One (1), and the South Half (S1/^) of the Southwest Quarter (SWj4) of Section Two (2), and the Northeast Quarter (NE*4) of the Northeast Quarter (NE%), and the East Half (E%) of the Southeast Quarter (SE%) of Section Twelve (12), all in Township Seventeen (17) North, Range Seventy-four (74) West of the 6th P.M.”

The material facts so far as they require consideration here are very little if at all in controversy and may be stated as follows:

The lands aforesaid were sold in the year 1922 at an Albany County tax sale for non-payment of taxes. There being no other offers to purchase these lands at this sale, the then County Treasurer sold said lands to Albany County. On October 5, 1926 the Board of County Commissioners of said county conveyed by *163 deed all of its interest in said lands to Lillian E. Rie-desel, one of the plaintiffs herein for the consideration of $226.38. This deed was thereafter on October 8, 1926 duly recorded in the office of the County Clerk and Ex Officio Register of Deeds of Albany County, Wyoming. It appears that one Buntin originally owned these lands and about the year 1919 he gave Riedesel a contract to buy them and the latter went into possession thereof. Thereafter some oil drilling work was commenced in the vicinity and Buntin declined to “go through with his contract.” Riedesel simply stayed on the land and as stated above the tax sale thereafter occurred and ultimately through his wife Lillian they purchased the property from the County as herein-before detailed.

The First Savings Bank and Trust Company of Nashville, Tennessee, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of that state was the owner of the property in question according to the answer filed by Harris and admitted by the reply filed by the plaintiffs but just when it became such owner through transfer from Buntin or others is far from clear. It does appear, however, that this bank was succeeded by the Nashville Trust Company, also of Nashville, Tennessee and that this bank last mentioned undertook for a valuable consideration on June 27, 1940 to transfer by deed all its interest in said lands to J. E. Harris, one of the defendants in the district court aforesaid and appellant herein, said deed being of record in the office of the County Clerk of Albany County in Book 136, page 277.

The plaintiffs base their title to the lands in question upon the County Commissioners’ deed to Mrs. Riedesel issued as above described and also the fact that plaintiffs “have been, and are now in open, continuous, hostile, notorious, and adverse possession of all of said *164 lands” in controversy here; that they have held this possession “for ten years and more next immediately preceding the commencement of this action.”

Plaintiff, John K. RiedesePs pertinent testimony on behalf of the plaintiffs relative to these lands is substantially as follows: That they have had possession of the real property in question under said county deed since the year 1926; that he himself had possession of this land prior to the time of said deed from Albany County under a contract to buy it from the then owner, Buntin, who, as already recounted, declined to perform the contract, but nevertheless Riedesel remained on the land; that the land was thereafter sold by the officers of Albany County under sale for delinquent taxes; that he was in possession of the land at the time the deed was obtained in 1926; that no one else was in possession of the land at that time; that he had exclusive possession of it then and he and his wife have had that ever since; that he has been in possession of these lands since 1919; that he erected improvements upon them after the year 1926; describing these improvements he stated that there is a barn there that is twenty-six feet wide and eighty-two feet long with a hay loft in it; then there is a chicken house that is about sixty feet long and also a cattle shed which he built out of poles with a hay loft in it and slabs over the top of the poles; that it will hold about 150 or 200 head of cattle; that he and no one else has used these buildings and he still uses them; that in exercising this use and possession, he did so believing that he owned the land by virtue of the above mentioned commissioners’ deed; that he claimed the right to this land; that he made his home on this land; the house is not now actually situated on this portion of Section 12 that Mr. Harris claims; that the latter is not claiming RiedesePs house; that Mrs. Riedesel was living with him during all this time since 1919 and *165 also his son Warren; that he has never had any other home.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hudson v. Erickson
216 P.2d 379 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P.2d 747, 66 Wyo. 160, 1949 Wyo. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riedesel-v-towne-wyo-1949.