Roberts v. Quisenberry

242 S.W.2d 26, 362 Mo. 404, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 665
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 9, 1951
Docket42327
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 242 S.W.2d 26 (Roberts v. Quisenberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. Quisenberry, 242 S.W.2d 26, 362 Mo. 404, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 665 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

*406 HYDE, J.

Action to quiet title to a narrow strip of land between the residences of plaintiff's and defendants, which plaintiffs claimed by adverse possession. Defendants asked affirmative relief of decree of title in them. The Court found plaintiffs entitled to a small part of the strip absolutely, and to an easement over another part; and defendants owned the rest of it. Defendants haYe appealed.

The parties own adjoining- lots in Springfield and have their houses on them. Their deeds (made in 1923) come from a common source of title to a tract 131.71 feet wide along the west side of Jefferson Street. Plaintiffs’ deed is for the south 58.79 feet of this tract and defendants’ deed is for the north 72.92 feet. Each have paid» taxes since 1923 on the property to which they have record title. Plaintiffs claim a strip, by adverse possession, along the south side of defendants’ lot, 3 feet wide at the street and 1 Va feet wide at the west end. This strip is about 300 feet long. The parties agree that a correct survey was made showing that plaintiffs’ garage encroached 9 inches north of the true line to which they held record title and that its eaves extended 16 inches farther north. This garage was.built in 1927, 124 feet west of the street and was 20 feet in length. Plaintiffs’ driA^eway had a concrete, apron extending 10 feet west of the sideAvalk Avhich encroached 21/> inches north of the line fixed by their deed. Their diNeAvay from this concrete apron to their garage consisted of two graveled strips with grass between them and on each side. This driveAvay curved slightly to the north so that the north graveled strip encroached north of the line about 12 inches. Plaintiffs also used the area adjoining this graveled strip on the north for getting out of their car and unloading it. They claim to have always mowed it.

Plaintiff's had evidence as to their use of the whole 300 foot strip (mowing, gardening, trimming trees and shrubs) upon which they based their claim of 27 years adA^erse possession. They made their claim to a line starting at a stone, marker on Jefferson Street Avhich was there when they bought the property, and which they always *407 thought marked the north line of the property they bought. The survey showed this spot to be 3 feet north of plaintiffs’ true line. West of their garage, plaintiffs claimed a fence built by Mr. Quisenberry (after plaintiffs purchased their property) which ran from the northwest corner of their lot to the place where they built their garage. (Defendants are Quisenberry’s wife and daughter.) There was no fence from the garage east to the street. Defendants had some conflicting evidence as to what plaintiffs had done to use this strip. However, it is unnecessary to consider this since the Court found against plaintiffs’ claim of ownership, except as to the part of the strip (9 inches by 20 feet) actually covered by the garage, and plaintiffs have not appealed. As tu all of the strip west of the garage, the Court found that plaintiffs had no rights, and adjudged title to be in defendants. As to the rest of the strip (from the street to the west end of the garage) the Court found that plaintiffs had only an easement. This part of the strip' was 145 feet long and 2 feet 1 inch wide; and included the area of the overhang of the eaves of the garage, all of the ar.ea upon which the graveled part of the driveway encroached and some of the area north of it, Avhich plaintiffs used for getting out of and unloading their car.

Defendants’ principal contention seems to be that plaintiffs did not state or shoAV any right to a way of necessity. They stress in their motion for new trial the fact that plaintiffs had plenty of room to make a driveway on the south side of their house. They also point out evidence which showed that the curve to the north in the driveway Avas to avoid scratching plaintiffs’ ear on shrubs growing on the north side of their house. Pictures in evidence shoAV plaintiffs’ house is on higher ground than the driveway and there is a rather high bank along the south side of the driveAvay on which plaintiffs had some shrubs. Defendants say that by cutting these shrubs or removing part of this bank there would be room for plaintiffs’ driveway without encroachment on the land covered by defendants’ deed. However, the Court’s judgment was not based on a way of necessity, and there is no such issue in the case. What the Court adjudged Avas an easement by prescription; and necessity is not the basis for establishing such an easement. In fact it is said: “As a general rule, no matter how long an easement is used as a way by necessity, such use cannot be adverse or confer a prescriptive right, at least while the necessity continues. The possession and use are always referable to the’ right arising from necessity and cannot be made the foundation or ground for the assertion of a higher right.” (17 Am. Jur. 980, Sec. 70; as to ways of necessity generally see 17 Am. Jur. 959, Sec. 48.) “The four essential facts for the plaintiffs to prove in order to sustain their claim to an easement by prescription are, first, user for the prescribed period; second, that the user Avas adverse; third, that it was under a claim of right; fourth, notice to the owner of the user and of its *408 character and of the claims of right.” (Anthony v. Kennard Building Co., 188 Mo. 704, 87 S. W. 921; See also Faulkner v. Hook, 300 Mo. 135, 254 S. W. 48; 17 Am. Jur. 969, Sec. 56; 28 C. J. S. 662, Sec. 18.) As these authorities show, notice may be inferred from the circumstances. and express notice is not necessary. (188 Mo. 1. c. 720.) The evidence here was sufficient to support a finding of all of these elements. Plaintiffs’ claim was to a line «beyond that to which the Court adjudged the right of way; and it was an unequivocal claim to absolute ownership to the line commencing at the old stone marker on Jefferson Street, regardless of where the true line might be. Plaintiffs’ construction of their garage and driveway, and their use of the part of the strip adjoining, was sufficient to support a finding of notice of their claim to the extent to which the Court found for them. We hold that the evidence warranted a finding of an easement by prescription to this part of the strip.

Defendants further contend that plaintiffs’ petition does not state a cause of action for the relief granted. They argue that it was a legal action for absolute title by limitation under Sec. 516.070, R. S. 1949, and say it does not state a cause of action to establish title to a garage encroachment and for an easement of right-of-way. They say that these claims were provisional upon the claim of title to the entire strip. What their argument amounts to is that plaintiffs must be given the full relief they sought or nothing. The petition stated facts as to actual, visible, notorious, hostile and continuous possession under a claim of ownership and use for a garage and driveway. The legal conclusions from these facts stated in the petition do not bind the trial court as to the relief to be awarded. See. 511.160, •R. S. 1949 provides that in rendering judgment for the plaintiff “relief shall not be other or greater than that which he shall have demanded in the petition”; but that “in any other case, the court may grant him any relief consistent with the case made by the plaintiff and embraced within the issues.” Moreover, Sec. 509.500, R. S.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W.2d 26, 362 Mo. 404, 1951 Mo. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-quisenberry-mo-1951.