Robinson v. Leverenz

202 P.2d 517, 185 Or. 262, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 123
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 13, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 P.2d 517 (Robinson v. Leverenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Leverenz, 202 P.2d 517, 185 Or. 262, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 123 (Or. 1949).

Opinion

ROSSMAN, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a decree of the Circuit Court in favor of .the plaintiffs, which holds that they (plaintiffs-respondents) are the owners in fee simple of two parcels of real property which the complaint describes. The suit was instituted to quiet the respondents’ title. The respondents are four..in number. Two of them, Henry N. and Dora D. Robinson, are the parents of Clifford E. Robinson, who, with his wife Laura, are the other two respondents. The appellants, who are husband and wife, own a parcel of real property which is immediately north of the parcels described in the complaint.

The appellants present two assignments of error:

1. “The Court erred in rendering its decree in favor of the plaintiffs and against the defendants.”
2. “The Court erred in rendering a decree that the plaintiffs are the owners of the real property described.”

The following statement contained in the appellants’ brief affords a better impression of the issue submitted by this appeal:

“The possession of plaintiffs, as shown by the *264 evidence, does not establish, title in themselves by adverse possession.”

The properties involved in. this suit are situated in the city of Corvallis. Although the complaint de7 scribes two parcels, the title to only one of them is in dispute — a strip, 100 féet'long, 30 inches wide at its street end and 45 inches , wide at the alley end.' The other parcel which 'the c'omplairit 'describes is 50 by 100 feet in size, immediately south of the disputed strip. The complaint avers that its owners are the-.respondents. The answer, referring to the appellants and to the parcel just mentioned, says:

“They deny that the defendants (appellants) have heretofore or do now claim any right, title, or interest in the property , first described in the complaint, and do hereby disclaim' any and all claim, title or interest thereto, * *

Thus the title to the parcel (50 by 100 feet in size) which lies immediately south of the disputed strip is not claimed by the appellants. Upon that parcel and the adjacent disputed strip, the respondents, Henry N. and Dora D. Robinson, -have made their home since 1926. Immediately to the north of the disputed strip is the home of the appellants. Their deed calls for a. lot 50 by 100. feet in size.. .

- Prom the .foregoing it- is seen that the narrow strip is bounded upon the. south-bya: parcel 50by 100 feet in size which the respondents say they own, and which the appellants do not claim. It is bounded on the north by the home of the appellants. The deeds to both properties describe the properties by metes and bounds; each is 50 by 100 feet in size. If the disputed area belongs to the respondents^ their property is '50 feet, and .30 inches vide in front and 50 feet and 45 *265 inches wide at the rear' If it belongs to the appellants, their lot is 50 by 100 feet in size; but if it does not belong to them, their lot is less than 50 by 100 feet in size to the extent of the disputed strip. The appellants, in order to prove title to the disputed strip, depend upon their deed. The respondents, in support of their claim to title to the disputed area, depend upon adverse possession. They claim that it began not later than 1902.

For many years a fence has stood along the north line of the disputed tract. There also stands a fence along the south line of the respondents’ lot and still another along the alley. The three fences, roughly speaking, assume the form of a IJ. The disputed strip is within the U. To clarify matters, we shall retrace some steps. The respondents claim title to their 50 by 100-foot lot by virtue of the deeds they possess; they claim title to the contested area by adverse possession. A dwelling house stands within the U, and in it, as we have said, the respondents, Henry N. and Dora D. Eobinson, reside. The evidence indicates that they have lived there since 1926, and that the predecessors in interest of the respondent, Henry N. Eobinson, resided there since 1902, with the exception of a short time when tenants lived upon, the property. A dwelling house also stands upon the appellánts’ lot and in it the appellants make their home. The description in their deed includes the disputed strip, and they are entitled to it unless the respondents gained title by adverse possession. The properties of the appellants and of the respondents are separated by the aforementioned fence which runs along the north line of the contested strip — if "that fence is, in fact, the dividing line. If it is, the disputed strip belongs to the respondents.

*266 The respondent, Henry N. Robinson, to whom we shah refer as Mr. Robinson, was 78 years of age when he testified. He swore that he became familiar with the Robinson place in 1900. By the Robinson place, we mean the entire area within the U enclosure just described; that is, the 50 by 100-foot lot, together with the disputed strip. The- witness said that his father purchased the place in January, 1902, and that at that time the dwelling house in which the witness and his wife now reside had already been built. According to him, his father or some member of the latter’s family lived upon the place continuously since 1902,--with the exception of-a short timé when tenants occupied it. Mr. Robinson testified that he and his wife moved upon the property in December, 1926, and have occupied it ever since. .....

We mentioned the fact that a fence stands on the north' line of the disputed strip. According, to Mr. Robinson, a fence, which was built by one E. B. Hammond, stood, as early as February, 1900, at the identical place where the present one stands. It was made of wire and ran from the. street to the alley. Referring to the time when he and his wife, moved upon the property, December, 1926, Mr. Robinson testified:

“There was an old wire fence there, pretty well dilapidated. Some of the. posts had rotted off and some hadn’t, and it was in very bad shape. There was briers growing there in the northwest corner;

We quote further from his testimony:

.“Á. Along in the spring after I moved there in December, I went out and grubbed out the briers and bushes along there "and tore the whole fence out and built the new fence, the o’né’ that is there now. ' ■
*267 “Q. Where did you build it relative to the old fence?
“A. Just as near as I could get it to the old one.
“Q. You would say it was. built on the same line exactly as the old one?
“A. The posts is set exactly where the old posts was set.”

He swore that after he built the new fence in 1927 it was not thereafter “moved one iota” and that it stood at the time he testified upon the same line where he built it in 1927. The one he built was a picket fence. Photographs of the respondents’ house are before us as exhibits. They show a part of the fence, which appears to be substantial and well maintained.

Mr. and'Mrs. William S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 P.2d 517, 185 Or. 262, 1949 Ore. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-leverenz-or-1949.