Schlossnagle v. Kolb

54 A. 1006, 97 Md. 285, 1903 Md. LEXIS 145
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 8, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 A. 1006 (Schlossnagle v. Kolb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schlossnagle v. Kolb, 54 A. 1006, 97 Md. 285, 1903 Md. LEXIS 145 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Jones, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for Garrett County in a case of trespass quare clausum fregit. The action was instituted in that Court by the appellee against the appellant for an alleged trespass upon a tract of land called" Fried-land,” the title to, and possession of which the appellee claimed to be in him. The appellant took defense on warrant; and the evidence in connection with the return made under the warrant, *286 shows little or no dispute about the facts which miist control the decision of the case. At the conclusion of the testimony the appellant asked of the Court two instructions that related to the right of recovery against him. These having been rejected by the trial Court he excepted. The exception thus taken presents the only question which the record brings up.

It appears from the proofs that in 1840 a patent issued from the State of Maryland to George Templeman and David Stewart for the tract of land “Friedland” to which the controversy here relates. In regular course of devolution through sundry mesne conveyances the paper title to this land became vested in the appellee. It was conveyed to him by deed dated the 30th day of March, 1896, from Margaret Sturgis and Russell Sturgis her husband, which was duly recorded, and under which it appears, he immediately went into possession. The locus in quo of the trespass alleged is embraced within the lines of the patent for “Friedland and of the appellee’s deed. •“Friedland,” as patented, contained two hundred and one-fourth acres of land. There were no enclosures around the tract and none of the parties through whom the title passed in course of devolution to the appellee ever lived upon or actually occupied, in person, any part of the same; but the land had been duly assessed to the parties under whom the appellee claims, and the taxes thereon were paid by them before, and by him since, he bought it. In 1874 John W. Fike obtained a patent from the State for a tract of land-by the name of “Fike’s Venture,” which consisted of three hundred and sixteen acres, and together with other land, embraced within its lines all of the land covered by the patent for “Friedland.” In 1871 Christian Fike, father of John W. Fike, had obtained a warrant from the Land Office and upon this a certificate of survey, locating “Fike’s Venture,” but did not get out a patent. This location was identical with the location of the same land in •the patent issued to John W. Fike in 1874 except that this patent.along its eastern boundary, which was identical with the eastern boundary of “Friedland,” included a strip of land not embraced within the lines of the location made in the cer *287 tificate of survey of 1871. Christian Fike entered upon this land and built a house and erected a sawmill on Bear Creek, as shown upon the plats. He died before obtaining a patent and by his will, dated in 1872 and probated in 1873, he devised to his son, John W. Fike, “a certain tract of land lying on Bear Creek formerly vacant but recently known as my (his) sawmill property, containing one hundred and fifty acres more or less.” The buildings erected by Christian Fike were within the lines of the patent for “Fike’s Venture” subsequently obtained by John W. Fike and of the certificate of survey made prior thereto for his father; but neither the buildings, nor any enclosures in connection with them were within the lines of “Friedland.”

It was in evidence that in 1876, John W. Fike gave to the appellant a paper under which the latter claims to have entered into possession of land described in a deed subsequently executed to him by Fike on the 3rd day of January, 1878. This deed embraced within its outlines that part of “Fike’s Venture” upon which the sawmill and house had been built, and also, besides other land within the patent for “Fike’s Venture,” all that part of the tract of land covered by the patent for “Friedland,” which lay within the lines of the certificate of survey made in 1871 for Christian Fike. It contained, however, an exception from the grant as follows : “excepting * * eighty acres heretofore sold to Catherine Geiss, also thirty-one acres and 132 perches sold to Michael Harden.” The land referred to as sold to Catherine Geiss is described in a deed to her from A. J. Fike administrator of John W. Fike which is dated on the 4th day of December, 1884, and was recorded on the 21st of February, 1885. This deed, with other land, includes a small part of “ Friedland,” and recites that a deed was executed to Catherine Geiss on the third day of January, 1878, by John W. Fike for the land therein described ; but that through negligence this last-named deed was never delivered to her and. was never recorded. It does not appear just when her occupancy or possession began ; but she and her husband, William Geiss, were on the 17th day of *288 December, 1884, in occupancy of a part of the land described in her deed which lay within.the bounds of “ Friedland.” The land referred to as sold to Michael Harden is described in a deed to him from John W. Fike bearing date January 3rd, 1878, but not recorded until November 10th, 1892, and lies wholly within the lines of “ Friedland.” In December, 1884, he had cleared and was in occupancy of a part of this land.

In addition to the enclosures of parts of “ Friedland ” in the occupancy of Geiss and Harden there was one by Henry Kolb which covered a part of “ Friedland” that lay within the lines of the appellant’s deed and also a part of the strip of land on the eastern boundary of that tract which was not included in the bounds of said deed. Kolb had no paper title, and how he first came into occupancy of the land does not appear in the evidence. He testified that in 1876 the appellant came to him with two men who, he (appellant) told him were owners of the land and wanted to sell it to him (Kolb); and proposed that he and appellant should buy it in partnership ; that after this he (Kolb) was in possession of part of the land and cleared it himself; that he “held it under somebody—Stewart was one of them; ” that “ he found it out from the Land Office ; ” that he “ never entered the land under any agreement” with Fike and “ never made any agreement with Fike in reference to the timber; ” that “ later he cleared about an acre ; ” and that he “ began clearing in 1858 and kept on until Fike ran off the land.”

With the exception of the improvements and enclosures which have been noticed all the land patented as “ Fike’s Venture” was wild, uncultivated and uninclosed. There was testimony on behalf of the appellant that he and his grantor had cut timber on the land, “ Fike’s Venture ; ” had pastured it; had made sugar from sugar trees on it; and had kept off trespassers. Some of these acts were done upon “Friedland,” but do not appear to have had special reference to assertion of title to or possession of, that tract as distinct from Fike’s Venture,” or as a distinct part thereof; but to have been done indiscriminately as respects the two tracts. Land by the *289 name of “ Fike’s Venture ” was assessed to the appellant’s grantor and taxes were paid accordingly by both the appellant and his grantor.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 1006, 97 Md. 285, 1903 Md. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schlossnagle-v-kolb-md-1903.