Scully v. Squier

90 P. 573, 13 Idaho 417, 1907 Ida. LEXIS 57
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 90 P. 573 (Scully v. Squier) 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
Scully v. Squier, 90 P. 573, 13 Idaho 417, 1907 Ida. LEXIS 57 (Idaho 1907).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, J.

This is an action to prevent alleged encroachments on D street in the city of Lewiston. The appellant as plaintiff brought this action against the respondents, alleging that they were encroaching upon said D street, and charging them with having taken for their private use approximately four feet off the south side of said street and of extending their buildings over and upon said four feet of land wrongfully.

The nature of this action is a suit in equity to abate a nuisance alleged to be a public nuisance, damaging to the public as well as to the plaintiff’s private rights, and praying that the same be abated and removed, and that an injunction be issued restraining and prohibiting defendants and each of them from encroaching upon said street and for a mandatory injunction against the defendants, and to restore said street to its width as claimed to have been established by the official survey of E. B. True, to wit, eighty feet.

. The defendants deny any encroachment upon said street, and allege affirmatively the incorporation of the city of Lewiston, surveying and platting of the city long prior to the said True survey; that according to said original plat and survey, the lots in question were fifty feet in length north and south, except where they widened at the bend in E street (said E street is also called Main street and Montgomery street); that about the year 1874, and long after the [423]*423rights of the defendants and their predecessors were vested to the premises in controversy, the townsite of Lewiston was entered by the mayor, Henry W. Stainton, under the federal townsite act; that the defendants and their predecessors in interest were, long prior to 1874, in the actual occupancy, the use and enjoyment of the premises in controversy, which they were enjoying at the time of the commencement of this suit, on which premises they are now attempting to erect the three-story brick buildings referred to in the complaint; that a patent was issued by the United States to the mayor as trustee, and thereafter the official survey was made; that said survey was ordered under the federal and territorial laws; that the declaratory statement therefor was No. 39, and was made in the United States Land Office at Lewiston, November 21, 1871, by Levi Ankeny in trust for the inhabitants of the city of Lewiston, claiming settlement in 1861; that cash entry was made June 6, 1874, therefor by said Henry W. Stainton in trust; that said True was employed to make the survey and was commanded as follows: “To so adjust the said plat as to conform to the .condition of the improvements of and occupation of the lands affected thereby, and the mayor-trustee was authorized, empowered and required to make and deliver to the bona fide occupants of such land described in the patent, good and sufficient deeds in fee simple, according to their respective interests, and for that purpose was authorized to carry the act into effect”; that in making said survey, more especially the survey of the south line of said D street, the said True did not pay regard to or attention to the several use and uses of the land as the same was then occupied by the inhabitants of the city of Lewiston, and more especially did not pay any attention to the quantity of land then used and occupied by the defendants and their predecessors in interest, and that said True did not conform said D street as it was known and used prior to said survey, nor did he pay due or any regard to the actual use, occupancy and improvements of the said lots; that the south line of said D street, as surveyed and delineated by said True, cut several feet off the north end of [424]*424the lots of the various inhabitants of Lewiston, which lots had a frontage on D street, and so cut off the lots in controversy owned by these defendants and their predecessors; that said street as surveyed by said True- crossed and interfered with buildings then standing on the same, and attempted to devest certain vested rights; that said True did not conform D street to the use of lands nor did he make D street, as marked on his map or plat, conform to or coincide with the actual south line thereof as the same had been and then was used and treated as a public street; that thereafter and after the approval of the said True survey, such steps were taken that in many instances- the plat and survey were corrected and changed, and that notwithstanding the erroneous work of said True, the various citizens still continued in the actual use and occupancy of their said lands, and the predecessors of defendants did the same as to the lots involved in this case and which are owned and possessed by them, and that such claim was by occupancy, buildings and improvements, continued from the first occupancy, thence hitherto, and that the land involved, being ■ about four feet on the north end of said lots, never at any time, nor at all, was used or occupied as a street, but was used and occupied by defendants and their predecessors; that after True had made his plat, it was amended, and the defendants aver that the correct south line thereof is now and was by such amendment shown in red ink, and that the red ink line conformed to the true south line and ,to the several uses and occupancy of the lands involved; that respondent Moxley owned lot 3 in said block 24, having an area of 1250 square feet, both prior to and after said True survey, but that said True gave it only 1173 square feet; that lot 2 in said block as shown by said True survey contained but 1131 square feet, whereas long prior to the said survey and at the time thereof and since, the said lot has in truth and in fact contained 1250 square feet; that the difference between 1250 square feet and 1131 square feet is the strip of approximately four feet wide by twenty-five feet in length which appellant seeks to enjoin the respondent Squier from [425]*425holding; that snch lot as claimed by the said Squier has been actually covered by a building for more than thirty-five years last past, and was so occupied by said building long prior to the survey of True; that respondent Moxley obtained title to lot 3, said block, by direct deed from Henry D. Stainton, mayor-trustee, and that the plat of the True survey and the size of this lot as stated by him were amended prior to the recordation of said plat and that True’s survey gave said lot only 1136 square feet, but the same with an amendment was deeded to said Moxley by said mayor-trustee, and the strip involved herein is the amendment which said mayor deeded to Moxley.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 573, 13 Idaho 417, 1907 Ida. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scully-v-squier-idaho-1907.