Seattle Factory Sites Co. v. Saulsberry

229 P. 10, 131 Wash. 95, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 724
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1924
DocketNo. 18540
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 229 P. 10 (Seattle Factory Sites Co. v. Saulsberry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seattle Factory Sites Co. v. Saulsberry, 229 P. 10, 131 Wash. 95, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 724 (Wash. 1924).

Opinion

Parker, J.

The plaintiffs, Seattle Factory Sites Company, and others, commenced this action in the superior court for King county against the defendants, George W. Saulsberry, C. V. A. Mattson and others, under the provisions of § 947, Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. C. § 7412], reading as follows:

“Whenever the boundaries of lands between two or more adjoining proprietors shall have been lost, or by time, accident, or any other cause shall have become obscure or uncertain, and the adjoining proprietors [96]*96cannot agree to establish the same, one or more of said adjoining proprietors may bring his civil action in equity, in the superior court for the county in which such lands, or part of them, are situated, and such superior court, as a court of equity, may,- upon such complaint, order such lost or uncertain boundaries to be erected and established and properly marked.”

A decree is sought establishing the boundaries between each and all of the tracts of shore lands owned severally by each of the numerous plaintiffs and defendants abutting on their respective uplands on and around a cove or bay at the southerly end of Lake Washington. Such proceedings and trial as prescribed by the statute relating to such controversies were had, resulting in a decree of the superior court establishing the boundaries‘between each of the tracts of shore land of the several parties to the action, from which the defendants Saulsberry and Mattson have appealed to this court.

The facts as alleged in the complaint, so far as we need here notice them, may be summarized as follows: The lands in question are a large number of tracts of shore lands of Lake Washington lying in a cove or bay with irregularly curved shores between two projecting headlands at the southerly end of the lake. Each of the numerous parties to the action separately owns one or more of the several tracts of shore land under separate conveyances from the state of Washington. None of the shore lands so owned by appellants directly joins any of the shore lands owned by the plaintiffs. It is alleged in the complaint:

“XV.
“That as shown by the state deeds conveying said second class shore lands to plaintiffs and defendants respectively, or their predecessors in interest, the same did not define, or undertake to define by course or dis-[97]*97tanee, the side lines, or even the outer lines of the shore lands so conveyed, but that the said different grants only described the property as shore lands of the second class owned by the state of Washington, situate in front of, adjacent to or abutting upon the up-land in said respective deeds mentioned, and that under the law and the decisions of the courts of this state, the outer or exterior boundaries of said shore lands are coterminous with said inner harbor lines.
“XVI.
“That it has been found impossible for two or more of said shore land owners to agree, and they cannot agree, upon the division or boundary side lines or the establishment thereof between their respective tracts of said shore lands, because of the complexity involved in the practical application of the rules of law applicable thereto, and also because to so agree would leave undetermined and in dispute the boundary line between such parties and the next adjoining owner of such shore land, and that the determination of one side of the boundary line necessarily involves the determination of the opposite or other boundary line.
“XVII.
“That the above stated condition has resulted in disputes between some of the owners of said shore lands as to the true location of the boundary lines as to the several and numerous tracts of said shore lands; and that the entire matter of the boundary lines of said several and numerous tracts of said shore lands, and as to what rule or principle of law is properly applicable thereto, is uncertain, resulting in claims and contentions by the parties in interest, which constitute clouds upon the title of these plaintiffs, and likewise upon the titles of defendants.
“XVIII.
‘‘ That said disputes and uncertainties not only cast clouds upon said titles, but will result in frequent and numerous suits to settle said boundary lines, unless said boundary lines are fixed, settled and determined [98]*98in this action; and that furthermore a suit or suits between two or more only of the parties to this action, either plaintiffs or defendants, to settle the boundary lines of their respective tracts of shore lands, would finally result in all of the parties in interest between said headlands being made parties to said litigation. ’ ’

These facts are admitted by the answers of appellants.

The principal contention here made in behalf of appellants seems to be that the trial court erred in entertaining the complaint as against them, because of want of allegations therein that the boundaries of their shore lands are obscure or uncertain, and because of want of allegation of any direct controversy between appellants and plaintiffs with respect to the location of the boundaries of appellants’ shore lands. In view of the failure of the conveyances from the state to define the division boundary lines between the several tracts of shore lands and the uncertainty of the true location of such boundaries, in view of the necessary converging lines thereof by reason of the irregular curvature of the shore of the cove or bay, it seems to us, it renders the proper determination of the true location of any of such boundaries dependent upon the determination of the true location of all of such boundaries. This, we think, becomes apparent when we consider the general principles of law applicable to the determination of the true location of such undefined boundaries, which are well stated in the leading case of Northern Pine Land Co. v. Bigelow & Co., 84 Wis. 157, 54 N. W. 496, 21 L. R. A. 776, as follows:

“Where.the general course of the shore is a straight line, or approximates a straight line, and the division lines between coterminous riparian owners are at right angles with the shore, there would seem to be no difficulty in reaching the navigable water by straight [99]*99parallel lines; but where there is much diversity and irregularity in the shore line the difficulty of making a just division is increased, and the adherence to a universal rule rendered impossible. "Where the general course of the shore line is much curved, either outwardly or inwardly, the boundary lines within which the riparian owner is required to confine himself in reaching the navigable water must necessarily be either divergent or convergent, according as the navigable water line is longer or shorter than the shore line. The general rule early adopted in Massachusetts, and since adhered to, was borrowed from the civil law, and. is to the effect:

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Bluebook (online)
229 P. 10, 131 Wash. 95, 1924 Wash. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seattle-factory-sites-co-v-saulsberry-wash-1924.