Sengfelder v. Hill

58 P. 250, 21 Wash. 371, 1899 Wash. LEXIS 295
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 19, 1899
Docket3098
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 58 P. 250 (Sengfelder v. Hill) 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
Sengfelder v. Hill, 58 P. 250, 21 Wash. 371, 1899 Wash. LEXIS 295 (Wash. 1899).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Fullerton, J.

This is an action brought to recover the possession of certain real property situate in the city of Spokane, and described by the lower court in its findings of fact as follows:

“ Parts of lot four (4) and five (5) in block twenty (20) of the resurvey and addition to Spokane Falls (now city of Spokane), state of Washington, and particularly described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at the southwest corner of said lot five (5), running thence north with the west line of said lot five, sixty (60) feet, thence east ninety and twenty-three one-hundredths (90.23) feet, thence south sixty feet, to the north line of Sprague street, thence west along said north line of Sprague street ninety and twenty-three one-hundredths (90.23) feet to the place of beginning.”

This land, along with other lands, was patented by the government of the United States to James FT. Glover on April 5, 1878. At that time the county of Spokane had *374 not been organized, but formed a part of tbe county of Stevens, the county seat of which was at Colville, now the county seat of Stevens county, as at present organized. In the spring of 1878 Glover caused a part of the lands included within his patent to be marked out on the ground into lots and blocks, and a plat to be made of the same, which plat he left with one Rymer, a surveyor, with instructions to forward it to Colville for the purpose of having it placed of record. This plat was never recorded; a fact unknown to Glover until some time afterwards, who proceeded to sell and convey certain of the lots and blocks so platted, describing them in accordance with the numbers of the unrecorded plat. In September, 1879, Glover conveyed to one A. M. Cannon and one J. J. Browne each an undivided one-fourth interest in his original land claim, reserving certain parts thereof described by metes and • bounds, and certain other parts described by number according to the unrecorded plat. After the discovery that the original plat had not been recorded, Glovez’, Cannon, and Browne caused the town-site to be resurveyed, and a plat thereof to be made and recorded under the title of “Resurvey and Addition to Spokane Falls, Spokane County, Washington Territory,” properly dedicating the streets and alleys thereon to the .public use. This resurvey and addition followed very closely the original survey; the lots and blocks upon the old plat being numbered the same and being of the same size as the original plat, save that along the south boundary a strip was cut off' the tier of lots for the purpose of forming a street, called “Sprague Avenue” in the plat of the resurvey. In this resurvey a discrepancy in the measurement was discovered. It was found that the blocks and lots were slightly larger than the original measurement made thezn.

As originally conveyed, the tract in dispute formed three several parcels, which counsel have designated as *375 tracts “A,” “B,” and “C,” for convenience of reference. Briefly, tract A is the north half of the south sixty feet of lot five, tract B is the south half of the south sixty feet of lot five, and tract C is the south sixty feet of the west half of lot four; their relative locations being shown upon the following diagram:

C. W. Carson, the guardian of the minor respondents, is shown bv the record to have been married four times. His first wife was Mary Pelham, whom he married in 1881, but as the title to no part of the property is affected by this marriage the record is silent as to any other fact concerning her. His second wife, Matilda Lind, he married Hovember 17, 1883; she died without issue in February, 1884, leaving as her sole heirs her husband, C. W. Carson, and her father and mother, Carl and Charlotta Peterson. On September 14, 1884, he married Alice Pel *376 ham, with whom he lived until her death on March 10, 1889. To this marriage were horn two children, Hazel Bellam Carson and Roy Edward Carson, the minor respondents in this action. After the death of Alice, and prior to December 9, 1889, he married his present wife, Mary. On May 4, 1878, subsequent to the making of the original plat, but prioir to the time of the resurvey, Glover and wife conveyed to one E. H. Cook tracts A and B, with the balance of lot five, describing the land as follows: “Lot five (5), block twenty (20), situated in Spokane Falls, Stevens Co., Wash. Ty., Township Twenty-five, (25), Forth Range forty-three (43) East.” Cook and wife on December 15, 1883, subsequent to the recording of the plat of the resurvey and addition, conveyed tract A to one E. H. Boyer, describing it by metes and bounds; using, however, the numbers of the lot and block to determine the initial point. Boyer conveyed the tract to C. W. Carson on September 29,.1886, at which time the marriage relation existed between Carson and his third wife, Alice. On September 3, 1889, after the death of Alice, Glover made a quit claim deed of tract A to C. W. Carson; and on March 1, 1893, Carson and his present wife, Mary, conveyed the tract by warranty deed to the defendants Ostroski, Breslauer, and Wise, who now claim to own the same.

Tract B was conveyed from Glover to Cook by the deed of May 4, 1878, and from Cook to H. P. Reeves on October 6, 1883, and from Reeves to C. W. Carson Fovember 5, 1883. On Fovember 17, 1883, Carson deeded this tract to Matilda Lind as a wedding present, marrying her on the same day. On the death of Matilda the land descended, one half to O. W. Carson and the other half to Carl and Oharlotta Peterson. The Petersons conveyed their interests to C. W. Carson by deed dated October 25, 1889, about seven months after the death of Alice. This *377 tract was included in the quit claim deed from Glover to Carson of September 3, 1889, and was conveyed with tract A to Ostroski, Breslauer, and Wise by the deed of May 1, 1893. It was further shown that, during the lifetime of Alice, Carson entered into a verbal contract for the purchase of the interests of the father and mother of his wife Matilda in tract B, on which he paid $1,000, and gave a mortgage to one W. C. Jones, the attorney representing the Petersons, for $4,000 more, to secute the balance of the purchase price. This mortgage was placed of record, though canceled thereon long prior to the time the appellants purchased the property. Carson testifies that at the time the mortgage was given a deed to that tract of land had been made from the Petersons to him, which, being defectively executed, was not accepted, but was returned to the Petersons, who were then somewhere in Sweden, and that the deed received after Alice’s death was intended to correct the defective execution of the former one; that he subsequently paid, the balance of Uo purchase price represented by the mortgage, but paid it out of the moneys earned while his wife Alice was alive, and which was the common property of himself and the minor respondents in this action.

Tract C was adjudged by the lower court to be the property of the defendants Ostroski, Breslauer, and Wise, and, as no appeal is taken from that part of the judgment, it requires no further consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 P. 250, 21 Wash. 371, 1899 Wash. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sengfelder-v-hill-wash-1899.