Sheldon v. Chambers

281 N.W. 438, 225 Iowa 716
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedSeptember 27, 1938
DocketNo. 43866.
StatusPublished

This text of 281 N.W. 438 (Sheldon v. Chambers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheldon v. Chambers, 281 N.W. 438, 225 Iowa 716 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

Donegan, J.

— This action was instituted by plaintiff to quiet title to land described as lying west of the public highway in the Southeast quarter of section 30, Township 70, North, Range 43, West of the Fifth P. M.; and to land described as lying west of the public highway in the South Half of the Northeast quarter of Section 30, Township 70, North, Range 43, West of the Fifth P. M.; which described land comprised 20 acres, more or less; and also to establish ownership and quiet title to lands lying west of the land above described and extending from the west boundary thereof to the Missouri river. There is no dispute as to the plaintiff’s ownership and title to all of the land described by *717 him as situated in the Southeast quarter and the South Half of the Northeast quarter of said Section 30. The controversy is as to the title and ownership of the lands west of the Southeast quarter and the South Half of the Northeast quarter. Plaintiff claims these lands as accretions to the lands above described, and as to which his ownership is admitted.

Plaintiff acquired title to the land lying west of the public highway in the Southeast quarter and the South Half of the Northeast quarter of Section 30 from one Lorena Leeka, by deed executed on or about the 6th day of October, 1927, and filed in the office of the recorder of Fremont county on October 17, 1927. After the specific description, by section, township and range, of the lands conveyed, the deed contained this statement: " Comprising Twenty (20) Acres more or less and all accretions accruing to the above described land.”

The defendants, Clayton Chambers and Harve Moore, claim ownership in separate tracts situated to the westward of the land specifically described in plaintiff’s deed. The land claimed by the defendant, Moore, is in the Southeast quarter of the Northwest quarter of said Section 30, and lies west of the land owned by plaintiff in the South half of the Northeast quarter of said section. The land claimed by the defendant, Chambers, is the Southwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of said Section 30 (also described as Lot 4 of said section), and the Northwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of said Section 30; and all of this land claimed by Chambers lies to the westward of.the land owned by plaintiff in the Southeast quarter of said section. There seems to be no dispute in the record that the above defendants have a record title to the land claimed to be owned by them, extending backward to the time it was conveyed to the State of Iowa by patents of the United States Government. The plaintiff’s ¡contention as to the defense based upon such record titles is, that the lands covered by such titles were eroded by action of the Missouri river and ceased to exist as lands in place, and that ownership in said lands terminated when such lands became a part of the Missouri river. The defendants’ response to this claim is: 1. That'the lands claimed by them never eroded, but were always lands in place; 2. That, if the lands originally in place ever eroded, the accretions now occupying the situs of such eroded lands accreted to and belong to lands lying to the west *718 ward, which were always in place, and not to the lands of plaintiff.

Upon the trial of the case the district court confirmed the plaintiff’s ownership in the land specifically described in his deed from Lorena Leeka as lying west of the public highway in the Southeast quarter and the South Half of the Northeast quarter of Section 30, and also án a tract of approximately one acre in the Southeast comer of the Southwest quarter of Section 30. But the court found that the lands claimed by plaintiff as accretions to the'said described lands were not accretions; that said lands are lands in place; that they had not been washed away by the river; and that the plaintiff was not entitled to any of the land west of the described land. The court also found that the defendants, Chambers and Moore, were owners of lands claimed by them and quieted their title thereto. From this decree the plaintiff has appealed.

There appears to be little, if any, dispute between the parties as to the law involved in this case. The principal controversy has to do with the facts. If the facts be as claimed by the appellant, then we do not understand that the appellees rely on any law that would deprive him of the relief prayed. On the other hand, if the facts be as claimed by the appellees, there can be no question but that, under the law, ¡the decree of the trial court must be sustained. It becomes necessary, therefore, to direct our attention to the facts shown by the record.

It is undisputed that the lands claimed by plaintiff as accretions occupy the exact situs of lands originally in place, which were surveyed and platted by the United States. A copy of a plat certified by the surveyor general in 1855 shows that, beginning at a point several miles north of Section 30, the east bank of the Missouri river ran in a slightly southwesterly direction to a point approximately coincident with its intersection of the center east and west line of Section 30 extended, and that from this point it ran in a southeasterly direction; that Sections 18 to 31, inclusive, border on the east bank of the river; that Section 18 lies directly north of Section 19, Section 19 lies directly north of Section 30, and Section 30 lies directly north of Section 31; that, beginning almost two miles north of Section 30, in what would be the Northwest quarter of Section 18, a slough, designated on the plat as “Keg Creek Slough”, extended southeasterly from the east bank of the Missouri river through Section *719 18, and then in a southerly direction through the east half of Sections 19, 30 and 31 and again reached the Missouri river a short distance south of Section 31; that the west half of Sections 19 and 30 were not surveyed and platted in quarter sections, but the east half of the west half of each of these sections was platted in 80 acre tracts, and the land lying west of these 80 acre tracts was surveyed and platted in numbered lots; and that the lots in Section 30 were numbered from 1 to 4 inclusive, beginning at the north side of the Section, lots 1 and 2 being north of the east and west center section line, and lots 3 and 4 south thereof.

While the original plat indicates that lot 3 in Section 30 contained 68.82 acres, a survey made in 1891 shows only 32.50 acres of this land still lying east of the bank of the Missouri river, and indicates conclusively that the Missouri river had encroached upon this land during the intervening years. Plats introduced in evidence by both plaintiff and defendants, from surveys made a comparatively short time before the trial, indicate that the river also encroached to the eastward upon lands lying north of lot 3; because, while the plat of the original government survey showed the east bank of the river extending in a slightly southwesterly direction along these lands, the later plats show that, beginning at the north line of Section 30, the east bank of the river was much further east, and much nearer the west line of the east half .of the northwest quarter of the section than it appears on the original plat.

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Bluebook (online)
281 N.W. 438, 225 Iowa 716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheldon-v-chambers-iowa-1938.