Smith v. Hayden

772 P.2d 47, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 397, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 162, 1989 WL 32668
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 10, 1989
Docket87SA247
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 772 P.2d 47 (Smith v. Hayden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Hayden, 772 P.2d 47, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 397, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 162, 1989 WL 32668 (Colo. 1989).

Opinion

Justice LOHR

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal and a cross-appeal from a district court judgment quieting title to *49 two parcels of real property in Buffalo Creek, Colorado, based on principles of adverse possession. The disputes arose when surveys disclosed that the true boundary lines separating three properties on which mountain cabins had been constructed were not where the owners or their predecessors in title had long believed them to be. The district court determined that ownership had been established by adverse possession consistent with the boundaries that historically had been believed to be correct. We affirm the judgment of the district court. 1

I.

At issue is the title to two strips of land, each approximately 20 feet wide and 195 feet long. One lies along the southeast boundary and one along the northwest boundary of a lot owned by Donald P. Smith, Jr., and Marjorie G. Smith in Buffalo Creek, Colorado. The lot is essentially rectangular and contains approximately one-half acre. It has 105 feet of frontage on the right-of-way for the highway between Pine Junction and Deckers and extends approximately 195 feet back from the highway right-of-way.

A lot owned by Frank Riedel and Anna Riedel borders the Smith lot on the northwest. Property owned by Joan Hayden adjoins the Smith lot on the southeast. All three properties are improved with cabins and have been used by their owners principally as summer weekend retreats.

About 25 feet easterly from each of the rear comers of the Smith lot is an iron pipe driven into the ground. These pipes were assumed by the Smiths, the Riedels and their predecessors in interest to mark the rear comers of the Smith property. In fact, as recent surveys show, the true corners of the Smith lot are about 25 feet westerly of these markers. It is undisputed that the sidelines of the Smith property are perpendicular to the rear lot line.

The present dispute was precipitated when the Smiths obtained a survey in 1983 incident to the construction of an addition to their cabin. The survey showed that a strip of land on the southeast side of the Smith property, which the Smiths originally had assumed to be theirs, was within the boundaries of the Hayden property and that a strip of land on the northwest side of the Smith property, which both the Smiths and the Riedels had assumed to belong to the Riedels, was within the boundaries of the Smith property. We refer to the properties described in the deeds and delineated on the ground by the recent surveys as the Riedel property, the Smith property, and the Hayden property. We refer to the disputed strip within the Smith property along its border with the Riedel property as the Riedel-Smith parcel and to the disputed strip within the Hayden property along its boundary with the Smith property as the Hayden-Smith parcel. A schematic diagram depicting these properties is annexed as an appendix to this opinion.

A garage historically used by the Riedels and their predecessors in title to the Riedel property is located on the Riedel-Smith parcel, within the boundaries of the Smith property. A driveway and parking area historically used by the Smiths and the persons from whom they obtained title to the Smith property is located on the Hayden-Smith parcel, within the boundaries of the Hayden property.

After the Smiths discovered the discrepancy between the true and assumed property lines, they brought the present action against the Riedels and others late in 1983 to quiet title to the Smith property, including the Riedel-Smith parcel. The Riedels answered and counterclaimed to quiet title to the Riedel property and to the Riedel-Smith parcel. The Riedels based their claim to the latter parcel on the doctrine of adverse possession. 2 The Smiths then *50 amended their complaint to add Hayden as a defendant and to assert a claim by adverse possession to the Hayden-Smith parcel. Hayden answered, denying the adverse possession allegations, and counterclaimed against the Smiths to quiet title to the Hayden property, including the Hayden-Smith parcel. After all claims were at issue, the case was tried to the Jefferson County District Court. During the trial, and at the request of the parties, the trial court viewed the premises to which this litigation relates.

The trial court then issued findings of fact, conclusions of law and orders. 3 We summarize the findings and conclusions as they relate to each disputed parcel.

A. The Riedel-Smith Parcel

The Riedel property and the Smith property were at one time owned in common by W.F. Brogoitti. Brogoitti built the Riedel cabin, the Smith cabin and two garages, one to be used in association with each cabin. Brogoitti believed the iron pipes were at the corners of the Smith property, and based on that assumption he positioned the garages so that the boundary line would pass between the two garages. In fact, however, both garages were on the Smith property. 4

In 1953 Brogoitti conveyed the Riedel property to Thomas 0. Hayden and Joan Hayden. In 1963 the Haydens conveyed the property to John A. Mathis and Mary Mathis. John A. Mathis transferred his interest to Mary Mathis, who in turn conveyed the property in 1965 to the Riedels, who continued to own it to the time of trial. From the date they acquired their property until this litigation was commenced, the Riedels believed that the iron pipe near the back of the Smith property was the common corner of that property and the Riedel property, and that the boundary line between the Smith and Riedel properties ran between the two garages. 5 The court found that the Riedels used the Riedel-Smith parcel as if it were theirs. The court relied on the following facts: The Riedels had an oil storage drum buried behind then-garage, the garage was located in the Rie-del-Smith parcel, the Riedel children played in that strip, and the Riedels held barbecues during which part of that strip was used. Additionally, “although the Smiths may have stored some lumber on that strip, and the Riedels did not object, the Riedels at all times claimed that strip as their property.”

Based on these findings the trial court concluded that “at all times from 1965 to the time of the trial, the Riedelsf] possession of [the Riedel-Smith parcel] was actual, adverse, hostile, and under claim of right” and that their possession was “open, notorious, exclusive, and continuous” during that time.

B. The Hayden-Smith Parcel

In 1955 Brogoitti conveyed the Smith property to Edd D. Wilson and Ethel A. Wilson. In 1961 Edd D. Wilson quit claimed his interest in the property to Ethel A. Wilson. In 1963 Ethel A. Wilson conveyed the Smith property to the Smiths, who continued to own it to the time of trial.

At the time the Smith property was conveyed to the Smiths, Edd D. Wilson told Donald P. Smith, Jr., that the iron pipes at *51 the back of the property marked the property corners.

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Bluebook (online)
772 P.2d 47, 13 Brief Times Rptr. 397, 1989 Colo. LEXIS 162, 1989 WL 32668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-hayden-colo-1989.