Smith v. Stanfield

158 P. 239, 29 Idaho 190, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 71
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 158 P. 239 (Smith v. Stanfield) 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
Smith v. Stanfield, 158 P. 239, 29 Idaho 190, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 71 (Idaho 1916).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This is an action brought to quiet title to a large number of distinct and separate tracts of land in the town and in the vicinity of the town of Mountain Home, Elmore county. It is a general suit to quiet title in one action to said tracts of land, each of the answering defendants occupying or claiming a separate tract, and none of the defendants claiming any interest in the tract claimed by any other defendant, except the two defendants Nichol and McDonald. Many of the defendants appeared and answered and others failed to appear and their defaults were entered. The defendants the Sub-Rosa Gymnasium Club and School District No. 6 filed cross-complaints and by stipulation of respective counsel the allegations of those cross-complaints were deemed denied.

Upon a trial of the ease the court found that the plaintiffs were the owners in fee of lots 5 and 6 in block D of the town of Mountain Home, and that the defendants were in each [194]*194instance, except the defendants Lucille McDonald, John H. Brady and Peter "Whitbeck, the owners and entitled to the possession of the land claimed in their separate answer, and judgment was entered accordingly.

The court made no finding of fact and no decree was entered with reference to who was the owner of, and entitled to the'possession of, a certain part of the land mentioned and described in plaintiff’s complaint. From said judgment and decree this appeal was taken.

Counsel for appellants first take up in their brief the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support the decree in favor of the defendants. The evidence, among other things, shows that all of the different tracts of land involved in this action were conveyed to the plaintiffs by one Oehsner, deed to which was recorded in said county on February 10, 1909. It also appears that plaintiffs introduced a long chain of record title from patent from the United States government down to the present time, showing the record title in the plaintiffs. It also appears that the plaintiffs have the only record title to all of said lands, running from the patent to the date of the trial. Their evidence shows an unbroken chain of title without conflict or adverse deed. So far as that evidence shows, it appears that the plaintiffs have the legal title. ’ Most of the defendants claimed under adverse user, under an oral contract with some of the predecessors of appellants, and adverse possession. The evidence shows that many of the defendants have had adverse possession of said land for more than five years, and have cultivated and improved it to a certain extent.

The first assignment of error discussed by appellants in their brief is based on the ground that the court failed to find who was the owner or owners of a certain tract of land described by metes and bounds in the 5th paragraph of the complaint, as follows:

"Also commencing at a point forty (40) feet North and four hundred and sixty-three (463) feet west of the Southeast Corner of the Southeast quarter of the Southwest quarter of 'Section Twenty-five (25) Township Three (3) [195]*195South, Range Six (6) East, Boise Meridian, thence running West two hundred three and one-tenth (203.1) feet, thence North two hundred fourteen and five-tenths (214.5) feet, thence East two hundred three and one-tenth (203.1) feet, thence South two hundred fourteen and five-tenths (214.5) feet to the point of beginning.”

The only evidence introduced concerning this tract of land was offered by the plaintiffs, which evidence shows plaintiffs had a complete record chain of title thereto and that it is included in the deed from said Ochsner to the plaintiffs. On that state of facts the court should have found in favor of the plaintiffs, and quieted their title to said tract of land and the decree must be modified to that effect.

It is next contended that the evidence is insufficient to establish the title of the defendant Stanfield to certain lands specifically described in paragraphs 8 and 9 of the court’s finding of facts.

The record shows that this tract of land was left for a street, and the defendant in his answer and cross-complaint interposed the defense of five years’ possession, and also alleges that he “is the owner in fee of said premises except for an easement therein of the village of Mountain Home for a street, whenever said village shall require the same for that purpose.”

It is contended that the two defenses, that defendant Stanfield is the owner and that the village of Mountain Home has an easement on said tract for a street, are inconsistent; that title cannot be claimed by reason of adverse possession and at the same time admit the right to possession and paramount title in another; that an easement for a street is a property right and an interest in land, and that if the village of Mountain Home has a property right and interest in said strip of land, then the village is the proper party to claim the same as against the plaintiffs. Counsel contends that the village of Mountain Home evidently does not claim any interest in said strip of land, as it was made one of the defendants in this action and defaulted and laid no claim to said land. The general rule of law is that in an action to quiet [196]*196title to real estate one cannot have decreed to him an interest therein when he alleges the title and interest to be in a third party. The evidence does not show that the village had ever opened or attempted to open that tract of land as a street, and it is also contended that no legal dedication or grant has ever been made to the village, and if the plaintiffs purchased it from Ochsner, in whose name the record title stood, they would have a right to assume that he was the owner thereof.

It appears from the record that the Idaho & Oregon Land Improvement Company purchased 420 acres of land and platted about 80 acres of it as the town site of Mountain Home and apparently holding the balance to be platted as the town grew. The land claimed by the defendant Stanfield lies just north of the platted portion of said town and only one block removed from the platted part. A large portion of the platted part of said town was sold by said Improvement Company and also a portion of the unplatted part, but with the exception of an 80 acre tract which was so far removed from the town that it would doubtless never be needed for town purposes, all that said company sold was sold in squares which corresponded to the blocks of Mountain Home, except one tract, which included two blocks.. The eighty-foot strips of land left between said blocks were reserved, that is, were not conveyed by the deeds conveying the blocks to the purchasers, and said strips were of the width of the streets of Mountain Home and corresponded with them. In fact, they were evidently intended simply as extensions of the streets of Mountain Home.

Finally, the Land Improvement Company sold all of its holdings to the Mountain Home Canal & Land Company and took a mortgage back for a part of the purchase price. Said mortgage was transferred to Andrew W. Mellen and by him foreclosed in the U. S. district court and the property bought in by Mellen, and he thereafter received a United States marshal’s deed for the property covered by said mortgage. Mellen also acquired a tax'title to the same property. He held the land for some time and sold off many lots and small [197]

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Bluebook (online)
158 P. 239, 29 Idaho 190, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-stanfield-idaho-1916.