Smith v. Whitney

74 P.2d 450, 105 Mont. 523, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 156
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1937
DocketNo. 7,710.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 450 (Smith v. Whitney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Whitney, 74 P.2d 450, 105 Mont. 523, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 156 (Mo. 1937).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANDERSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff brought this action to quiet title to certain lands acquired through tax deed proceedings. Findings of fact were made and filed in favor of the plaintiff. Judgment was entered in conformity therewith, and the appeal is from this judgment.

*525 The lands to which the tax deeds were issued are all described as being in township 7 north, range 87 east. The government survey of the land in the southern portion of the township was made in 1879. The lands described in these deeds are all in sections 32, 33, and 34 of this township. In so far as the lands involved in this action are concerned, in the survey the boundary line of what would ordinarily have been the south line of the southerly tier of 40-acre subdivisions, and likewise which would have been the south boundary line of the township, was a meander line along the northerly shore of the Yellowstone River.

These tracts, which would have contained 40 acres, were, in accordance with the law and practice, designated as lots and contained varying acreages, but all of them were less than 40 acres in area. Subsequent to the time of this survey, and continuing down to the time of the commencement of this action, lands had gradually formed to the south of these lots in section 33, and the southwesterly lot in section 34 (being lot 4), amounting to an area of approximately 184 acres. All agree that this area of 184 acres was formed through the process of accretion. The entire controversy is waged over these accreted lands.

To the east and south of these accreted lands lies an island in the Yellowstone River known as Shorty Island, on which one Blackburn settled in 1920. No controversy exists over the title to' this island. Soon after Blackburn built a cabin on these accreted lands and erected some fencing on them; he lived there, at least the major portion of the time, until 1934, when he conveyed to the defendant the tract of unsurveyed lands in the Yellowstone River known as Shorty Island, giving the township and range in which the land is located. No attempt was made in this conveyance to describe these accreted lands. Blackburn during his sojourn claimed title to the accreted lands. He never paid or offered to pay any taxes on them. Defendant Whitney asserts title to them as successor in interest of Blackburn. After the conveyance to him, defendant entered into possession of these accreted lands, built a house thereon, and *526 erected some fences approximately following the old meander line of the original survey.

The plaintiff obtained a tax deed in November, 1933, to the lands in section 33, and by a statutory court proceeding secured tax deeds to the lands in sections 32 and 34. After securing the tax deed to the lands in section 33, he commenced a quiet title action, describing these lands as against the true owner, one Pontius, and obtained a decree quieting title as to them. In all the various tax proceedings and the quiet title suit, the lands involved were described in conformity with the government survey. The assessment for taxes against these lands was made by describing them in accordance with this survey, and these lots were assessed as having the acreage reported by this survey. The government survey did not run the true south boundary township line of this township. These accreted lands extend across and beyond what would have been the south line of this township if it had been located. The lands across the river immediately south of this township were at the time of the survey a part of the Crow Indian Reservation. The defendant has disclaimed all interest in and to all of the lands within the government survey described in the various tax deeds, but asserts that he is the owner of the accreted lands.

At an appropriate time application was made to the district court under the provisions of section 2214, Revised Codes of 1935, to require the defendant to deposit the amount of the taxes and other sums provided for therein to be deposited in court for the use of the plaintiff in the event the defendant should prevail. The court did not require the defendant to make the deposit because of his disclaimer.

Defendant by his pleadings and on the proof makes the following contentions, supported by appropriate specifications of error: (1) That the tax deeds were void for certain defects in the proceedings leading up to their issuance; (2) that the tax deeds included in their description none of the accreted lands; (3) that, in any event, they did not and could not include any of the accreted lands lying south of the township line as projected; (4) that the tax decree in the tax deed pro *527 ceedings and the quiet title suit had no binding force and effect upon defendant, since neither he nor his predecessors in interest were parties to them; and (5) that plaintiff’s action was barred by sections 9015 and 9016, Revised Codes. Defendant by his answer sought no affirmative relief.

The plaintiff in a suit to quiet title must prevail, if at all, upon the strength of his own ease, rather than upon the weakness of that of his adversary. (Borgeson v. Tubb, 54 Mont. 557, 172 Pac. 326.) Whatever the evidence may establish with reference to adverse possession on the part of the defendant, it is insufficient to prove title in the defendant by adverse possession, since neither the defendant nor his predecessor had ever, at any time or at all, paid taxes, or offered to pay taxes, on the accreted lands. (Sec. 9024, Rev. Codes; Anderson v. Mace, 99 Mont. 421, 45 Pac. (2d) 771; Bearmouth Placer Co. v. Passerell, 73 Mont. 306, 236 Pac. 673.) There is no contention made here that the so-called accreted lands are lands of any other character.

The general rule with reference to the ownership of accreted lands was stated by this court in Bode v. Rollwitz, 60 Mont. 481, 199 Pac. 688, 691, as follows: “Accreted lands— that is additions to the area of real estate from the gradual deposit by water of solid material, whether mud, sand, or sediment, producing dry land which before was covered by water, along the banks of a navigable or unnavigable stream — belong to the riparian owner.” (See, also, see. 6820, Rev. Codes.)

This court has said of the effect of meander lines in surveying fractional portions of public lands constituting boundaries, in the case of Faucett v. Dewey Lumber Co., 82 Mont. 250, 266 Pac. 646, 648: “The general rule adopted by state and federal courts is that meander lines run in surveying fractional portions of the public lands bordering upon navigable bodies of water, are not run as boundaries of the tract, but for the purpose of defining the sinuosities of the banks of the lake or river, in order to ascertain the exact quantity of the upland to be charged for. The title of the grantee is not limited *528 to such meander lines; the waters themselves and not the meander lines constitute the real boundary.”

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 450, 105 Mont. 523, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-whitney-mont-1937.