Staniford v. Trombly

185 P. 599, 181 Cal. 372, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 360
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1919
DocketS. F. No. 8789.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 185 P. 599 (Staniford v. Trombly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staniford v. Trombly, 185 P. 599, 181 Cal. 372, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 360 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

MELVIN, J.

Appeal by plaintiff from a judgment against him in aXsuit to quiet title to certain land in Santa Clara County.

*373 It is conceded that plaintiff has record title to 565 acres and defendants to two hundred acres, and that the two tracts adjoin at the south of the land of defendants and the north of that of plaintiff. Defendants claim about 165 acres more than their record title by reason of a boundary fence and an alleged agreement between the parties that said fence should be the true line separating the parcels of land. Defendants also pleaded prescription and estoppel. The whole controversy arises over the boundary line between the two parcels of land. D. C. Riddell and Speer Riddell were the predecessors in interest of plaintiff in the ownership of the land lying south of the tract in dispute, and Peter Trombly was the predecessor in interest of plaintiff in the ownership 'of the acreage to the north of the property in dispute.

In the year 1876, 1877, or 1878, as the court found, because the stock owned by one or the other of the possessors of these neighboring properties would wander over the land of the other, causing trouble or annoyance to the owner of the land and the owner of the cattle, D. C. Riddell and Peter Trombly agreed to build a fence to prevent the straying of the stock. Riddell was to build half and Trombly half of the fence. In accordance with this arrangement the fence was built. The court found that ‘1 Said fence was not built upon an agreed boundary line between the Riddell tract and the Trombly tract to settle any dispute, uncertainty, or controversy arising over or out of the true location of the dividing line between the said two tracts of land.” The fence in question extends from a point at the southeast corner of the land described in the original deed to Trombly, but instead, of following the true boundary between the two tracts, as they then existed, ran far to the southwest thereof. It did not extend all the way across the property of Riddell, but to a natural barrier, namely, a creek. Beyond the fence the conformation of the land and the thick growth of underbrush were sufficient to turn cattle. In their answer defendants asserted that the agreed boundary line followed the fence throughout its entire length, and was extended in the same direction to the southwesterly line of plaintiff’s property. If this claim had been sustained, it would have resulted in giving to defendants a triangular strip of land south of the true line between the original holdings of the predecessors in interest of these litigants and extending some distance to the south *374 west of the original Trombly rancho, because the land of plaintiff subtended by the supposed agreed boundary extends farther west than does that of defendants.

Notwithstanding the finding that'the fence was not built upon a line agreed upon as a boundary at the time of its construction, but that it was intended to turn cattle, the court also found that the true boundary line was uncertain when the fence was built; that after its construction for a period of thirty years neither Riddell nor any of his successors made any protest against “the fence existing where it was thus built”; that Trombly and his successors had, during all of that period, occupied and cultivated part of the laijd immediately north of the fence; that their possession was open and well known to plaintiff; that no objection of-any sort was made; and that “by reason of such nonobjection of said Riddell and his successors in interest the said Riddell and 'those claiming under him acquiesced in said fence as being the boundary line between the properties owned respectively by the said Peter Trombly on the one side and the said De Witt C. Riddell on the other side.” It was found also that since 1867 plaintiff’s predecessors and plaintiff had paid taxes on land described as “bounded on the north” by the lands of defendants or their predecessors [naming them]. Conversely, the assessments paid by defendants and their predecessors were on land “bounded on the south” by the property of Riddell or one of his successors, designated by name. But in every assessment the Trombly land was described as containing two hundred acres and the' Riddell property as having an area of 565 acres.

In its judgment the superior court did not accede to all of the demands of defendants. It was found that the defendants were entitled to about one-half of the disputed area, and this result was reached by treating the fence as an agreed boundary for its full length and then arbitrarily selecting boundaries extending from the fence to the true original line between the properties and following said line to the northeasterly end of the fence at the southeast comer of the land of defendants. The description of the parcel to which defendants were found to be entitled follows the fence to its southwesterly end at “the center of á creek,” and “running thence down the center line of said creek in a northerly direction to Murphy Canon and creek running thence along the center of Murphy Canon and creek in a westerly direction to where *375 Murphy Canon and creek crosses the north line of the Riddell Ranch; and running thence N. 76° 37' E. to the place of beginning.”

[1] The judgment must be reversed, if for no other reason, because of these arbitrarily selected boundaries. But there is another and stronger reason for reversal. The finding that the fence was not built to establish the line between the properties is supported by the evidence. [2] The mere acquiescence in the existence of the fence and the occupancy of the land to the north of it would not amount to an agreement that it was on an accepted boundary line. And the large area of the irregular parcel subtended by the fence and the creek to which it extended would go far to indicate that the builders of the fence were fixing a line “for occupancy and not for title.” This case greatly resembles in its facts (except those pertaining to estoppel) Grants Pass Land and Water Co. v. Brown, 168 Cal. 456, [143 Pac. 754]. In that case, as in this, it was shown that a fence had been built to turn cattle; that thereafter one of the builders of the fence occupied the land set off by the fence from his neighbor’s property; and that no agreement had been made as to the other parts of the boundaries. Mr. Justice Shaw, who wrote the opinion of the court, used the following language:

“It may be doubted whether in any case so large and irregular a parcel as that shown on the map, departing so far from the true line, could be acquired by an adjoining owner, under the law as to agreed boundaries placed or made with intent to mark or fix the true line. The map itself seems almost conclusive to the effect that they were not fixing a true line, but only placing a boundary for occupancy and not for title. But we need not decide the question. The doctrine applies only to lines so far as marked or fixed by the agreement. The actual location is the thing to which the parties must agree. Where such agreement extends to a part, only, of the line, it cannot be extended by construction or implication, so as to embrace a part of the bounds which were not considered or included in the agreement and as to which there was no agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
185 P. 599, 181 Cal. 372, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staniford-v-trombly-cal-1919.