State ex rel. Remy v. Agar

1977 OK 6, 559 P.2d 1235
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 18, 1977
DocketNo. 48830
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1977 OK 6 (State ex rel. Remy v. Agar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Remy v. Agar, 1977 OK 6, 559 P.2d 1235 (Okla. 1977).

Opinion

DAVISON, Justice:

This case involves an appeal from the decision of the trial court in a taxpayer’s suit brought under the authority of 62 O.S. 1971 § 373.1

Appellant, a resident taxpayer of the City of Norman, William E. Remy, brought an action under the provisions of the above statute, seeking recovery and the quieting of title in the name of the City of Norman of certain lands along the northern bank of the South Canadian River, consisting of approximately 160 acres upon which Norman’s City Dump was located.

At the trial court, the District Judge to whom the case was tried, entered a judgment for the appellees. Appellant taxpayer appeals from that judgment.

The facts giving rise to the action are as follows. Since 1901, the City of Norman has held title to certain lands along the South Canadian River in Cleveland County, Oklahoma, and has used said land as a dumping ground. At the time the City took title in 1901, the lands were described as original governmental lots, the boundary lines of which were based on the 1873 governmental survey.

Between 1873 and 1967, the South Canadian River has moved to the south, leaving approximately 200 acres of land and river bottom between the south boundary of the original governmental lots and the 1967 center lines of the river. The City of Norman, in 1967, entered into an agreement and cross-conveyance with those who owned the land across the river and with a party who owned land adjacent to the City’s land. This agreement was entered into in order to define the property boundaries and settle any boundary disputes between the parties, which enabled an oil company, producing from lands in and about the riverbed, to apportion royalties.

Appellant taxpayer alleges that under the agreement and cross-conveyance, the City deeded away approximately 160 acres, including land upon which the City dump was located, alleging that the City had title to the approximate 160 acres by virtue of accretion and/or by prescription through adverse possession. Then, the appellant taxpayer contends that the agreement and cross-conveyance is void and asks for recision for the following reasons:

1. The City of Norman did not have the power to convey the land in question.
2. The proposed resolution of the City Council authorizing the execution of the agreement was not in fact a legal action taken by the City Council of Norman, for the resolution was passed in noncompliance with City Charter provisions, as the resolution was passed at an unannounced special meeting, and the resolution was never published.
[1238]*12383. The agreement was executed under a mutual mistake of facts, as none of the parties to the conveyance realized, at the time of the execution, that the land upon which the City dump stood was the subject of the contract.
4. There was no consideration or grossly inadequate consideration flowing to the City of Norman in exchange for the conveyance.

I

The first issue raised by the appeal is whether or not the City ever acquired title to the approximately 160 acres involved. If the City never acquired title to the land, an action for the recovery of the land in the City’s name will not lie.

Although there was evidence introduced to support the proposition that the City acquired title to the land involved through the process of accretion, there was also evidence introduced to support the contention that the changes in the river resulted from avulsion, though the evidence introduced to show the avulsive nature of the change was at best remote. However, whether accretion or avulsion took place is not the decisive issue, for the evidence clearly established that the City obtained title to the land by prescription.

Evidence adduced at trial demonstrated that from 1944 until the signing of the agreement, the bank of the river in the area in question was virtually unchanged. The record further reflects that at least since 1944, the City had occupied and used the entire dump ground up to the riverbank and that the City had exclusive possession of all the land to the river’s edge. City employee, Harvey Byford, who for seventeen years, while in the employment of the City of Norman, lived at the dump and managed it, testified to the City’s possession and use of the area. The use and possession of the area for more than fifteen years was clearly adverse, open, peaceful, continuous and exclusive.

The appellees argue that title by prescription could not have come about by virtue of adverse possession because the true boundaries to the area were not known to the City. Then, citing Kentucky case law, appellees argue that there is no such thing as title by adverse possession unless the boundaries are known by the contending claimants. The Kentucky cases cited by the appellees, Newsome v. Sword, 240 Ky. 806, 43 S.W.2d 33 (1931), Skaggs v. Skaggs, 212 Ky. 836, 280 S.W. 150 (1926), and Small v. Hamlet, 24 Ky. 238, 68 S.W. 395 (1902), do not support the appellees’ contention, nor does Oklahoma case law.

The Oklahoma rule applicable to the fact situations before us was first announced in Johnson v. Whelan, 186 Okl. 511, 98 P.2d 1103 (1940). In that action, we held that where an adjoining property owner encroaches on a portion of the adjoining lot and occupies such portion openly, peacefully and exclusively for more than 15 years, he acquires title by prescription. In that case, we pointed out that possession of property was the key, and that the possession could have resulted from a mistake or ignorance or the true boundary without affecting the result. Again, in Leach v. West, Okl., 504 P.2d 1233 (1972), we held that under the authority of Johnson v. Whelan, supra, the fact that an appellant was mistaken as to the true boundary line and was not aware that she was encroaching upon the land in which record title was in the name of others, did not preclude her from acquiring the disputed tract in question by prescription, if under claim of right, she occupies and has possession of the tract openly, peacefully and exclusively, for more than 15 years. Also see Wilson v. Moore, Okl., 335 P.2d 1085 (1959), in which this Court, under the authority of Johnson v. Whelan, supra, made a similar ruling.

Because the record before us establishes that the City of Norman occupied the dump area in question openly, peacefully and exclusively for more than 15 years, we hold that the City acquired title to that land by prescription, even though the City may have been ignorant of the true boundaries of the property.

[1239]*1239II

Having held that the City obtained title to the land in question by prescription, we will now determine whether the City had the power to convey that land.

Appellees contend that the City of Norman had the authority to convey the land by virtue of the provisions of 11 O.S.1971 § 568 which provides:

“All cities governed by the provisions of this Chapter shall be bodies corporate and politic, and shall have the power * * * to sell and convey any real or personal property, owned by the city, * * * to make all contracts and do all other acts in relation to the property and affairs of the city, necessary to the good government of the city, * * *

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Bluebook (online)
1977 OK 6, 559 P.2d 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-remy-v-agar-okla-1977.