Steller v. David

257 A.2d 391, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 264
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 30, 1969
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 257 A.2d 391 (Steller v. David) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steller v. David, 257 A.2d 391, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 264 (Del. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

STIFTEL, President Judge.

This is an ejectment action. It concerns marshland in Blackbird Hundred to which plaintiffs claim they received title by deed from Eleanor Brynberg Johnson on August 5, 1946. Defendants argue that the 1946 conveyance to the Stellers was a nullity because they claim their father, James Harry David, had acquired this land considerably before this time under the doctrine of adverse possession. This marsh tract, known as Tract No. 2, borders the Delaware River. Plaintiffs insist that it consists of 163 acres, more or less, and defendants claim it is 111 acres. The description in the surveys of 1911 and 1925 indicates it is more probably 111. Prior to the conveyance to the Stellers, it had been in the Johnson family at least from the year 1801. There was and is a companion Johnson tract, known as Tract No. 1, four or five hundred yards to the west, which consists of some 601 acres, some 160 acres of which is fast land and the remainder of which is marshland.

These two tracts stayed in the Johnson family and finally vested in one Dr. Robert P. Johnson, who was born October 11, 1828, and died June 16, 1890. When he died, only 28/60ths of the total fee could be traced to him. In other words, when Dr. Johnson died, he had clear title to a little less than one-half of Tract No. 2. Dr. Johnson died intestate and left his wife, Susan Elizabeth Bird Johnson, and two living daughters, Louisa Bird Johnson and Eleanor Brynberg Johnson.

During 1892, shortly after the death of Dr. Johnson, James Harry David occupied Tract No. 1 under verbal agreement with Dr. Johnson’s widow, Susan. His son, Lee Woodkeeper David, was born there in 1894, and another son, Wilson Armstrong David, in 1902. Some twelve years after Dr. Johnson’s death, his widow, using a warranty deed, conveyed Tract No. 2 to James Harry David on September 8, 1902. The deed itself gave no indication that it was only for her life. However, at the time of the conveyance of Tract No. 2, this was the only interest she had in the land. Her two daughters had the remainder interest. At the time of this conveyance by Susan Johnson, Tract No. 1 still remained hers. It was not affected by the Tract No. 2 deed to James Harry David.

At about the time he received the deed to Tract No. 2, James Harry David purchased two other tracts of marshland immediately below Tract No. 2, in which he apparently took the fee. These three tracts became known as the River Tract, which comprised 326J4 acres and is mentioned in surveys in 1911 and 1925 as the David Lands.

Susan Johnson died on September 21, 1910, intestate. Her daughters, Louisa Bird Johnson and Eleanor Brynberg Johnson, inherited Tract No. 1, where James Harry David admittedly remained as a tenant under a rental-sharecropping arrangement: Food products on the farm land and muskrats 1 on the marshland of Tract No. 1.

Even though Susan Johnson’s life estate terminated on September 21, 1910, in Tract No. 2, James Harry David, the life tenant for Susan’s life, continued to use this land for hunting, muskratting, and cutting salt hay. He would use this land only for three or four months of the year because its special use limited its activity from December through March of each year. James Harry David paid the taxes on Tract No. 2 and apparently his heirs never stopped paying the taxes down to the present time. In the meantime, Louisa, who apparently had an undivided one-half interest in Tract No. 1 and Tract No. 2 as a consequence of the intestacy of her father, died on December *394 14, 1926, leaving all of her land to her surviving sister, Eleanor Brynberg Johnson. It is from Eleanor Brynberg Johnson that John Steller and Mary Steller obtained their deed to Tracts Nos. 1 and 2 on August 5, 1946.

As formerly mentioned, James Harry David had been a long time resident of Tract No. 1. In fact, approximately two years after Dr. Johnson died, he moved onto Tract No. 1 in 1892 as a tenant of Susan Johnson. Ten years later, in 1902, he received the warranty deed from Susan as aforesaid. In 1911, one year after Susan died and the life tenancy terminated, James Harry David had a survey made of the three parcels of the River Tract. This is called the “Johns Survey”. In 1925, James Harry David still on Tract No. 1 had another survey made of the entire River Tract. This is called the “Vandegrift Survey”. In 1929, James Harry David decided to leave Tract No. 1. He moved to Smyrna, Kent County, Delaware, and one of his sons, Lee Woodkeeper David, took over as the sharecropper of the Johnson Tract No. 1. James Harry David often returned to the farm and continued a close business relationship with his sons. Lee Woodkeeper David remained on the Johnson Tract No. 1 until March 1, 1947, after Eleanor Johnson sold it and Tract No. 2 to the Stellers, on August 5, 1946, for a purchase price of $30,000.

During the period of time before the Steller deed, the senior David and his sons almost yearly entered upon Tract No. 2 and hunted and trapped there. They set markers along Tract No. 2 for the purpose of guiding trappers and they also sharecropped with individuals with whom they associated and to whom they gave permission to enter upon the River Tract.

Approximately a year after the conveyance to the Stellers, John Delbert Steller and Mr. MacClain, his tenant farmer, in December 1947, 2 placed and set some traps on the marsh. As fast as they were placed, however, Lee and Wilson David, right behind them, pulled them. Since it takes longer to set a trap than it does to pull one up, it was not long before the David brothers caught up with the trapsetters. It was then that Lee David told Mr. Steller that his father had a deed from Susan Johnson to the land, that he and his father continually paid taxes on the land and that they had made use of Tract No. 2 since 1902. 3 With these remarks, he continued 'pulling up the traps and threw them on Mr. Dukes’ (an adjoining landowner’s) side of the marsh. Lee and Wilson continued a close association with the Stellers over the years, but apparently they never heard from Steller again in reference to Tract No. 2 ownership until they and their sisters received a letter dated June 8, 1966, from Mr. Steller demanding that James H. David’s children cease their trespass upon this particular tract.

Mr. Steller claims that he made no move after the December 1947 incident to reassert his ownership in Tract No. 2 primarily because he did not have the financial resources to engage in litigation and because his wife was a sister of the wife of Lee Woodkeeper David and he did not want any dissension in the family. However, in 1966, he was advised by counsel that something had to be done about protecting his rights in the land. This litigation followed on July 11, 1966..

Title to realty may be acquired in Delaware by continuous adverse possession for 20 years. 10 Del.Code § 7901; Marvel v. Barley Mill Road Homes, 34 Del.Ch. 417, 104 A.2d 908; Jones v. Short, Del., 77 A. 968; Doe, dem. Pepper v. Pepper, 2 Marv. 221, 43 A. 90; Woolley, On Delaware Practice, § 1589, p. 1081. Possession is adverse when it is asserted in an open, notorious, hostile and exclusive manner for the *395 twenty year period. Marvel v.

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Bluebook (online)
257 A.2d 391, 1969 Del. Super. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steller-v-david-delsuperct-1969.