Stutsman v. State

275 N.W. 387, 67 N.D. 618, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 120
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1937
DocketFile No. 6489.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 275 N.W. 387 (Stutsman v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stutsman v. State, 275 N.W. 387, 67 N.D. 618, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 120 (N.D. 1937).

Opinion

*620 Englert, Dist. J.

The plaintiff brought this action to enjoin the defendants from trespassing upon the East half of the Northwest quarter of Section 27, Township 157, Bange 65, in Towner County, North Dakota, and to restrain them from moving or tearing down the barn located on said land. The plaintiff is the fee owner of the said *621 described premises, and for brevity and convenience the said premises will be hereinafter referred to as the east eighty. *'

The defendant, Bank of North Dakota, is the fee owner of the West half of the Northwest quarter of Section 27, Township 153, Range 65, Towner County, North Dakota, and for brevity and convenience, these premises will be hereinafter referred to as the west eighty.

The real dispute between the plaintiff and the defendant bank is over the dividing line between the said two eighties, and over a barn located on the east eighty, except that the southwest corner of said bam extends over onto the west eighty about three feet, and the northwest comer of said barn extends over onto the west eighty about seven feet.

The defendant, Virgil Lockhart, is not interested and makes no claim, and will not, therefore, be further mentioned.

The plaintiff, and the defendant bank both derived their ownership of the said premises through a common grantor, namely, James P. McGee.

James P. McGee homesteaded the west' eighty, and one John CParrell homesteaded the east eighty.

It is the claim of the defendant bank that while James P. McGee lived on the west eighty, and John 0. Darrell lived on the east eighty, they agreed on a dividing line between the said two eighties, some ninety or ninety-one feet east of the regular United States Government survey line. If this contention is established by the evidence, then the barn would belong to the defendant bank.

The case was tried to the court as one in equity, without a jury. The trial court found that the regular government survey line had not been changed, and that the plaintiff is .the owner of so much of the bam as rests upon his east eighty, and that the defendant bank is the owner of so much of the barn as rests upon its west eighty. The court determined the value of their respective interests in and to the barn, decreed the barn to the plaintiff, determined the damage done to the barn by the defendant bank, deducted its interest in the barn from the damage done and allowed judgment to the plaintiff for the difference. Prom the judgment thus entered, the defendant bank appealed. It asks for a trial de novo here.

1. The first point for consideration is: Did James P. McGee and *622 John C. Farrell agree upon a dividing line between the said two eighties at a point some ninety or ninety-one feet east of the regular government survey dividing line ? There is no dispute and never was, so far as the record shows, over the true line established by the United States Government survey.

A determination of this point requires a further statement and consideration of the evidence bearing upon the rights of the respective parties.

As already stated, J ames P. McGee homesteaded the west eighty and one,-John C. Farrell, homesteaded the east eighty.

On January 10th, 1901, Farrell made final proof, and received his final receiver’s receipt for the east eighty. On November 14th, 1901, the said Farrell conveyed the said east eighty to James P. McGee, •by warranty deed. From then on the said J ames P. McGee remained the fee owner of both the east and the west eighties, until he lost the same through mortgage foreclosure proceedings, as will be presently noted.

On November 28th, 1906, James P. McGee and Mary A. McGee, his wife, gave a mortgage upon the east eighty to D. F. McLaughlin. This mortgage was duly recorded. D. F. McLaughlin, on February 4th, 1907, assigned this mortgage to the Burlington Savings Bank. This bank foreclosed said mortgage, and received a sheriff’s certificate of sale on June 12th, 1926. On January 25th, 1927, the said Burlington Savings Bank assigned its said sheriff’s certificate to the plaintiff herein. On June 13th, 1928, the sheriff of Towner County issued a sheriff’s deed of the said east eighty to the plaintiff herein.

Before the plaintiff became the owner of the said east eighty through the said sheriff’s deed, James P. McGee was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $1958.79. To secure this indebtedness, James P. McGee and wife gave a second mortgage to the plaintiff on May 2nd, 1922-, upon the east eighty. After describing the east eighty in the mortgage, there was typewritten therein the following statement: “Containing 80 acres of land, more or less, according to the United States Government Survey thereof,” — not according to any boundary established by private agreement, but by the government survey thereof, or that it contained less than 80 acres. This mortgage was duly recorded.

On September 26th, 1924, James P. McGee and Mary A. McGee, his *623 wife, made, executed and delivered to the Bank of North Dakota a mortgage upon the west eighty. This mortgage was duly recorded. On his making application for this mortgage, James P. McGee represented to the said bank that the buildings were located on the west eighty.

The bank foreclosed its said mortgage and, on July 5th, 1932, the sheriff of Towner County issued a sheriff’s deed to the State Treasurer as trustee of the State of North Dakota.

The evidence so far as -witnesses are concerned, upon which the defendant bank relies to show that McGee and Darrell agreed to establish the dividing line between the said east and west eighties, comes from Mrs. Isabel Jenkins, Mrs. Sevills Skinner, and Claude McGee. These are the children of James P. McGee.

Mrs. Jenkins is the oldest of the three McGee children mentioned. At the time that John C. Darrell deeded the east eighty to James P. McGee, in November, 1901, Mrs. Jenkins was either 13 or 14 years of age. Whatever agreement was made between McGee and Darrell to change the dividing line between the said two eighties, must have been made before McGee became the owner of both said eighties.

She testified that John C. Darrell bought a shack from her father and that they moved it to a point on the east eighty, plowed a furrow, and designated that as the line between the two eighties. She also testified: “Well, the line-was just a little bit east of these poplar trees.”

At the time the agreement is supposed to have been made, Claude McGee was either seven or eight years of age, and Mrs. Sevills Skinner was two or three years old.

Neither of these witnesses testified that there was any controversy between their father and John C. Darrell over the true government boundary line dividing these two eighties, or that there was any doubt concerning the same. There is no evidence in the record that there -was ever any dispute between McGee and Darrell over the true government survey line. Their testimony is too indefinite, too general, too uncertain, to carry any conviction.

The defendant bank maintains that James P.

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Bluebook (online)
275 N.W. 387, 67 N.D. 618, 1937 N.D. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stutsman-v-state-nd-1937.