Tab Enterprises of Bend, Inc. v. Heare
This text of 588 P.2d 671 (Tab Enterprises of Bend, Inc. v. Heare) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Defendants appeal from a decision of the trial court in a declaratory judgment action holding that plaintiff is the rightful owner of certain real property fronting on the Deschutes River in Woodriver Village, a subdivision south of Bend, Oregon. We affirm.
The focus of this dispute is a narrow strip of land bordered by a rimrock ledge on the east and extending into the Deschutes River to the west. Plaintiff is the owner of the Woodriver Village subdivision which is adjacent to property owned by defendants. The disputed area borders on the property of both parties and has been platted as part of the common area of Woodriver Village. Both parties acquired their property through a chain of title that originated in a common grantor, Benson.
The majority of the facts are not in dispute. The chain of title from the parties’ common original grantor, Benson, is as follows:
BENSON
Plaintiffs Defendants
Chain of Title Chain of Title
Blay Harter
5/27/46 6/14/43
Zietz Evans
1/23/51 4/26/60
Merrifield Fox
6/18/53 11/29/61
Brandis, et. al. Heare
11/27/72 10/6/70
Tab Enterprises of Bend, Inc.
11/20/72
The original grant from Benson to Harter (defendant’s predecessor) describes the property in part as:
"Beginning at a rimrock ledge which is approximately 200 feet south of the northeast corner of said Section 7; thence following said rimrock ledge in a southwesterly [882]*882direction to its intersection with the thread of the Deschutes River; thence southerly along the thread of the Deschutes River to its intersection with the south line of the North one-half of the Northeast Quarter of said Section 7.” (Emphasis added.)
This description contains an error: the rimrock ledge it refers to never intersects the Deschutes River. This impossible description is consistently used in the chain of title leading to Fox.
The deed from Benson to Blay, plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, provided in part:
"* * * that part of the North Half of the Northeast Quarter (NV& NE%) of section seven (7), lying south and east of the Deschutes River save and except that portion which has heretofore been deeded by the grantors herein, and which is more particularly described as follows:” (Emphasis added.)
The deed proceeds to describe a piece of property which has as one of its borders the nonexistent point where a thread of the Deschutes River intersects the rimrock ledge.
In January of 1963, defendants executed an earnest money agreement with Earl and Alice Fox to purchase approximately ten acres of land in Deschutes County. The boundaries of the unimproved land were to be determined by a survey. The completed survey served as the basis for the property description agreed to by the parties in the contract of sale.1 The legal descrip[883]*883tion of the property in those documents does not include the river front property erroneously described in the previous deed in the chain of title and subject of the present dispute between plaintiff Tab Enterprises and defendants. Defendants conceded in their depositions that at the time of the Fox purchase they did not believe they were acquiring any river frontage. They had never spoken to the Foxes about purchasing any land on the Deschutes River.
The Foxes agreed that defendants would draw up the deed upon the completion of the sale. Defendants’ attorney subsequently sent a deed to the Foxes which they signed. The deed is set out in the margin.2 The description under the "Warranty Deed” portion of that [884]*884document comports with the land previously described in the dealings between the parties. However, the italicized quitclaim language was not present in the survey’s description of property the Foxes proposed to sell to defendants or the contract of sale upon which the former was based. Fox testified at his deposition that he did not read the deed before he signed it. Fox believed the legal description corresponded with that used in the survey and contract of sale.
The defendants testified at their deposition that the quitclaim provision was added as a direct result of a title search. This search disclosed the ambiguity or impossible description in their vendor’s chain of title. Defendants believed the property was unclaimed and hoped to acquire it. They attempted unsuccessfully to pay taxes on the property in November, 1974, and subsequently. The assessor’s office told defendants that the property was part of plaintiff’s subdivision, Woodriver Village. Fox testified at his deposition that he had never owned the property. The trial court found that, because the rimrock does not intersect the river, no title to the disputed area could have passed in the original grant from Benson to Harter, the Foxes’ predecessor in interest. Thus, the disputed property was never owned by the Foxes and could not have been conveyed by them to defendants.
The responsibility of the court in construing a deed is to ascertain and give effect to the intentions of the parties as found in the language of the instrument and [885]*885the circumstances attending its execution. Wirostek v. Johnson, 266 Or 72, 511 P2d 373 (1973). There is no evidence in the record which sheds any light on what Benson and Harter intended by the use of the nonexistent point of intersection between the Deschutes River and the rimrock ledge. ORS 93.310 provides:
"The following are the rules of construing the descriptive part of a conveyance of real property, when the construction is doubtful, and there are no other sufficient circumstances to determine it.
"(1) Where there are certain definite and ascertained particulars in the description, the addition of others, which are indefinite, unknown or false, does not frustrate the conveyance, but it is to be construed by such particulars, if they constitute a sufficient description to ascertain its application.
The trial court found the property as described in the Benson-Harter deed to be a sufficient description after rejecting the impossible point of intersection. This was appropriate because, by eliminating any reference to the Deschutes River — an "impossible particular” in that it never intersects the rimrock — it was still possible to identify a completely enclosed parcel of land; i.e., a parcel whose western boundary was the rimrock running roughly parallel to the river. This left unconveyed the parcel in dispute here, i.e., the parcel between the rimrock and the Deschutes. See Hayden v. Brown, 33 Or 221, 53 P 490 (1898).
The original Benson deed was inadequate to convey title to the property lying between the rim and the Deschutes River. As a result, Benson continued as the owner of the disputed property at the time of the Benson-Blay deed. This latter deed granted Blay, plaintiff’s predecessor, title for that portion of the North Half of the Northeast Quarter (N%NE%) of Section Seven (7), lying south and east of the river, except that previously conveyed away.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
588 P.2d 671, 37 Or. App. 879, 1978 Ore. App. LEXIS 3435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tab-enterprises-of-bend-inc-v-heare-orctapp-1978.