Taylor v. Tripp

330 N.W.2d 542, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 266
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1983
Docket13741
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 330 N.W.2d 542 (Taylor v. Tripp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Tripp, 330 N.W.2d 542, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 266 (S.D. 1983).

Opinions

DUNN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment quieting title in Gertrude Taylor (appellee) to a piece of property in Spearfish, South Dakota. We affirm.

Appellee is the record titleholder of Lot 2 and a portion of Lot 1 of Schar’s Addition to Spearfish, South Dakota. Appellee and her ex-husband received the property by a quit claim deed on November 24,1945. Ap-pellee has held the property individually since May 29, 1956.

Since first occupying the property in 1945, appellee mistakenly believed the boundary to one side of the property was a fence. The fence, which was in place at the time appellee first took possession of the property in 1945, was a heavy gauge woven wire combination with barb wire on the top. Although the legal description of the property was approximately eleven feet short of this fence line, appellee at all times mistakenly believed her property extended to the fence line.

Over the years, appellee used the property in dispute for gardening and she also tended apple trees in the area. Testimony at trial indicated that neighbors were allowed to use this area for garden space during the periods appellee did not choose to plant a garden. Even in periods when no garden was planted, appellee apparently maintained the property up to the fence line and continued to harvest the apples from the nearby apple trees.

At one point, a prior abutting landowner tried unsuccessfully to purchase a portion of what he believed to be appellee’s land along the fence line. In 1977, a real estate developer who then owned the abutting property also tried to purchase land along the fence line. Receiving no response to his offer, the developer had the land surveyed and discovered the boundary was not at the fence line but was actually located approximately eleven feet inside the fence line. The developer proceeded to remove the original fence and construct a new one in the position designated by the surveyor. A home was later constructed on the developer’s property.

In response to these activities, appellee decided to retain counsel. After experiencing some difficulty with her original counsel, appellee retained her present counsel and commenced this action against Edwin and Irene Tripp and the Bank of Belle Fourche (collectively designated herein as appellants). Other parties were joined below but are not participating in this appeal. In addition to retaining counsel, appellee pulled out survey stakes prior to the construction of the new fence, told potential buyers she owned the disputed piece of property and otherwise resisted attempts by the developer to encroach on what appellee believed to be her property. Judgment was entered for appellee below and appellants now request that we review the action taken by the trial court.

The trial court found that appellee established by clear and convincing evidence adverse and hostile possession under two separate theories. First, adverse possession was established by showing more than twenty years’ possession under a written instrument as provided in SDCL 15-3-10 and SDCL 15-3-11 and, secondly, by showing the area was used and enclosed by a substantial enclosure for more than twenty years as provided by SDCL 15-3-12 and SDCL 15-3-13. We address each theory in turn.1

[544]*544In Cuka v. Jamesville Hutterian Mut. Soc., 294 N.W.2d 419, 422 (S.D.1980), this court held that: “[T]o establish by adverse possession ownership and title which is inconsistent with the record title, the proof must be by clear and convincing evidence.” We adhere to this standard in the case at hand and we believe adverse possession was properly established.

As noted earlier, appellee was not the record titleholder to the approximately eleven-foot wide and one hundred forty-nine foot long strip of land in dispute in this case. Instead, appellee entered into possession, occupied and utilized the strip of land under a mistaken belief as to the true boundary. In Sullivan v. Groves, 42 S.D. 60, 172 N.W. 926 (1919), this court held where an adjoining landowner enters into possession under claim of title and under misapprehension as to the true boundary and continues in possession for twenty years, adverse possession is established under what is now SDCL 15-3-10, notwithstanding the fact the land extends beyond the calls of the occupant’s deed. Similarly, in Labore v. Forbes, 59 S.D. 12, 238 N.W. 124 (1931), this court concluded that occupancy to a visible and ascertainable boundary for the statutory period is the controlling feature in determining hostility in mistaken boundary-line cases. We noted that: “It is obvious that the only sensible, safe and really equitable rule is to make the physical characteristics of possession, excluding all other persons, the sole test of adverse possession^]” 59 S.D. at 16, 238 N.W. at 126. Realizing these principles, we conclude that if the occupancy of land beyond the true boundary line was actual, open, visible, notorious, continuous, and hostile in other respects, it is adverse even though such occupancy took place due to mistake and without the intention to claim the lands of another. See, Annot., 80 A.L.R.2d 1171 (1961).

SDCL 15-3-11 sets forth the acts which constitute adverse possession where the entry by claim of title is under a written instrument or decree. SDCL 15-3-11 states, in pertinent part:

For the purpose of constituting an adverse possession by any person claiming a title founded upon a written instrument, or a judgment, or a decree, land shall be deemed to have been possessed and occupied in the following cases:
(1) Where it has been usually cultivated or improved;
(2) Where it has been protected by a substantial inclosure;

The evidence is very clear that appellee met the statutory requirements to establish adverse possession by cultivating and improving the lands as well as maintaining the fence which acted as a substantial inclosure.

Assuming for a moment that appellee’s claim could not be founded on a written instrument as required by SDCL 15-3-10 and SDCL 15-3-11, adverse possession can nonetheless be established by SDCL 15-3-12 and SDCL 15-3-13. SDCL 15-3-13 provides:

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Bluebook (online)
330 N.W.2d 542, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 266, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-tripp-sd-1983.