Thomas v. Bremer

946 P.2d 800, 88 Wash. App. 728
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedNovember 13, 1997
DocketNo. 14974-9-III
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 946 P.2d 800 (Thomas v. Bremer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Bremer, 946 P.2d 800, 88 Wash. App. 728 (Wash. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Schultheis, J.

— In this 30-year-old dispute over title to nine acres in the Entiat Valley, the court ruled on cross motions for summary judgment that title to the strip had been quieted in G.A. and Elva Bremer by the judgment entered in Cascade Inv. & Dev. Co. v. Bremer, Chelan County Cause 26814, affirmed by unpublished opinion, 11 Wn. App. 1009, review denied, 84 Wn.2d 1013 (1974). The court also dismissed Frank and Dorothy Thomas’s adverse possession claim on summary judgment. The Thomases challenge both decisions. They contend the court should have vacated Cascade v. Bremer because a federal district court judge subsequently ruled in the consolidated cases of Harlow v. United States, No. C-83-388 (E.D. Wash. Jan. 15, 1988) and United States v. Bremer, No. C-86-069 (E.D. Wash. Jan. 15, 1988) that the decision in Cascade v. Bremer was based on erroneous evidence presented to the court. They also contend the court should not have dismissed their adverse possession claim. The facts and law of the case compelled the superior court’s decisions as they compel ours; we affirm.

[730]*730At issue is title to a nine-acre parcel of land located in Township 27 North, Range 19 East of the Willamette Meridian, Washington. The original survey of the area was approved in 1883. In 1901 the Northern Pacific Railway Company (N.P.R.) acquired all unpatented and unreserved land in odd-numbered sections in the township by railroad land grant. In 1903 N.P.R. deeded to James W. Bonar the SWV4 of the SE XU of section 15. In 1908 the United States issued a patent to Gus A. Bremer conveying to him the E V2 of the SW XU and the SW XU of the SW XU of section 14. The SE XU of the SE 1U of section 15, which lies between the Bonar and Bremer lands, was originally patented to David M. Farris together with the NE XU of the SE 1/4 and the SE XU of the NE XU of section 15 and the NW XU of the SW XU of section 14. Thus, there was no overlap between these parcels as they were originally settled, described, and conveyed.

The 1883 survey was seriously defective, however, because the surveyors set only two exterior corners—one on the north township boundary and one on the south township boundary—which were not in alignment, and apparently set no interior corners. The lack of corners and monuments made locating claims very difficult. Because of complaints from those who had settled the area, including Gus A. Bremer, the federal government in 1916 authorized a resurvey of the township and adjoining townships under the 1909 Resurvey Act. Resurveys are authorized "Provided, That no such resurvey or retracement shall be so executed as to impair the bona fide rights or claims of any claimant, entryman, or owner of lands affected by such resurvey or retracement.” 43 U.S.C. § 772 (1995).

The resurvey, conducted for the purpose of retracing and restoring the original survey and approved in 1923, revealed a discrepancy between the paper locations of several settled claims and their actual location on the ground. To protect the bona fide claims of the owners, the government surveyor identified the property they actually settled [731]*731by tract numbers and described them by metes and bounds descriptions. The land granted to N.P.R. as part of section 15 was designated Tract 41, the land patented to D.M. Farris as parts of sections 14 and 15 was designated Tract 42, and the land patented to Gus Bremer as part of section 14 was designated Tract 43. The tracts do not overlap, but to a large extent they overlie different sections than those named in the patents. Unfortunately, none of the property was re-patented. Nor was any other action taken to correct the record title of these lands.

George B. Brown acquired the Bonar parcel described in the N.P.R. deed and the Farris parcel described in the original patent. When he died, those parcels (and others) passed through his will in 1941 to his son John B. Brown. Gus A. Bremer died in 1942 and his land passed to his son G.A. Bremer in 1950 by inheritance and quitclaim deed from the elder Bremer’s other heirs.

In July 1965 John B. Brown agreed to sell his ranch to Frank M. and Dorothy H. Thomas. The earnest money receipt/purchase and sale agreement describes the property by quarter sections, including those once owned by Mr. Bonar and Mr. Farris, but the June 1967 quitclaim deed from Mr. Brown to the Thomases describes the property by reference to the resurvey tracts as well as the section descriptions. The quitclaim deed purports to convey as Parcel "E”:

That portion of Tract 41, according to the dependent resurvey of Township 27 North, Range 19, E. W. M., dated January 27, 1923, which was conveyed by the Northern Pacific Railway Company to James W. Bonar, by deed dated December 31, 1903; recorded February 26, 1904 in volume 54, page 600, wherein the property was described as the Southwest quarter of the Southeast quarter of Section 15, Township 27 North, Range 19, E. W. M., records of said County.

and as Parcel "I”:

Tract 42, according to the dependent resurvey of Township 27 North, Range 19 E. W. M., dated January 27, 1923, EXCEPT [732]*732that portion thereof conveyed to Chelan County, Washington for road ....

In December 1969 the Bremers moved onto the 120 acres they claimed under the original patent to his father, Gus A. Bremer. In April 1970 the Thomases sold Tract 42 to Cascade Investment and Development Company. Tract 42 overlies much of the land described in the Bremer patent. The Bremers refused to vacate, so Cascade and the executor of John B. Brown’s estate brought suit against the Bremers to quiet title in Tract 42.1

On the evidence before it, the Chelan County Superior Court ruled in favor of the Bremers. The oral opinion of Judge Leahy, which this court incorporated in its unpublished opinion, explains the rationale and the law that led to his decision. Essentially, federal law protected the rights of entrymen who perfected their claim before the resurvey, so the Bremers owned the lands described on their patent. Moreover, there was apparently testimony before the court that John B. Brown treated the land at issue as belonging to the Bremers. Finally, Mr. Brown’s quitclaim deed could convey only what he owned and "Tract 42” had never been conveyed to him. The court entered judgment decreeing the Bremers to be

the owners of the following described real property located in Chelan County, Washington according to the 1883 survey as reestablished by the 1916 dependent resurvey:
Southwest quarter of the southwest quarter and the east half of the southwest quarter of section 14, township 27 north, range 19, east of the Willamette Meridian,
and plaintiffs, Cascade Investment & Development Co. and Clarence L. Haynes, as Executor of the Estate of John B. Brown, deceased, and their predecessors, be and they are hereby adjudged to have no right, title or interest in said real property described above or any portion thereof.

[733]*733In the 1980s the dispute regarding the location of the Bremer lands was again the central focus of litigation, this time in federal district court.

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Related

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294 P.3d 1 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2012)

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Bluebook (online)
946 P.2d 800, 88 Wash. App. 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-bremer-washctapp-1997.